Saint Joseph's Parish, BOYLE

Saint Joseph's Parish, BOYLE The Parish of Boyle of Boyle embraces the ancient territory of Moylurg and nestles at the foot of the Curlews and in close proximity to Lough Key.

The Parish is a place-name identified as the site of Ireland's finest 11th Century Cistercian Abbey.

09/10/2025

APOSTOLIC EXHORTATION DILEXI TE OF THE HOLY FATHER LEO XIV TO ALL CHRISTIANS ON LOVE FOR THE POOR [ Multimedia ] _____________________

07/10/2025

Our Lady of Victory, pray for us!

Today marks the 454th anniversary of one of the most important battles in European history, the Battle of Lepanto, called "the battle that saved Europe".

The battle took place in the Gulf of Patras off the coast of Greece on 7 October 1571. The Holy League (a Christian coalition organized by Pope Pius V, composed of Venice, Genoa, Tuscany, Urbino, Savoy, the Papal States, the Knights of Malta and the Spanish Empire with Naples and Sicily) defeated the Islamic forces of the Ottoman Empire, which were intent on conquering the West.

It was the first major victory of a Western Christian fleet against the Ottoman Empire. It was also was one of the largest naval battles of all time, being the largest naval engagement since the Battle of Actium in 31 BC. Approximately 40.000 men died in 4 hours (equal to about 166 deaths per minute), the highest casualty rate of any battle until World War I. The battle remains the largest naval defeat inflicted against Muslims in history.

The Feast of Our Lady of Victory (also now called Feast of the Holy Rosary) was instituted by the Church on 7 October to commemorate the battle.

Commanders of the Battle of Lepanto:

• Don Juan de Austria, first in command
• Marcantonio Colonna, second in command
• Agostino Barbarigo, left
• Giovanni Andrea Doria, right
• Álvaro de Bazán, rearguard
• Juan de Cardona, vanguard

[Agostino Barbarigo, Venetian commander of the left wing, was shot in the eye by an arrow. He continued to fight, but died of the wound two days later.]

Courtesy of "This is Christian Europe"
https://www.facebook.com/share/1KsHWyD3L5/?mibextid=wwXIfr

29/09/2025

After 12 years of ministry in the Parish of Ballintubber-Ballymoe in the Diocese of Elphin, Fr Pat O'Toole CSSp has retired. Our thanks to Fr Pat for his time amongst us and for an incredible 60 years of priesthood which he celebrated this summer. Ad multos annos, Fr Pat!

11/09/2025

Another date for the diary!

On September 12th, we will join together to celebrate 150 years of the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, Sligo in this Jubilee Year of Hope.

The Second Session of the talk on the Season of Creation: Sowing Seeds of Hope will take place tonight, 8pm at the Paris...
10/09/2025

The Second Session of the talk on the Season of Creation: Sowing Seeds of Hope will take place tonight, 8pm at the Parish Resource Center. All are welcome. 🙏🏼

25/05/2025
17/05/2025

Pope Leo XIV's official portrait has been released

©Vatican Media - All rights reserved

INVITATIONThe Rosary Rally is on today at the Marian Shrine, Boyle at 4pm. 🙏🏼
10/05/2025

INVITATION

The Rosary Rally is on today at the Marian Shrine, Boyle at 4pm. 🙏🏼

PRAYER FOR POPE LEO XIV🙏🏼Lord, source of eternal life and truth, give to your shepherd a spirit of courage and right jud...
08/05/2025

PRAYER FOR POPE LEO XIV🙏🏼

Lord, source of eternal life and truth, give to your shepherd a spirit of courage and right judgment, a spirit of knowledge and love. By governing with fidelity those entrusted to his care, may he, as successor to the Apostle Peter and Vicar of Christ, build your Church into a sacrament of unity, love and peace for all the world. Amen.

In-depth: A look at the man who has become Leo XIVThe Chicago-native former cardinal is an Augustinian and worked for ma...
08/05/2025

In-depth: A look at the man who has become Leo XIV

The Chicago-native former cardinal is an Augustinian and worked for many years in Peru. He has extensive pastoral experience and has worked in the Roman Curia.
It took just 24 hours of conclave for the 133 cardinal electors to choose a successor to Pope Francis. From the Loggia of St. Peter's Basilica in Rome, Cardinal Dominique Mamberti announced the election of American Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost on May 8, 2025. The 267th pope in history took the name Leo XIV.

