Bishop Denis Nulty celebrates 10th annual National Day of Prayer for Children

by | 13 Oct, 2017 | News

Bishop Denis Nulty, Bishop of Kildare and Leighlin, today celebrated a prayer service in the Cathedral of the Assumption, Carlow, to mark the National Day of Prayer for Children. The National Day of Prayer is celebrated by the Society of Missionary Children, and forms part of a number of celebrations organised by World Missions Ireland to mark October as ‘Mission Month’. More than 700 children gathered today in the Cathedral of the Assumption to join in the celebration.

Now in it’s tenth year, the purpose of the National Day of Prayer for Children is to spiritually support children through prayer to transform our world for the better. The motto of the Society of Missionary Children is ‘children helping children’ and this is promoted through prayer, sacrifice and offerings, to help create awareness among young people about the plight of their less well-off counterparts in poorer mission countries. Schools and parishes across Ireland, north and south, have been participating today in a prayer service, a celebration of the Mass, or by praying the mission rosary.

To complement the World Meeting of Families 2018, the theme for this year’s National Day of Prayer is ‘Let’s be Family’.

Speaking at the celebration, Bishop Denis Nulty said, ‘One hundred years ago on this very day, three children, Lucia, aged 10, and her cousins Francisco, aged 9, and the youngest Jacinta, aged 7, witnessed the final Fatima Apparition, which included Our Lady telling them in the presence of 70,000 people that she was the ‘Lady of the Rosary’; she confirmed all these facts by the miracle of the sun.

‘A central feature of our celebration in this October Mission Month is the multi-coloured pair of Rosary Beads, in the sanctuary space of the Cathedral.  Green representing Africa; Red representing the Americas; White representing Europe, Blue representing Oceania and Yellow representing Asia. In praying the Rosary in our classroom, at home, with our families we have the opportunity of remembering children in these continents a lot less fortunate than ourselves.  This is what Mission is about; the Rosary is the axis on which the month of October spins.’

He continued, ‘I’m told there are over 700 children and young people physically present in the Cathedral this morning.  They represent the family of schools in our Diocese.  There are 2,800 Catholic Primary Schools right across Ireland, and 350 secondary schools under the Catholic ethos – many of them joining in this live stream today.  The sixteen-year-old educational activist Malala Yousafzai of Pakistan addressing the UN Youth Assembly said: “one child, one teacher, one book and one pen can change the world”.  We are privileged to live in a society and a world that values education, let us in this month of October support through our prayer and fundraising the parts of our world where children so badly need the opportunity education offers.

‘In exactly 311 days we begin the World Meeting of Families in Dublin, and hopefully we will be joined by the one who gifted the World Meeting event to Ireland – Pope Francis.  It is a meeting that celebrates family; family means so much to all of us.  Let us reach out from the Cathedral in Carlow this morning with our message of Joy as we later release balloons in the Rosary Mission colours at the end of today’s ceremony.  In speaking with Jesuit schoolchildren sometime back Pope Francis reminded them that education is like learning to walk – one foot firmly anchoring us on the ground, the second taking the risk of landing in a new space.’

Bishop Nulty concluded, ‘The tenth anniversary is known as a tin or aluminium celebration.  It would be remiss of me not to applaud the many schools who have helped the missions in their work over the past ten years.  For special mention in Kildare & Leighlin Diocese I single out Saint Evin’s in Monasterevin and Kildare Town Community School.  I thank Julieann and the Society of Missionary Children team around her for keeping the mission flame alive for children at home and around our world.’

October is Mission Month. Since 1926, the Church has traditionally remembered its universal mission during this month. This year Mission Sunday will be celebrated globally on the 22 October. The theme for Mission Month is ‘Reach Out and Spread the Joy.’ Archbishop Kieran O’Reilly, chair of the Council for Missions of the Irish Catholic Bishops’ Conference, recently spoke with Brenda Drumm about Mission Month 2017 on Faithcast, which you can listen to here.

World Missions Ireland is the official mission outreach charity of the Catholic Church in Ireland. It supports missionaries and mission projects in up to 80 countries throughout the world. For more information on the work of World Missions Ireland, please see www.wmi.ie.

Photo: John MCElroy

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