Homily of Cardinal Seán Brady at the ordination Mass for Rev Paul Murphy

30 Jun 2013

Church of the Immaculate Conception, Termonfechin, Co Louth in the Archdiocese of Armagh – Sunday 30 June 2013 

  •  Paul Murphy – your son – your brother – your friend – is about to be ordained a priest.  That is a great calling.
  • I ask for your prayers during this critical days for the genuine Protection of the Life of the Unborn Child.  As shepherds, at all times, we want to protect those entrusted to the care of the Church at this time from the threat of abortion

Pope Francis

On the 21 September 1952, Georgio Mario Bergoglio – then seventeen years of age – now Pope Francis – had an extraordinary experience.  He came to realise, in a very vivid and powerful way, God’s amazing love for him.  As a result, he decided to join the Jesuits and become a priest.

What caused this?

We do not know.  We can only guess!  He was coming to the end of his time at Secondary School.  He was wondering what God wanted him to do with his life.  It was the Feast of Saint Matthew – one of the twelve apostles and author of the First Gospel. Matthew was a tax collector when Jesus called him – never a popular profession and certainly not in the time of Jesus where tax collectors were allowed to add on an extra bit for themselves and then hand the rest to the hated Roman government.  Nevertheless, Jesus saw his potential and chose Matthew.

The young Georgio Bergoglio may or may not have been aware, at that stage, of what the Venerable Bede – a famous Englishman had written about the call of Matthew. He certainly became aware of it later on, because, when he was made a bishop, he chose his motto from what Bede wrote – so let us hear it.

“Jesus saw a man called Matthew at the tax office  He saw a tax collector and since he looked at him in pity and choosing him as a disciple he said:  “’Follow me’”.  The Pope’s motto is:  Looking at him in pity and choosing him as a disciple.

I believe that this idea of God looking at all of us in mercy and pity, and choosing us to play our part in his plan, is a powerful influence with Pope Francis.  On 13 March last, when he was asked if he would accept his election as Pope, he said:  “I am a sinner.  I am well aware of that but I have confidence in the mercy of God and since you have elected me or rather God has chosen me, I accept”.

The fact is that God has chosen each and every one of us for great things.  For, at the beginning of every human life, at the beginning of your life and mine, God said:  ‘Let there by you’.

The beginning of every human life is a mysterious invitation.  It is an invitation from God, to each one of us, to enter into existence and to enter into friendship with God.  This invitation comes to each one of us at the moment we come into being.  The reason you and I are here today is that we have been created:

Created by God.

Created by God, out of love.

  • The only reason we continue to live is because God continues to keep us in existence.
  • God continues to keep us in existence through love so that we may freely acknowledge that love and entrust ourselves to it and play our part in God’s plan.

Human Life

Human life is an invitation we all receive together.  To reject that invitation or to reject any other human being and especially to kill any other human being, is to reject the very invitation that gives meaning and purpose to our own life.

Our God is a God who continually comes – who continually invites.  At Baptism God invites those being baptised to share in the Priesthood of Jesus Christ.  It is a call to listen to His word and praise His name and play our part in building up God’s kingdom.  But there is yet another calling:  Jesus chose some of his followers – not all – to carry out – publicly – not in private – priestly work.

Jesus was sent by the Father.  He, in turn, sent the Apostles.  He sent them into the world to carry on his work.  The work of Jesus was that of teacher – teaching the most important subject of all – Knowledge of God.

It is a work of priest – offering prayers and praise, continuing His presence in our midst by celebrating sacraments.  It is the work of shepherd – leading, nurturing, guiding and healing God’s holy people, on the road to eternal glory.

Today that work is carried on in the Church and will continue – you can depend upon it – until the end of time.

Today is a day of great joy.  Paul Murphy – your son – your brother – your friend – is about to be ordained a priest.  That is a great calling.  No-one takes the honour to himself but only when he is invited by God to do so.

About seven years ago or more, the inspiration came to Paul that he was being chosen, by Christ, to be a Public Representative of Christ in, and for, the people of God.  Thankfully, Paul decided that he had better give serious consideration to that thought for he knew that if God had chosen him to do some good as a priest, then it would remain undone if he refused to follow that calling.

He also concluded that if he refused to follow God’s calling, he was unlikely to find fulfilment in some other calling.  Thankfully, he received the whole-hearted support of his family in all of this.  Today we give thanks to God and to his parents, family and friends for all of that support and indeed to everyone who helped, in any way, on Paul’s long journey of studying and travelling to Belfast and Rome and Maynooth and Drogheda.  Despite that wonderful support, some may still wonder how a young man like Paul Murphy can give up so much to follow Christ in the priesthood. The secret is that he does so in the sure knowledge that if he plays his part Christ most certainly will do His part.

I was at the Golden Jubilee of Father Tommy McNulty’s priestly ordination recently.  There was a lovely logo:

‘For all that has been – thanks.  For all that will be – yes’

That ‘yes’ can be spoken with confidence because God has promised, through His Spirit in the Church, to sustain His ministers with His grace.  Of course, the Minister of Christ – the Representative of Christ – has to play his part by trying to become Christ-like in his own life.  That we do by uniting ourselves to Christ in our prayers and in our actions.  By uniting to Christ means making Christ more and more the centre of our lives.  It means handing over, more and more, of life to Him.

In a few minutes Paul will answer ‘yes, I do’ to questions which the Church puts to him at this stage. They are indications of his willingness to sacrifice his desire to be independent.  Day by day this big ‘yes, I do’ is lived out in a series of little ‘yeses’.  But this call to give, for the sake of others, can only be done without bitterness or self-pity if Christ is really at the centre of our lives.

As we prepare to move to the next stage can I ask your prayers for three intentions:

1.     Prayers for us clergy – chosen by Christ to carry out publicly, priestly ministry in His name on your behalf.  We need those prayers now and always.

2.     Secondly, I pray that there will be others to follow in our footsteps – to provide for you the Presence of Christ – especially in the sacraments of Confession, Holy Communion and Anointing of the Sick.  We pray especially that there will always be priests to show Christ, and His love, to you and to help to lead you to Christ, through their love, their care and their concern for others

3.     Finally, I ask your prayers during these critical days for the genuine Protection of the Life of the Unborn Child.  As shepherds, at all times, we want to protect those entrusted to the care of the Church at this time from the threat of abortion.

In this Church of the Immaculate Conception, we entrust, to Mary,

  • Bright dawn of the new World – Mother of the Living
  • We entrust to her the Cause of Life.
  • We ask her to watch over Paul and help him to play his part in building – together with all people of goodwill – the civilization of truth and love, to the praise and glory of God, the Creator and giver of life.

 AMEN

  • Cardinal Seán Brady is Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland

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