Announced by Vatican experts as one of the papabili, Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost, 69, was elected in just 24 hours. This is a sign of the cardinals' desire to quickly give the Catholic Church a new leader and demonstrate its unity. He is the first pope from the United States.

Marked by his experience as a missionary in Latin America and discreet with the media, the American Robert Francis Prevost was spotted by Pope Francis to head the powerful dicastery responsible for selecting the world's bishops in 2023. Created cardinal that year, this member of the Order of Saint Augustine has had an unusual career.

An American with immigrant heritage
Born in Chicago on September 14, 1955, Bishop Robert Francis Prevost comes from a family of French, Italian, and Spanish descent. After studying mathematics and philosophy at Villanova University in Philadelphia, he entered the Augustinian novitiate in 1977, where he took his vows four years later.

He was ordained a priest in 1982 in Rome by Archbishop Jean Jadot (1909-2009), then pro-president of the Secretariat for Non-Christians and considered a “progressive” figure within the Curia. This Belgian archbishop was apostolic delegate to the United States from 1973 to 1980, at a time when the nunciature did not yet exist due to the absence of formal diplomatic relations between Washington and the Holy See.

Experience in Peru
Father Robert Francis Prevost obtained a doctorate in canon law from the Angelicum (Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas) in 1987 with a thesis on the role of the local prior of the Order of St. Augustine. While preparing his thesis, he also had his first missionary experience in Peru in 1985-86, as chancellor of the diocese of Chulucanas and vicar of the cathedral.

After returning to his native Illinois for a few months as director of vocations and missions for his province, he returned to Peru in 1988 for 11 years, during which time he held numerous positions in the Archdiocese of Trujillo.

In particular, he founded a parish where he served as the first pastor until 1999, and was also prior of his community, ecclesiastical judge, director of the Augustinian seminary, and prefect of studies and rector of the diocesan seminary, where he taught canon law, patristics, and moral theology.

Elected provincial for his home region covering the American Midwest, he returned to Chicago in 1999. Father Prevost was then elected prior general of the Order of Saint Augustine, a position he held for two six-year terms, from 2001 to 2013. After a year of transition as director of formation at St. Augustine's Convent in Chicago, first counselor and provincial vicar, he was called to the episcopate by Pope Francis in November 2014, thus returning to his former mission country.

A missionary bishop in an unstable Peru
Initially the apostolic administrator of the diocese of Chiclayo, he became diocesan bishop in his own right in September 2015. According to the 2022 edition of the Pontifical Yearbook, this diocese in northern Peru has 90 incardinated priests for a total population of 1.3 million, 83% of whom are Catholic. Bishop Prevost also served as apostolic administrator of the diocese of Callao, the large port on the Pacific coast, from 2020 to 2021.

Within the Peruvian Bishops' Conference, Bishop Prevost served as vice president and member of the permanent council from 2018 to 2023, and as president of the commission for education and culture from 2019 to 2023.

The bishops of Peru played an important role in maintaining institutional stability during the successive political crises that led to the successive overthrows of Presidents Pedro Pablo Kuczynski in 2018, Martín Vizcarra and Manuel Merino in 2020, and Pedro Castillo in 2022.

A few days before his fall and arrest, Castillo, who came from the radical left, was received by the president of the Episcopal Conference and by Bishop Prevost in order to find a peaceful solution “in this very difficult moment in Peruvian democratic life,” as the bishops, who had until then had difficult relations with his administration, emphasized at the time.

Bishop Prevost is therefore well acquainted with the political and social reality of South America. It should be noted that within the Latin American episcopate, nationals of the United States are rare. However, the Peruvian Bishops' Conference has another American member: Bishop Arthur Colgan, a member of the Order of the Holy Cross, who has been auxiliary bishop of Chosica since 2015.

Peru, a relatively small country by Latin American standards but nevertheless twice the size of France, was visited by Pope Francis in January 2018. This trip allowed him to meet and get to know Bishop Prevost, whom he received in a private audience in 2021.

An original missionary profile within the Dicastery for Bishops
Robert Prevost's rise within the Roman Curia has been the subject of speculation for several years, as he became a member of the Dicastery for the Clergy in July 2019 and of the Dicastery for Bishops in November 2020: these discreet appointments can sometimes be a first indication of a future role of responsibility within the Roman Curia.

By effectively succeeding Cardinal Ouellet on April 12, 2023, he became the first missionary bishop outside his country of origin to be appointed head of this strategic dicastery, responsible for selecting bishops for dioceses in countries of “ancient Christianity,” mainly located in the Northern Hemisphere. Bishops from mission lands remain under the jurisdiction of the Dicastery for Evangelization, formerly the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples.

