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- The Newsletter of SacredSpace.ie -
As Editor of Sacred Space and its newsletter, Latest Space, and on behalf of all of us at the Jesuit Communications Centre in Dublin, I greet you, members of the Sacred Space community, with best wishes and prayers that the coming season of Christmas may be a time of many blessings for each and every one of you.As you read the contents of this issue of Latest Space, I'm sure you will come to a deeper realisation of the ways in which God continues to bless us and our work in Sacred Space. You may also be interested in the newsletter of the Irish Jesuits, AMDG (newsletter.jesuit.ie), also edited by one of our team, Dermot Roantree, and produced by the Irish Jesuit Communication Centre. The current issue is a bumper Christmas issue! Special coverage is given to the inauguration of the coming Jubilee Year for the first Jesuit priests, St. Ignatius Loyola, St. Francis Xavier and Bl. Peter Fabre, including the Mass to begin the Jubilee Year on December 3, the feast of St. Francis Xavier, in Gardiner Street, Dublin. There is plenty of other good reading too. May the Lord continue to bless all of our efforts as we enter into this coming year. God bless you and yours. - Fr. Gerry Sections within this issue of Latest Space:
Christmas Greetings! I can hardly believe I'm writing those words. How the time has flown since I last wrote you all in early summer. Then the sun was shining and my window open, looking out on to the beautiful garden, festooned with summer flowers, at the back of our residence here in Leeson Street, Dublin. Now my fire is lit and my desk lamp on, as the evening closes in and the winter solstice beckons.I always find this an unsettling time of the year. Perhaps that's not surprising, as it is a time of waiting, uncertainty and encroaching darkness. The almost existential unease I feel reminds me of one Advent when I was a post-graduate student at University College, Dublin. I was experiencing that same uneasy sadness, loneliness, even a vague anxiety that I couldn't pin on anything in particular. I was in the habit of going to Mass regularly in a small Carmelite chapel near the University and a very old lady used to sit two seats ahead of me. She kept herself very well, and the Carmelite fathers called her 'Hats', as she always wore the most lovely elaborate hats to church. Anyway, this particular evening at Mass, I sat nursing my anxiety and praying to Jesus for the gift of peace. I heard the readings which did mention how the Prince of peace would come, "healing in his wings" and things like that, but I was too caught up in my own preoccupations to pay attention to the Word of God!! Suddenly, as the priest finished the gospel and went to the altar, Hats swung round in her seat and spoke to me in a very loud voice. "Did you hear that?" she demanded. "Yes," I replied shakily. "Every very word of it?" she insisted. "Yes, every word," I replied, my mind racing, thinking she had read my innermost thoughts and knew God had answered my prayers through the readings, which I had heard but ignored. Just as I was about to say sorry to her for my lack of faith, she said, "Well, you're the lucky one - I can't hear a thing. I'm going stone deaf!" I almost burst out laughing in relief, but the message wasn't lost on me, who had ears but did not hear, or heard but did not listen. And since I'm on the topic of hearing, its always lovely to hear from you who are the Sacred Space community. We read all the e- mails and letters – and a special word of thanks to those of you who have given us financial assistance. Every little does help and means we can continue to grow, via the net, and develop an even wider community of prayer. So, on behalf of the Jesuit Communication Centre here in Dublin, may I wish you all a Christmas full of love and joy, and, if you're troubled or anxious, may you not only hear, but listen to, the Words of God going forth this Advent, to bring you healing and peace. - Pat Coyle
Here is a piece of spiritual writing that has meant a lot to me; it is from Barjona by Jean-Paul Sartre, the existentialist philosopher and playwright. In the autumn of 1940 the Nazis captured and deported Sartre, to a concentration camp in Germany. Before Christmas, a Jesuit fellow- prisoner, Paul Feller, persuaded Jean-Paul to write a nativity play for the French Christians who shared his captivity. Sartre, baptised a Catholic, was by this time a declared atheist. Writing a Christmas play ran against the grain. But as a gesture of solidarity with his French fellow-prisoners, he wrote Barjona, Jeu scénique en six tableaux.To my knowledge the play was never published in Sartre's lifetime. He presumably saw it as a jeu d'esprit, like a piece written for a Christmas party among friends. As an atheist and existentialist, he would not appreciate its location in a spiritual setting. However, the play is of such searing beauty that whenever I have quoted it, people have looked for the text and marvelled. Barjona is the headman of a village near Bethlehem at the time of Jesus' birth. He is a Sartre-like figure, a strong man consumed by existentialist despair. The villagers are starving and powerless under the yoke of Rome, and he cannot help them. In the play he has just persuaded his fellow villagers into a joint pact that they will