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  PassionistsGlasgow

father frank's Log...

26/4/2024

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FATHER FRANK’S LOG: 28th APRIL – 5th MARCH 2024

This coming Sunday we listen to Jesus’ parable about the vine and, as usual, this connects to certain memories. For around 10 years I was secretary to the North European Conference of Passionists. In line with a restructuring of the Congregation in recent years, this is now referred to as the Configuration of Charles Houben (St Charles of Mount Argus) because the story of St Charles spans a number of provinces in North Europe. He, of course, was born at Munstergeleen in the Netherlands. This became the Passionist Province of Our Lady of Holy Hope. In Munstergeleen the old farmhouse where St Charles was born and grew up is now a beautiful shrine to St Charles, and indeed the two approved miracles that paved the way for the Beatification, and then the Canonization of St Charles, were the cures of two people from the Netherlands. Fr Charles’ Passionist formation took place at the newly established monastery at Eyre in Belgium, which became the Province of St Gabriel of Our Lady of Sorrows. Unfortunately, this province had to be dissolved in recent years due to aging and diminished membership. After ordination he came to England, which until very recently was St Joseph’s Province. He worked there with Irish immigrants in the wake of the famine. He was destined to return to England for a number of years after he was exiled from Ireland due to false stories that were spread about him, which the Archbishop of Dublin feared could be the cause of scandal. However, completely exonerated, he returned to Dublin for a second stint, and picked up his ministry of healing, hope and reconciliation which had begun before his exile. Ireland at that time was part of St Joseph’s Province, and it was only in 1927 that, combined with Scotland, it became St Pattrick’s Province. Now, ironically, because of aging and diminished numbers, St Joseph’s Province has now been subsumed into St Patrick’s Province. You may be bamboozled with all of that, but I imagine you can see why St Charles of Mount Argus is the obvious choice as the patron of our North European Configuration of Passionists.

My memory goes back to the mid 1990’s. I was, in my secretarial capacity, attending a meeting at our Passionist monastery in Bordeaux, at a place called Verdelais. A few years later the French Passionists would move from there to establish a House of Welcome and Hospitality in Lourdes. The monastery was surrounded by vineyards in the region of Entre Deux Mers, a beautiful Bordeaux wine-making area, located between the two rivers – the Garonne and the Dordogne. I remember that, in the little cemetery in Verdelais, the famous artist, Toulouse-Lautrec was buried. As was our custom at these meetings, a half-day was set aside for the host province to bring the provincials and delegates from the other provinces on a little outing. On this occasion, the French Passionists brought us to a local chateau for a wine tasting tour and visit. It was a very pleasant and informative experience. At the end of the tour, we were seated in a circle in a beautiful garden and were given two glasses of wine to sample. One, we were told, was a very expensive wine. The other was of a much cheaper variety. We were then asked to declare our preference. Almost all of us that day chose the much cheaper variety, which either goes to show that we were an unsophisticated lot, with no taste, or else that, unless you’re a bit of a connoisseur, for whom money is no object, don’t be tempted into paying too much for a bottle of vino, as you might actually prefer something that doesn’t hurt your pocket quite as much. Either way, it was a lovely day out, and a pleasant break from what was usually a very demanding few days of meetings, especially for the secretary, wrestling with the different languages and cultures of the various provinces. The Passionist map has changed a lot since then, with significant diminishment in some parts of the world, and growth in other parts. May God’s grace, and the Holy Spirit, continue to guide us moving on.

As ever, protect yourself, your loved ones and others, and protect Christ in your lives.

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father frank's Log

20/4/2024

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FATHER FRANK’S LOG: 21st – 28th APRIL 2024

As we approach Good Shepherd Sunday, I am reminded of the year I spent as Catholic chaplain to a young offenders’ institution back in the 1990’s, filling in for the regular chaplain who had gone on sabbatical. One of the chaplains from another Christian denomination, someone whose company I really enjoyed, was an actual, working shepherd from Ayrshire. He would regularly bring in his shepherd’s crook, a beautifully carved wooden object, as fine as any bishop’s crozier, and use it creatively to illustrate bible stories during prayer services. It was a very challenging period of my life and one which I learned a lot from. One of the things I remember is that when I would have the freedom of a particular wing to visit the cells of young Catholics, having been given a master key to open all the cell doors on that wing, the way of identifying the cell of a Catholic was that there was a green card inserted into a slot on the cell door with their name on it, along with some other details. It was then up to the young offender whether they wanted me to enter their cell for a chat, or not. In all the time I was there, not one person refused me entry, whether it was that they really wanted to chat to the priest, or whether it was just something that would break the monotony of their daily routine. It was the same with Masses and services. These were always very well attended, for whatever reason, and I can only hope that this corporal work of mercy did some little good, for at least one or two young people, during my time there.

