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Homily
of Archbishop Diarmuid Martin
of
Dublin
Homily
of Archbishop Diarmuid Martin, given at Mount Argus on Sunday, 3rd September
'06, to mark the 150th Anniversary of the presence of the Passionist Order
in Dublin and Ireland. Full Text Follows -

"Take notice of the laws and customs that I teach you today, and
observe them, that you may have life". These are the words we have
heard just now in the first reading from the book of Deuteronomy. They
remind us of how right throughout the history of salvation God revealed
his laws and custom that we may have life.
Jesus
takes up this same thought in today's Gospel, because over time it seemed
that a whole profession of casuists - Pharisees Scribes and others - had
emerged who had become so obsessed with the laws and the customs that
they had allowed the fundamental message of life to fall into the background.
God's
law is there that we might have life. The Christian message is not a negative
rule book or even a book of maxims about being good. It is above all about
a person, Jesus Christ, who has appeared among us, who enters into our
lives and changes them. He allows us to engage with him as he reveals
to us a God who is love. Jesus mission is to bring us life and life in
its fullness.
Even more, Jesus presents himself, his very own identity, as life: "I
am the life"; "I am the resurrection and the life".
The
Gospel reading reminds us then that we do not worship God with "lip
service", with the outward observance of rules, but by something
deeper and more authentic which must go on within our heart and our lives.
But
if we were to limit our reading of today's Gospel to just that observation,
a valid observation which we all need to recall, we would not have fully
understood what Jesus was saying.
Jesus
condemns the Pharisees and Scribes not just because of their lack of personal
integrity. He accuses them of emptiness in their teaching. They teach
"only human regulations", they "cling to human traditions"
rather than to the message and the commandment of God. Jesus condemns
them because they preached in God's name a message which was not that
of God.
Jesus
is teaching us that the promise of life that God spoke of through the
prophets cannot be attained by human regulations, human traditions and
mere human arrangements alone.
We
attain life and its fullness only when we allow ourselves to be guided
by the God who is revealed in Jesus Christ. If we wish to prevent our
human heart from being overcome by the evils of the day - and the Gospel
reading provides us with a list which needs very little updating after
two thousand years - then we must change our hearts to listen and understand
what God commands.
We
have come to celebrate 150 years of the presence of the Passionist Fathers
here in Mount Argus and in Ireland.
It
is hard to think back one hundred and fifty years and imagine what life
was like in Dublin or in Ireland just ten years after the famine. What
is sure is that 1856 belonged to a time of extraordinary renewal in the
Irish Church, a time of life and vitality. Cardinal Cullen, then Archbishop
of Dublin, had dedicated much time to consolidating the great religious
orders of women and men which had emerged in Ireland during the time of
his predecessor Archbishop Daniel Murray. Next he began to attract other
religious orders from abroad to come to Dublin and bring with them a wide
range of charisms which had not been able to emerge within Irish Catholicism
during the difficult period before Emancipation.
In
the years around 1856 when Mount Argus first welcomed the Passionist community,
Cardinal Cullen, you might say, changed the map of Dublin. Four years
earlier - in 1852 - the Mater Hospital was opened in Dublin. Four years
later Blackrock and Terenure Colleges would open.
In
1856, alongside the Passionist Fathers here in Mount Argus, the Oblate
Fathers came to Inchicore. University Church on Saint Stephen's Green
had just opened, an essential dimension of the vision of a University
of Cardinal Newman. The Daughters of Charity opened their first house
in Dublin in North William Street one year later; coming from Drogheda
where they had just established their first house in Ireland. The following
year the Jesuits came to Milltown Park. With a period of ten years many
of what are today the landmarks of Catholic Dublin - physically and also
in what they signify - were built.
But
what was happening was not an exercise in real estate. All these institution
and buildings were about bettering the life of people. For example, Cardinal
Cullen particularly wanted the Passionists to come to Dublin because he
knew of their work in Britain with poor Irish emigrants. It is interesting
today to reflect that the coming of the
Passionist Fathers and the renewal that they brought to the Irish Church
sprang from the way they cared for Irish who were outside their own country.
