As part of this public Day of Remembrance and Recognition, young people from all across the diocese lit 736 candles in St Fin Barre’s Cathedral at 11am this morning, one for each day of the pandemic to date in Ireland, in remembrance of those who died during Covid-19 and in recognition of all those who have cared for us during that time.
Members of the Diocesan Youth Group and of St Fin Barre’s Cathedral Choir lighting the candles. Photo: Eoin Murphy @artfotoglobalPhoto: Emma Clarke. Gerard McCarthy PhotographyPhoto: Eoin Murphy @artfotoglobalThe Bishop of Cork, Cloyne and Ross, Dr Paul Colton, and the Dean of Cork, Nigel Dunne, together with members of the Diocesan Youth Group and Choristers from St Fin Barre’s Cathedral. Photo: Eoin Murphy @artfotoglobalPhoto: Emma Clarke. Gerard McCarthy Photography
at the Choral and Civic Eucharist in Saint Fin Barre’s Cathedral, Cork by
The Right Reverend Dr Paul Colton, Bishop of Cork, Cloyne and Ross
We live in a world and a time when it’s easy to feel overwhelmed. Only on Monday last I read an opinion piece in The Irish Examiner which counselled against, what it called, ‘Doom-scrolling’ the news. I can identify with that. I had to break myself out of the 24/7 news cycle, flicking from channel to channel and website to website, during the first lockdown for the sake of my mental health. Ukraine news is now the same: we are transfixed with shock, disbelief, and increasing fury.
So overwhelming are these times, the picture is so big, the need so challenging and enormous, that all too easily some people, some opt out, some buzz around the proverbial fly with the blue posterior (I have to put things politely today in front of the City Council), and also some situations get forgotten.
In 2016, I was invited to preach in St Paul’s Parish, Glenageary in Dublin. A friend, a teacher and author, very involved throughout his life in Amnesty International, then advanced in suffering from Motor Neurone disease, was at church and was wheeled to the front by his wife, to within hearing distance of me. In my sermon I listed places of conflict in the world where there had been more than 10,000 deaths in the previous year alone – ‘Darfur, Somalia, Sudan, LIbya, Turkey and Kurdistan, North-West Pakistan, and eastern Ukraine’, I said. My friend wasn’t only within hearing distance; he was within heckling distance. ‘Yemen’ he said ‘you forgot Yemen.’ Yes, it is easy to forget, and it is easy to be so overwhelmed that we are stunned, either into inertia or frenetic over-activity.
The world of Saint Patrick was no less overwhelming – the Britain where he was born was occupied by the Romans. The fourth century there was a time of invasions and battles – the Romans, the Saxons, the Picts, and we the Scoti or Irish were menacing from the west. He was captured and taken into slavery. At the start of the fifth century there were major economic problems and social upheaval. This was the world of Saint Patrick.
The Christianity he brought and preached as a missionary and as a bishop, had, as it still does, at its core, a message for every time – a word and way of living based on faith, hope and love. The need was nothing new either. Jesus lived and preached and taught in and responded to a world in need. He referred to it as the obvious in today’s Gospel:
‘Do you not say, ‘Four months more then comes the harvest?’
But I tell you, look around you, and see how the fields are ripe for harvesting.’
John 4.35-36
‘Do you not say…’ Jesus is quoting a well-known saying of the time – they are not his own words – but a familiar proverb. In it there is a note of urgency, of purposeful mission. He is saying to the disciples that the need is obvious all around them and that they must get on with it!
What we all too frequently and sometimes conveniently overlook is that Jesus’ message was a radical one of care and of compassion to people who are complete strangers. He saw the need and responded to it. Time and time again Jesus was breaking down taboos and crossing boundaries to those who were different or on the edge. There has never been a time in human history when the need hasn’t been great.
This hospitality and welcome to strangers is part of the DNA of the Judaeo-Christian tradition to which we belong, and, indeed, to many other world faiths as well. It is also a profoundly humanitarian response.