However, bishops from countries in the southern hemisphere have sometimes held the position of prefect of the dicastery for bishops: this was notably the case of Beninese Cardinal Bernardin Gantin from 1984 to 1998, and his successor, Brazilian Cardinal Lucas Moreira Neves, from 1998 to 2000.

During his first years in office, Cardinal Prevost, who remained relatively discreet in the media, was appreciated for his listening skills and his mastery of the issues. A French bishop who met him two months after he took office praised his “judicious questions” and his ability to synthesize, emphasizing that this first contact had left him with a “good impression.”

Criticism of his conduct in an abuse case
His two years at the head of the Augustinian province of Our Lady of Good Counsel (1999-2001) were the subject of fierce criticism in the American press due to a case of sexual abuse of minors involving a member of his congregation. As provincial, Father Prevost had in fact agreed in September 2000 to take in a priest sentenced to nine years' suspension for sexual abuse of minors, Father James Ray, in an Augustinian priory located near a primary school.

For two years, this priest continued to celebrate weddings and baptisms, while also serving as a hospital chaplain. It was not until 2002, with the tightening of rules established by the American episcopate, that this priest was removed from his residence, before being laicized in 2012 after the discovery of new cases implicating him.

In the fall of 2024, he also faced charges of attempting to cover up two cases of pe*****le priests in his former diocese of Chiclayo. The apostolic administrator of this diocese vigorously defended his predecessor, stating that he had indeed forwarded the files to the prosecutor and the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and that his actions were in accordance with both civil and canon law.

More recently, in March 2025, Cardinal Prevost was the target of new attacks, this time from the SNAP (Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests) network. They accuse him of having carried out “actions and omissions intended to interfere with or prevent a civil or canonical, administrative or criminal investigation against certain priests of the diocese of Chiclayo.” A letter sent by this organization to Cardinal Parolin, then Secretary of State of the Holy See, reportedly went unanswered.

As prefect of the Dicastery for Bishops, Cardinal Prevost was tasked with enforcing the rules of Pope Francis' motu proprio Vos estis lux mundi, which can lead to the resignation of bishops found guilty of negligence, cover-up, or mismanagement of abuse cases involving priests under their jurisdiction.

Member of the Synod on Synodality
As a member of the Synod on Synodality, the major project launched by the pope in 2021 to make the Church more inclusive and less clerical, Cardinal Prevost was particularly involved in reflections on the appointment of bishops and their mode of governance.

Speaking to journalists, he didn’t hesitate to say that the process of selecting candidates for the episcopate must be more synodal, i.e., involve priests, religious, and especially laypeople to a greater extent. In his view, nuncios—who are responsible for this task—must reach out to people and parish groups.

Of course, for Cardinal Prevost, a bishop must be a leader. But he cannot be a mere business administrator, as the Church needs pastors who know their people. In an interview with Vatican media in 2023, he nevertheless assured that he did not want the choice of bishops to be the result of a democratic or political process.

His positions on some key issues
In the same vein, in early 2024, he was among the bishops of the Curia who blocked the German Synod's “Synodal Council” project, a structure intended to allow democratically elected lay representatives to participate fully in the governance of the Catholic Church in Germany.

On the question of the role of women in the governance of the Church, the American cardinal followed Pope Francis' line by ruling out a priori the possibility of ordaining women deacons, a decision that would ultimately risk “clericalizing” women.

Cardinal Prevost did, however, argue for giving women more prominence, particularly in positions of responsibility. His dicastery underwent a minor revolution under Pope Francis; three women now are members of it, including French nun Yvonne Reungoat.

Relatively discreet during the fall 2023 assembly, Cardinal Prevost emerged as one of the most visible figures of the second synodal assembly in 2024. In particular, he emphasized the importance of joint training for bishops from dioceses in the northern hemisphere and those from so-called “mission” dioceses.

He also called for a better articulation of the link between Rome and the local churches, and for the selection of new bishops to be broadened by consulting the people of God.

source : https://aleteia.org/2025/05/08/in-depth-a-look-at-the-man-who-has-become-leo-xiv?fbclid=IwY2xjawKJ6L5leHRuA2FlbQIxMQBicmlkETFpcmFFUndNM2NFTkN1NXdvAR74_qT3bYnlaNr0iP-7cMpMSTfhFTa0dsTqZ8uoaAIweuPYVzxtYa4JBO8mgg_aem_xlNSw_HE8FVz0CrlqXjnAw

28/04/2025

Bishop Kevin dropped in this evening to St Mary’s Church, Gortaganny, taking Fr Glenn Alipoyo by surprise, just as Mass was ending. It was a lovely opportunity to greet the parishioners, to say thank you to Fr Glenn and to wish him well as he prepares to return during the coming week to his home Diocese.