This memory sparked another, earlier memory from the1980’s when, just after ordination, I was based in St. Mungo’s, and we would take turns at the weekend, filling in for the chaplain to the Glasgow Royal Infirmary, a member of the Passionist community, so that he could have a bit of time off each week, usually from a Friday evening to a Sunday afternoon. He would then return from his well-earned breather to celebrate the hospital Mass, aided by a team of volunteers who would ensure the safe passage of the patients from their wards to the place where the Mass was to be celebrated, and then bring them back again. When we were fulfilling this role, the practice was that, when the Catholic chaplain was called out to attend a patient, day or night, and the patient was administered with the Sacrament of the Sick, or the Last Rites, as many people still refer to them, the chaplain would then write on the patient’s card that they had been attended by the priest. I think the intention was that, if the patient was later to take a turn for the worse, then the nurse would be able to tell the family that they had received the Sacrament, and so there was no need to send for the priest again. Nine times out of ten, of course, that family would want the priest sent for again, often at 2 or 3 in the morning, but you just accepted that as part of the ministry, and part of a dying person’s family’s vulnerability at such a difficult time. The detail I want to recall, however, is that the note on the patient’s card saying they had been attended to, had to be written in green ink. So, between the green card on the cell door of Catholic young offenders, and the green ink to indicate that a Catholic had received the Last Rites, there was obviously something in those days that associated Catholics with the colour green.  I wonder what that could be?

Of course, Good Shepherd Sunday is also Vocations Sunday, and my main job at that time, which was my first appointment after ordination in 1983, was as Vocations Director for the Passionists in Scotland. I wish I could look around our province now and be able to point out all the many members whom I brought into the order back then. Sadly, while there was a decent number who joined over the three years I was in the role, they nearly all subsequently left. I could quote the great Bob Dylan in saying that “there’s no success like failure, and failure’s no success at all”. However, the privilege of accompanying young people on their journey for a while, trying to discern what God was calling them to, even if it wasn’t to the Passionist life, was something I believe was worth doing, and not really a failure at all.
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As ever, protect yourself, your loved ones and others, and protect Christ in your lives.
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father frank's log

13/4/2024

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FATHER FRANK’S LOG: 14th – 21st APRIL 2024

Welcome back to the log. My trip to Ireland for meetings the week before Holy Week was relatively uneventful, in the sense that I experienced none of the travel disasters I seem to attract whenever I embark on any kind of long journey. I set out for the Cairnryan ferry on a beautiful spring day. I was making such good time that I decided to stop in Girvan and get myself a haircut, so as to look at least semi-respectable for the approaching Easter ceremonies. I parked the car down by the seafront, near to where Father Justinian’s family had run a little hotel in years gone by, attracting lots of visitors during the holiday season from Glasgow, including a goodly number of priests. As a youngster, before entering the Passionists, his role in the family business was to make the chips for dining guests, and to this day he knows how to make a good chip. Father Justinian turned 93 last Monday and is still the healthiest man in the community. Who said chips were bad for you?

From the sea front, I walked up towards the main street and entered the first hairdressers I came across. There was one person being attended to, and two more in a queue and so, conscious of time restraints, I left to see if there was another place I could find. All in all, I counted eight hairdressers on the main street in Girvan. A couple of them were closed, and I wasn’t sure if that was just for the day, or if they were permanently closed, but still and all, it seemed like a lot of hairdressers for one little town. I had more trouble finding a place to sit down for a coffee and a hot roll, so I ended up getting something from Gregg’s and taking it down to a bench on the sea front and enjoying it there, basking in the sun and soaking in the vitamin D, before continuing on my journey to the ferry. I only encountered one set of road works, with just a small delay, and the notice to “Wait for the Light” seemed appropriate with Easter drawing near.

The meeting took place in our Passionist Retreat Centre at Crossgar in County Down, about a 30-minute drive from the ferry port in Belfast. As always it was good to see the other members of the council, arriving from the various places in Ireland and England, with only myself coming from Scotland. It was also good to catch up on our younger province members. We have one novice and one student in Crossgar at present. We also have our senior student who is staying with us in Bishopbriggs at present, and gaining good pastoral experience both in St Mungo’s and St Roch’s parishes before, God willing, being ordained a deacon, perhaps later this year, and then a Passionists priest, hopefully sometime next year. Three young people in formation is a small enough number, but every new member is a blessing from God in these times. Our main task at these meetings is to prepare the way for our next Provincial Chapter which will take place in June 2025, which entails reviewing our vision, our ministries, our locations, and our personnel. With every passing Chapter this task becomes more challenging as our age profile increases, and our manpower decreases.
​
The journey back was also pleasant and unhampered. I was happy to be able to drive the coastal road from Cairnryan to Girvan in daylight as there are still some hairpin bends on that route that would qualify as chicanes on a difficult Formula One racing track. Safely home, it was time to focus all attention on Holy Week. All went well, but we were all exhausted at the end of it, and glad of a wee breather during Easter Week to restore our energies. Easter day dinner consisted of lamb shank with lots of vegetables, prepared by Brother Conor and Father John, under the supervision of Father Justinian. It was delicious. We had considered going out for a meal on Easter Monday but, as Father Gareth was leaving early that morning to head down to Wales to see his mum, we have postponed that until another day. He safely returned last night. Wishing you all a very happy Easter season and all the blessings of the Risen Lord.


As ever, protect yourself, your loved ones and others, and protect Christ in your lives.
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    FATHER FRANK KEEVINS C.P.

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