The Children of Israel were instructed
‘You shall also love the stranger, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt.’ Deuteronomy 10.19
When Jesus was speaking famously about the separation of the sheep and the goats, he himself said:
‘ … for I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me, 36I was naked and you gave me clothing, I was sick and you took care of me, I was in prison and you visited me.’ Matthew 25.35-36
The writer to the Hebrews picked up on this and wrote:
‘Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers, for by doing that some have entertained angels without knowing it.’ Hebrews 13.2
The needs of our time shut us out of this St Patrick’s Civic Service for the past two years. In the meantime, the needs since we last met have been especially great. Every year, except for the last two, we meet here on our national day for this Civic Service. It gives us an opportunity to reflect and to recalibrate as a matter of first importance on this day of celebration and affirmation of our national identity.
This year, looking at all of the representatives here at this Civic Service, from so many walks of life and strands of Irish and Cork society. I want to acknowledge the response that we made together, first to the Coronavirus pandemic, that we are still making, and that we are now beginning to make together to the war in Ukraine, and all the time, not losing sight of the many other causes and calls on our responses and compassion in the world and in our society. The great challenge in all of this is to ensure that no one is forgotten.
Throughout the last two years ordinary people did ordinary things as well as extraordinary things to help one another, to pool resources, and, in so far as has been humanly possible, to protect one another and to fend off the impact of the virus. As a sign of light and hope, the lights in the churches of the diocese will be on from dusk tonight, our national day, when we celebrate the coming to our land of the Gospel of Jesus, the light of the world, which still inspires and motivates so many.
Tomorrow, here, we will light more than 700 candles – one for each day of the pandemic to date – in the shape of a cross will be lit by the young people from our Diocesan Youth Council, on the floor of this cathedral as our response to the day of remembrance and recognition called for by the Government. The Cathedral bell will ring at 11 a.m. as will bells throughout our diocese. Any of you who wish to drop in for a moment of remembrance and reflection are most welcome to do so between 10 a.m. and noon. Prayers will be at 11.
As leaders and volunteers, as workers in many walks of life we were pulled in many directions ourselves, trying to respond and to give a lead – the tug o’war of obligations and emotions took its own toll. But here today, in this civic context, I want to acknowledge the role played by the Covid-19 Community Response Forum – that in the City headed up by Ann Doherty, and that in the County, headed up by Tim Lucey. These groups did something I have never seen before in my 23 years as bishop – soon starting my 24th year – they brought together, in common cause, people and organisations, who would not ordinarily, meet and collaborate, who would not necessarily have the opportunity to listen to each other’s views and to learn about each other’s work; and new partnerships and friendships were created. In my view they were a potent and effective part of the local response to the pandemic and the human need. In them, regardless of the participants’ religious outlook, I saw the grace and goodness of the light and compassion of Jesus Christ.
We do not know what lies ahead. Yet again we know that what is happening now will again change the world, our global family is again being tilted on its access, we will never be the same again, but we have shown ourselves, in our own generation, that we can do it. It’s not just something our parents and grandparents did; we have been doing it now too. It is, tragically, our turn. It can’t be put off or forgotten
‘Do you not say, ‘Four months more then comes the harvest?’ But I tell you, look around you, and see how the fields are ripe for harvesting.’ John 4.35-36
Choral Eucharist and Civic Service of Saint Patrick’s Day in Saint Fin Barre’s Cathedral, Cork. Photo: Eoin Murphy
Earlier today, the annual Festival and Civic Service for St Patrick’s Day was held at St Fin Barre’s Cathedral, Cork. After two years of not being able to host this celebration, Bishop Paul Colton invited the Lord Mayor of Cork and Cork City Council politicians, as well as representatives of State agencies, NGOs and Voluntary Groups to finally celebrate St Patrick’s Day together and in person again.
The Bishop welcoming everyone. Photo: Eoin Murphy @artfotoglobalAfter two years of absence, representatives of Cork City Council gather in the cathedral grounds before the Civic Service. A full cathedral for St Patrick’s Day. Photo: Eoin Murphy @artfotoglobalSusan Colton and Simon Coveney TD at the Civic Service in St Fin Barre’s Cathedral. Photo: Eoin Murphy @artfotoglobalThe Lord Mayor of Cork Colm Kelleher and representatives of Cork City Council at the Civic Service in St Fin Barre’s Cathedral. Photo: Eoin Murphy @artfotoglobal
For the first time since Christmas 2019, the full Cathedral Choir was singing at the service. There were forty singers, including girl and boy choristers, Junior Lay Vicars and Adult Lay Vicars Choral.
