The Messenger 12th April 2024

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Parking Restrictions
Parking Restrictions

Please note that there will be no parking in the area behind St Joseph’s Sacristy on Tuesday 16th April to enable scaffolding to be erected for repairs to St. Joseph’s Church roof. Thank you.

Laudato Si - 15th April - 7:00pm - St Yves Room, St Joseph’s
Laudato Si – 15th April – 7:00pm – St Yves Room, St Joseph’s

Laudato Si meet on Monday 15th April at 7:00pm in St Yves Room, St Joseph’s.

Mothers Prayers - 19th April - 11:00am
Mothers Prayers – 19th April – 11:00am

Mothers Prayers meet on Friday 19th April at 11:00am (Tea/Coffee from 10:30am) at Christine’s house

Tel: 259995 / E-mail: christineguernsey2014@gmail.com

www.mothersprayers.org

Life Changing Ministry - 20th April - 8:30am - Les Cotils
Life Changing Ministry – 20th April – 8:30am – Les Cotils

Life Changing Ministry Ecumenical Breakfast (£8.00) on Saturday 20th April, commencing at 8:30am at Les Cotils Christian Centre.

Speaker: Rev Jan Le Billio

The title of Jan’s talk will be “Flying High on the Wings of a Dove”

Reserve your place with Jan by Wednesday 17th April – Tel: 07781 435420 / E-mail: revjanleb@gmail.com

Coffee Morning
Coffee Morning

St Joseph’s Parish Room will be open for coffee/tea, cake and a chat on Wednesday 4th April and on every 2nd and 4th Wednesday of the month.

Drop in any time between 9:30am-11:30am.

This is a chance to enjoy a cup of coffee and meet up with others. Everyone is welcome!

Rotas - Eucharistic Ministers & Readers - St Josephs
Rotas – Eucharistic Ministers & Readers – St Josephs

Rotas for the period 21st April – 9th June 2024 are now available for collection just inside the Sacristy.

Please wait until the end of Mass before collecting the rota. Thank you.

Guernsey Prayer Walk - 18th May
Guernsey Prayer Walk – 18th May

Guernsey Prayer Walk on Saturday 18th May. Theme is ‘All Nations’.

Scriptural reference for 2024: Psalm 86:9 – All the nations you have made shall come and worship before you, O Lord, and shall glorify your name.

Further details to follow.

AED Update
AED Update

The eagle-eyed amongst you may have already spotted the bright green cabinet on the outside wall of the sacristy at St Joseph’s. The AED (defibrillator), which was located along at the organ, has now been moved into the cabinet and is ready to use as and when it may be required. This move means the AED is now available 24/7 rather than just when the church is open and so is available to the school and parish groups as well as the wider community. Also, by next weekend over 30 additional parishioners will have completed training on using the AED and as those trained come from all the Masses as well as the many different parish groups, somebody trained in using the AED should be as close to hand as the AED should the need arise.

Message to Guernsey — Beware your life is in danger
Message to Guernsey — Beware your life is in danger

9th April 2024

I have just issued the following hard-hitting Message to the Parish of Guernsey. The island is gearing up for elections and currently there is a concerted campaign to make legal assisted suicide and euthanasia. 

Dear Canon Christopher and Parishioners of Guernsey,
YOUR LIFE AND YOUR WELL-BEING ARE UNDER THREAT

First of all, I wish you a very Happy Easter. I wish you many graces and blessings from the Lord. The death and resurrection of Christ gives us hope for our lives here on earth and the promise of eternal life with God in heaven.