Picture: Fr. Glenn, Georgina (Chairperson of Loughglynn, Gortaganny and Lisacul PPC), with Bishop Kevin

26/04/2025

Mass for Pope Francis - St Anne’s Church, Sligo - 25th April 2025
Homily of Bishop Kevin

This evening, as we gather to give thanks for the life of Pope Francis and to commend him to God’s mercy, our Scripture readings, very appropriately speak to us of Resurrection.

I am not an expert on jazz music, but there is one piece that I always loved, which is associated with the English clarinetist, Acker Bilk. It’s called “Stranger of the Shore”. I never knew they lyrics, but I am often reminded of it when I hear the Gospel reading from St. John which we have had this evening.

Imagine the scene. The disciples of Jesus are back fishing on the Sea of Galilee, where their journey of discipleship first began. In the light of the early morning, as they come back to land, they see a stranger on the shore. Peter recognises him and shouts to the others “It is the Lord”. He invites them to bring some of the fish and to “come and have breakfast”. Gradually it dawns on them that Jesus who died is Risen. Jesus remains alive and present in the Church today in a variety of ways; in his Word; in his Body and Blood; in the working of his Spirit and in the community of faith which is His Body. This is our faith, and this was the faith of Pope Francis, a faith which was evident throughout his ministry, and which takes on a particular and very personal meaning in his final message on Easter Sunday, just hours before he died.

In 2013, when Pope Benedict resigned and during the time of the Conclave, I was in South Africa, helping in a parish near Durban. I remember thinking, “how far away Rome seems from here”. I realised that, for many Catholics in the world, Rome seemed distant. But then, the night before I returned home, Pope Francis was elected. He had been, as he said himself, called from the “ends of the earth”. For many of us who had never heard of him, he was indeed a “Stranger on the Shore”, and he was to be the Vicar of Christ, the visible sign of Jesus and a sign of unity in the Church. He has carried out that mission with humility, energy and courage. He brought the ministry of the Pope very close to people and, in him, Rome seemed somehow closer.

In his final message to the City and the the World (Urbi et Orbi), Francis revisited many of the key themes of his Pontificate, which had been at the heart of all his preaching and his action; care for the poor, the prisoners and all who find themselves on the margins; respect for life at ever stage; an end to violence and the beginning of lasting peace built on respectful dialogue. He mentioned individually and prayed for all the nations and peoples who are suffering as a result of war.

When Francis spoke of the importance of dialogue, I don’t think he imagined that people would always reach agreement. He did believe, however, that if speak honestly and listen respectfully to one another, we begin to understand one another and to reach a deeper unity, even in diversity. That is the heart of Synodality. He modelled that straight talking and respectful listening in his own ministry. I have experienced it in some of the meetings with him in which I participated with other Bishops. I think it is an example from which we can all usefully learn, for our life in family, in parish and in the workplace.

Let me finish by saying that, from our own experience of funerals, there are a few things that we will know instinctively and understand. Firstly, the family of the deceased needs our support not just at the time of the funeral, but in the weeks and months that follow. In the same way our prayerful support for the family of the Church is vitally important, not just now at the time of Francis’ funeral, but in the weeks ahead as the Cardinals choose a new Pope, and in the months ahead, for whoever they choose.

The second thing we know is that, when someone close to us dies, we reschedule things and people understand. There will be deep disappointment for many pilgrims travelling to Rome this week for the Canonisation of Blessed Carlo Acutis. But I think they will understand why it would not have been possible this weekend. The consolation for them may be that they will, instead, be part of a moment of great spiritual and historical significance in the life of the Church. Soon, please God, the canonisation will go ahead, and of course Carlo is young; he has time on his side.

Gid bless you all and thank you for coming.

Address

Carrick Road
Boyle

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 7pm
Tuesday 10am - 7pm
Wednesday 10am - 7pm
Thursday 10am - 7pm
Friday 10am - 7:30pm
Saturday 10am - 7:30pm
Sunday 9:30am - 7pm

Telephone

+353868262643

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