Renewal of the Church in Ireland today will also mean developing caring
pastoral structures to ensure that those who come to our shores now are
helped to live their coming here as new hope, new horizons, new opportunity,
new chance to fulfilment for themselves and their children. I know personally
of how the Passionist Parish and its schools and teachers in Huntstown
in West Dublin are doing pioneering work in this regard today.
Mount
Argus was established at a time of renewal and vitality in Church life.
It very soon became itself a symbol of renewal and vitality of the Christian
life in Dublin and farther. The early Passionists got things done quickly.
The first Church here in Mount Argus was built and blessed within months
of the arrival of the first Fathers. A year after its foundation Blessed
Father Charles began his charismatic mission here.
Soon
from this foundation new foundations sprung up in Glasgow and in Belfast,
both of which were to influence the Catholic culture of those cities right
down until our day. These Passionist Monasteries and the others which
developed later became places close to people in their daily lives and
aspirations, aware that the preaching of the Gospel must be linked with
the concrete situations in which people live and Passionist houses have
remained true to this mission until our day. In this they showed
that preaching the message of the Gospel in any society does not lead
- as some would today tend to portray - to alienation and subjugation
but is a true and vital
contribution to the fabric of any society.
Mount Argus and indeed the great Monasteries founded from it like Saint
Mungo's in Glasgow and Ardoyne in Belfast always had a character of their
own. They were big. As a child, when I came here to Mass with my parents,
I was struck by the dimensions of the Monastery here in Mount Argus. It
seemed to be a power house of priests. It was a power house of prayer
and encouragement to lead the Christian life to the full. It was a power
house of great preachers. From here the word of God was preached and the
lives of many were changed. It was a place where the story of the passion
and death of Jesus was preached as a message of life. Within a short time
Mount Argus had left its imprint for good on the life of Dublin and of
Ireland.
The
Passionist Monasteries were attentive to the aspirations of people. Some
of the leaders of 1916 came here on the eve of the Uprising
to reflect and pray and who knows also to agonise about their enterprise.
Ardoyne, on its part, stands out as a beacon of support and integrity
amid the struggles in its neighbourhood. Mount Argus has long links with
An Garda Siochana. How many times have I been here as honour was rendered
to dedicated members of the force who had contributed so much through
their lives and service to the stability and security of our society.
Now
Mount Argus must look to the future. I see the word downsizing in the
commemorative booklet. Numbers are down but I hope that there will be
no downsizing in the sense that Mount Argus would be any less a power
house of what is best in the Passionist tradition and charism. This has
been a powerhouse from which the word of God has been preached as the
source of what the second reading called: "All that is good and everything
that is perfect". This diocese needs such a power house. Ireland
needs it. We will need it all the more in the future.
The
strength of the Passionist tradition in Ireland has been its ability -
to use again the words of the second reading - to "accept and submit
to the word which has been planted in you".
Those who are called in a particular way to preach the Passion of Jesus
Christ and those of us who hear their word are called to "accept
and submit to that word" through the way we live. Jesus' passion
and death constitute the key to new life. In his self-giving love for
us, even unto death on a cross, Jesus revealed to us just how boundless
his love for us was.
In
doing this he revealed to us what God is like. Jesus chose to reveal the
God of power and might not in clinging to the outward expressions of authority,
power or popularity, but through self-giving love until the end. In this
he showed us that in defining the meaning of life, in 1856 or in our time
or at any moment in history, giving is just as important as having.
The
future cohesion of our nation will be not built just on our enjoying the
fruits of economic prosperity, but in ensuring that that prosperity is
shared in a way that all can reach fulfilment in life, within the beauty
of creation which has been given to us as our home and in the community
of the members of our human family.
We
thank God for the way in which over these 150 years the Passionist communities
here in Mount Argus and around Ireland and abroad have touched and changed
the hearts of so many and led them to see in the law and the call and
the love of God the true path to life.
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