The choir in procession. Photo: Eoin Murphy @artfotoglobalBishop, clergy, choir, and congregation. Photo: Eoin Murphy @artfotoglobal
For over twenty years, the Bishop and his wife Susan would host their annual Saint Patrick’s Day reception at the Bishop’s Palace in Cork, which was also not possible for the past two years. This year, still conscious of the ongoing pandemic, the Bishop arranged for Cortado Coffee to serve hot beverages and cake from their van outside the cathedral after the service.
The Bishop together with Deputy Lord Mayor Mary Rose Desmond, former Lord Mayor Donal Counihan, and Simon Coveney TD. Photo: Eoin Murphy @artfotoglobalThe Bishop greeting Commodore Michael Malone and Brigadier General Brian Cleary. Photo: Eoin Murphy @artfotoglobal
The Bishop with Cortado Coffee company after the service.
The Rev. Meurig Williams, Rector of Mallow Union, writes:
It was very good to host a community event at St Mary’s Doneraile to celebrate International Women’s Day, with its theme this year of ‘Gender equality for a sustainable future.’
Photos by Daisychain Photography
The evening offered a local microcosm of the breadth and depth of artistic creativity being generated by women throughout the world. This included displaying art by local artists, some recitation and acting, much singing and instrumental music as well as some fine story telling which captured the imagination. We were reminded of the way art, music, literature can inspire us, in a world where there is so much grasping for power and hostility.
Photos by Daisychain Photography
The event was formally inaugurated by Cllr Deirdre O’Brien, the Mayor of Fermoy, bringing a distinctive and creative voice to the political sphere and the public life of our communities here in North Cork.
All proceeds from the event went towards the current efforts here in Ireland to help Ukranian refugees who are fleeing the war in their homeland.
The evening was compered by Mary St Leger who is one of our churchwardens at St Mary’s. Huge thanks were extended to her for organising this annual event, showing how positive it can be when the Church looks beyond its own boundaries and engages imaginatively with the whole community.
At a ceremony on Friday 11th March in the Clayton Silver Springs Hotel in Cork, organised by Cork Civic Life and attended by more than 700 people, the Bishop of Cork, Cloyne and Ross, the Right Reverend Dr Paul Colton, was one of those to whom a Pride of Cork Award was presented.
Bishop Colton said that he was very surprised to have been nominated by members of the public for the award:
So many of the other award winners are people who have done wonderful and inspiring things, They are people, many of whom I know and work with in Cork, and admire greatly. I never imagined I’d be nominated by members of the public. I was especially delighted that many said they were helped by my night time prayers and short reflections on Twitter throughout the lockdowns of the pandemic. All I though I was doing was tweeting at about 9.30 p-.m. or 10 p.m. each night to give people a prayerful or reflective focus at the end of another tough day.
Miriam O’Callaghan of RTE presenting Bishop Paul Colton with his Pride of Cork Award. Photo: Erich Stack Photography
The citation which accompanied Bishop Colton’s award was read by Master of Ceremonies, PJ Coogan of Cork 96 FM and was as follows:
‘Our next recipient tonight is Dr. Paul Colton, the Bishop of Cork, Cloyne and Ross who was nominated by numerous people in the public call for nominations and is receiving A Pride of Cork Award for the following reasons:
His night prayers for people during the Covid months, be they religious or not, and who joined with him in the spirit and intention of those prayers, and got hope, solace and inspiration from them.
In recognition of his 23 years as Bishop of Cork, Cloyne and Ross.
In recognition of the affection that the people have for him as a person and Church leader.
In recognition of his inclusiveness for all in our society.
In recognition of the fact that in 2020 he became the longest serving Bishop of Cork Cloyne and Ross in over 400 years since Bishop William Lyon in 1617
In recognition of the fact that also in 2020, he became the longest serving Bishop still in office in the Anglican Churches of Ireland, England, Scotland and Wales
In recognition of his ability to speak out and be heard in Civic, Church and State matters
‘Bishop Paul Colton is one of those inspiring people whose contribution to people, causes and Cork is truly deserving of A Pride of Cork Award so that we can say thank you to him for his commitment in helping to lead, inspire and guide, Cork and her people.’