bring no more children into the world, in protest against the oppression of Rome and the silence of God. Then the Magi enter, following a star. Barjona abuses them as doting, deluded old men, and points to the misery of the crowd who had gathered, torn between despair and hope. However, the villagers follow the Magi to Bethlehem in search of the new-born King. Barjona, determined to eliminate this illusion before it catches the imagination of his friends, takes a short cut over the mountains to Bethlehem, where he plans to kill the baby. There is a gap in the text – Sartre's note reads: Il manque trois pages – and when it resumes Barjona is on his knees, watching from the shadows as the villagers gather in the stable. Sartre will not describe a conversion, but he leaves the door open for hope. Barjona, his fellow-villagers and the Magi kneel round the manger, and a narrator describes what they see. (The translation below is by the author.)That is how Joan-Paul Sartre, a male, an ex-Christian, a prisoner in a labour camp, saw the Holy Family. Is it surprising that at the end he returned to his baptismal faith? The typescript came my way in 1951 - from a French fellow-student in Munich. Paul Feller had given him a copy. Our life in Munich was Spartan. I was cold, hungry (the basic diet was still potatoes and turnips), and, as an isolated Irishman, lonely. I needed hope, not as a theological virtue, but as an existential experience, to help me trust that there was something beyond this stark and loveless existence. We put on Barjona as a radio play that Christmas. It was not like spiritual books which spoke from a faith too comfortable and unquestioning. I responded to Sartre when he described the Incarnation: a god who would submit to learning this taste of salt at the bottom of our mouths when the whole world abandons us. This was philosophy from the guts, not the head. It gave me spiritual sustenance when I needed it most. It has stood to me in bad times since then. Thank you for the excuse to recall it. - Paul Andrews Fr. Paul Andrews, who regularly submits the weekly "thought for the week" and the "inspiration points" for the daily meditations, also prepared an online retreat for Advent, which is now available. He already contributed material for our Lenten Retreat this year; it was available online until we put up the present material. The number of visitors to Sacred Space who made the Lenten retreat, until it was taken down at the beginning of Advent, was 4,431. The greatest number were from the USA (2,288), followed by the UK (466), Canada (321), Ireland (215), the Philippines (190), Australia (185) and India (72). The numbers who signed up from the other 120 countries were in numbers from 45 to 1 person from each country. We trust that this Advent retreat, too, will respond equally well to the spiritual needs of many of our Sacred Space community from all over the world. Once again this year, in the month of November, our Chapel of Remembrance, offered members of the Sacred Space community an opportunity to remember their beloved dead. Many visited daily to pray for loved ones. More than 1,000 people from 65 countries submitted 5229 names of people, who were remembered and prayed for during the month. Almost half of that number came from the United States. Another 35% came from the United Kingdom, Ireland, Canada, Australia, and the Philippines, while the remaining 15% were from the other 60 countries. On Nov. 23, 2005, our counter noted 16 million visits to the site since Feb. 1999. In Nov. 2005, on weekdays, we averaged 14,703; in 2004, 12,558; in 2003, 9,904. On weekends (Saturdays and Sundays): 9,557; in 2004: 8,155; in 2003: 6,408. In the first week of Advent (Nov. 27 - Dec. 3) the average number of vistors on weekdays rose to 15,731, and on weekend days (Sun. and Sat.), to 10,149. It is interesting to note the much larger numbers on working days. People at work seem to find it helpul to take a "prayer break". And also there is a significant increase in numbers during a season like Advent. When Sacred Space was launched on Ash Wednesay, 1999, it was promoted at the time as "something to do for Lent". ![]() The cover of the Ave Maria Press edition describes the book 2006 as follows: Sacred Space: The Prayer Book 2006 is a prayer guide inspired by the popular website, www.sacredspace.ie . Both offer a way to reflect and pray each day of the liturgical year; both present a time to quietly connect with God and a space to be spiritually nourished, healed, challenged, and transformed.It then adds in smaller print: After the success of Sacred Space: The Prayer Book book 2005 we are pleased to bring you Sacred Space: The Prayer Book 2006. Place your order today so you don't miss a day of prayer and reflection! And next August be sure to reserve your copy of Sacred Space: The prayer Book 2007!The reason for that final sentence may be the fact that Ave Maria Press ran out of copies of the 2005 edition in early Autumn of that year! The same blurb concludes with some short quotes from the feedback it has received:
When considering Christmas gifts or New Year resolutions, here are some ways you might wish to help in the ministry of Sacred Space.
- Frances Berumen (25.11.05)
- Pat, Dermot, Jae-Hong, Paul, Frank, John and Gerry Jesuit Communication Centre, 36 Lower Leeson Street, Dublin 2, Ireland | ||||||