I write because dark clouds are threatening the beautiful island of Guernsey. The Lord’s death and resurrection remind us of two fundamental moral truths: ‘Thou shalt not kill’ (Ex 20: 13) and ‘Love thy neighbour as thyself’ (Mk 12: 31). These are commandments Jesus taught in His life on earth and of which He gave us a wonderful example. These commandments, ‘Thou shalt not kill’ and ‘Love thy neighbour as thyself,’ form the bedrock not only of Jewish and Christian morality; they are the teaching of all religions. More, they are instinctive principles written into every human heart and they ground the laws governing every civilised society on earth. Yet there are now dark forces at work in Guernsey in the media and public life actively seeking to undermine these principles. I refer here to the campaign to legalise euthanasia, or mercy-killing, and assisted suicide. (I don’t use the term ‘assisted dying.’ I call it by the name of what it actually is: suicide).

Assisted suicide is gravely wrong for at least four reasons. First, it places an intolerable and immoral demand on medical staff, doctors and nurses. It asks them to ignore the Hippocratic Oath they take to preserve life, in order to extinguish life. Many a vet will speak of their grief at putting down a beloved family pet – “putting it out of its misery” – yet surely, we cannot treat an elderly relative in the same way? Assisted suicide would place medics in an impossible dilemma. It would ultimately undermine the trust we place in them. How would we know any more whether the doctor is working in our best interests?

Secondly, to legalise euthanasia and assisted suicide would undermine palliative care and the work of care-homes. After all, it is easier and cheaper to kill someone than to care for them. Yes, frailty, pain and infirmity are a difficult trial and the terminally ill can experience despair. Yet, thanks be to God for the amazing advances medical science has made. Britain is a leader in palliative care with methods and drugs that can manage pain right to the end. The Church always works to relieve suffering but as a Christian, I would add that in union with Christ, it is possible to find from Him all the patience and energy we need to sustain suffering – to ‘carry the cross’ (Mt 16: 24) – and to turn it into a positive good for others. This is the meaning of Easter, when Jesus underwent death at the hands of those who had decided it was better for society to have Him extinguished.

Thirdly, the possibility of assisted suicide puts intolerable pressure on the sick and the elderly. It makes them feel they are a burden on their family and a financial burden. Yet when we love someone, efficiency and cost-saving is irrelevant. How can helping someone to commit suicide ever be compassionate? It is evil masquerading as a kindness. As one of your Deputies said recently in the newspaper: “Considerable savings could be realised if assisted dying was to be introduced here in the island”. Seeking to justify himself, he added “Many people don’t want to keep on living, and I think we need to put a figure on that.”

And fourthly, as in Belgium and elsewhere where assisted suicide and euthanasia have been legalised, the legislation gradually keeps creeping forward, expanding to cover more and more categories: sick children, people with autism, those with dementia, the depressed, the mentally ill, the handicapped and others whose lives someone else decides are not worth living. In Canada, almost 5% of deaths are now by lethal injection. Recently, I read about a Canadian doctor boasting that she had helped hundreds and hundreds of people to die: she said it was the “most rewarding work she had ever done.” This is chilling stuff.

I write to you now because your local politicians and pressure groups are raising the question of legalising assisted suicide and this is likely to gather momentum in the next few months before the formal election campaigns begin. I want to appeal to all people of common sense and good will to reject these alarming proposals, and to redouble the compassionate care of those who are terminally ill. Let there be no death-clinics in Guernsey. Don’t let Guernsey become a destination for suicide tourism. The right to die would inevitably become the duty to die – and the right to make another die.

I appeal to Catholics to mobilise. Don’t be persuaded by emotional pitches in the media. Speak out against this sinister proposal. Raise it with the candidates in the forthcoming elections. It is never permissible to use an evil means to do good. Suicide is a mortal sin and helping someone commit suicide is a mortal sin. For we believe in assisted living, not assisted dying. Death is not pain relief; it is the transition to a glorious new life in heaven with God our Father and Creator.

In Corde Iesu,
+Philip
Bishop of Portsmouth

 

Thank You
Thank You

Canon Chris and Fr Inna thank you all for the cards and Easter offerings.

Special thanks to ALL who helped prepare the Churches for Easter including the Altar Servers, cleaners, musicians, choirs, welcomers, flower arrangers etc.