The eRecord Edition #76 - 07 April 2016

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www.therecord.com.au

7 April 2016

Edition #76

Be at centre of transformation into

‘large-hearted’ people, Archbishop By Jamie O’Brien

ARCHBISHOP TIMOTHY Costelloe this week challenged students to be at the very centre of transforming their school into a ‘largehearted school, full of largehearted people’. The Archbishop was speaking to the students and their teachers as part of the second annual Archbishop’s Forum for Secondary Schools in support of LifeLink Day. Schools were invited to send eight representatives to the event, which was held at Aranmore Catholic College, Leederville, on Tuesday, 5 April. Auxiliary Bishop Don Sproxton, who is Chair of LifeLink, officially opened the event and spoke about the work of LifeLink within the Archdiocese of Perth. Students also watched a video that featured several LifeLink agency directors speaking about the work their agencies undertake in the community. A ge nc ie s s upp or t e d through LifeLink include The Shopfront, Emmaus, the Emmanuel Centre, Catholic Ministry for Deaf and Hard of Hearing, Centacare Employment and Training, Centrecare Inc, Djooraminda, Identitywa, Daydawn Advocacy Centre and Catholic Outreach. The event was also attended by St Mary’s Leederville Parish Priest, Fr Joseph Angelo; Catholic Education

Archbishop Timothy Costelloe, Bishop Don Sproxton, Catholic Education WA Executive Director Dr Tim McDonald with staff and students from Catholic Schools across Perth at the 2016 Archbishop’s Forum for Secondary Schools for LifeLink Day, with the aim of taking the world’s biggest ‘selfie’. PHOTO: JAMIE O’BRIEN

Western Australia (CEWA) Executive Director, Dr Tim McDonald; CEWA Team Leader, Religious Education, Diana Alteri; as well as Aranmore Catholic College Principal, Declan Tanham. Students were also given the opportunity to participate in a 90-minute question and answer session with Archbishop Costelloe and Bishop Sproxton. Speaking on the theme of the Jubilee Year of Mercy, the Archbishop explained that, in announcing the Jubilee Year of Mercy, what Pope Francis is saying is that Jesus Christ is the face of the Father’s mercy. “What he is really getting at is that mercy is ultimately one of the most fundamental aspects of God Himself, and

that this God, who is mercy, has shown us what this looks like in practice by sending us His Son, Jesus, who, we might say, translates the mysterious language of divine mercy into human language – and that language is not just words, but actions, and attitudes and concrete gestures,” the Archbishop said. “The word mercy is trying to capture the idea that a merciful person is a person whose heart moves them to have pity and compassion for those in need – and then, crucially, actually does something about it,” he said. The Archbishop went on to talk about the story of Zacchaeus in light of the theme of mercy. “The story of Jesus and Zacchaeus shows us what

mercy looks like in practice and it helps us to understand that this is the way God always deals with us. Our God is a large-hearted God. “In many ways, this is the key idea I want to leave with you today.” The Archbishop encouraged those who may have trouble understanding what mercy means, or what it looks like, or explaining to themselves or others. “Take out the word ‘mercy’ and put in the word ‘largehearted’,” he said. “Think to yourself, not that Pope Francis has called for a Year of Mercy, but that he has called for a year of ‘largeheartedness’. Full Text available at

www.therecord.com.au


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