Emmanuel 2014
Tickets are now on sale for the Emmanuel Concerts - join
2,100 secondary school students from 60 Schools from all over the Archdiocese
of Dublin on Tuesday 4th, Wednesday 5th & Thursday 6th of March at 7.30pm
in the Helix. Tickets cost €10 and are
available on Tel: 01 7007000 or www.helix.ie
Please come and support your local school. A list of schools
participating each night is available on www.litmus.dublindiocese.ie
A big thank you to the choirs, teachers and students from
Colaiste Bride, Condalkin; St. Mary’s Holy Faith Secondary School, Killester;
Holy Faith Secondary School, Clontarf and Colaiste Mhuire, Cabra for
participating in a multi lingual video production in English, Irish, Polish and
Swahili from this year’s Emmanuel Programme. The song will be sung at each live
concert in tribute to Blessed John XXIII and Blessed John Paul II who will be
canonised saints next month.
Particular thanks is due to the students and staff from the
Szkoła Podstawowa in Marklowice in Poland, who sang live to Dublin via Skype
for the launch of Emmanuel.
"We will walk with God" -- Enjoy!!! https://vimeo.com/87271209
PRESS LAUNCH OF “EMMANUEL” 2014
Speaking Notes of Archbishop Martin
Crosscare Migrant Centre, Dublin, 26th February 2014
"Before coming here this morning I wanted to check that
I had my facts and figures correct and that I was on-focus about exactly what
Emmanuel is, both in its original inspiration and in what those who participate
in it consider it to be.
So I asked around my own staff what they understood Emmanuel
to be. I was told, quite correctly, that
it is an initiative of the Archdiocese of Dublin on liturgical music, in which
almost 60 second level schools from right across the diocese take part, from
Arklow to Balbriggan, from Dunlavin to Swords and many schools in Dublin city
and county, including this year Saint Mary’s Girls School for the Deaf. All correct information! But the best answer I got was: “What is
Emmanuel? It’s learning Church music in
a fun kind of way”.
There is a sense in which in so many ways the Church has
lost its sense of fun. Pope Francis
never lost his sense of fun, which he skilfully uses to disarm those who would
want to make the Church a place for the dull and the stolid.
My first hope this morning, therefore, is that those who
take part in Emmanuel this year will thoroughly enjoy themselves. It is one of the biggest annual gatherings of
secondary school pupils across Ireland, in which all take part, not as spectators,
but as active and enthusiastic participants in a common project. It is good to see that this can be achieved
within a specifically catechetical and religious context.
There has been controversy recently about the place of
religious education within the busy current school curriculum. But if we get stuck just in discussions about
the hours and minutes – and I am not saying that this is not important – we may
assert our legitimate rights, but miss out on the enthusiasm and the
participatory dimension which religious education should foster.
Faith is not conformism.
Faith must be creative and imaginative.
Faith formation involves not passive learning, but an involvement where
the young person can establish bridges between his or her own life and ambition
and talent, and the message of Jesus Christ and his truth, which truly makes us
free.
The challenge for the faith community here in Dublin is to
ensure that our faith education is not simply passive provision of knowledge
and information but something challenging and deeply personal. Faith education must however also lead beyond
the purely personal into commitment inspired by the Christian faith to be lead
a different life style – a demanding one, a counter cultural one, a generous
one, one in which excellence in education and the flourishing of personal
talent break out into an understanding that the gifts we have are to be used to
create a different world. Education does
not begin and end with just myself; education is about how I flourish through
giving myself and my talents for the common good of all.
A gathering around liturgical music can lead to a deeper
understanding of the basic roots of that music and the wisdom it contains,
especially the wisdom of the psalms which have been the songs of believers for
centuries, as they reflect on how God cares for his people on their life’s journey.
Finally there can be no real understanding of liturgical
music which does not lead the young person to a sense of prayer and
participation in the worship life of the Church. Liturgical music can make a good concert, but
the real concert must be a concert of worship of God in the liturgy of the
Church, which must not be dull and stolid, but must also pass through fun to
true joy and fulfilment in Jesus Christ." ENDS
Courtesy of Archdiocese of Dublin
Courtesy of Archdiocese of Dublin
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