A recent family visit to Toronto offered a welcome opportunity to experience the celebration of Mass in a truly cosmopolitan and culturally diverse setting. Canada, like every nation, faces serious challenges, and the behaviour of its closest neighbour does not always make life easier. Yet Canada remains a striking example of how an extraordinary diversity of cultures can live, work, and worship together in relative harmony.
Dóchas nua
Musings on the journey Dóchas Nua = New Hope. "Never forget that what you are doing is meant to benefit all of us. Be generous in sharing what you learn and what you experience, as best you can and however you can. Do not hesitate to share the joy and the amazement born of your contemplation of the ‘seeds’ that, in the words of Saint Augustine, God has sown in the harmony of the universe.” - Pope Leo XIV {Email to tomasohealai@gmail.com to subscribe for weekly updates}
Sunday, 12 April 2026
Saturday, 11 April 2026
Who presides?
Who presides at the
Eucharist? Jesus Christ does.
This is the central truth we must never lose sight of. The ordained minister acts in persona Christi—in the person of Christ, on His behalf, and also in Him and through Him. This can be difficult to accept when some ministers have gravely violated their vows and caused deep harm. But their crimes must never be confused with the sacramental action they perform. Christ is the true presider, and His work is not undone by human sin.
Friday, 10 April 2026
In the name of all creation
All of creation is
suffering serious harm because of human greed and disordered behaviour, greatly
aggravated by wars, repression, and the misuse of the gifts God has entrusted
to us (refer to Laudato
Si). Creation is a gift, and we are part of it. If creation “groans” as
Saint Paul writes in his Letter to the Romans (8:22), then we, too, “groan
inwardly while we wait for adoption, the redemption of our bodies” (8:23). Our
time on earth is limited, and the older we grow the closer we come to that
moment when creation itself “will be set free from its bondage to decay and
will obtain the freedom of the glory of the children of God” (8:21).
The late Pope Francis captures the intimate bond between creation and the Eucharist in Laudato Si:
Faith and doubt - a human dialogue
2nd Sunday of Easter - Sunday 12 April 2026
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Meditatio:
‘ Blessed are those who have not seen and yet
have come to believe.’ (John 20:29)
To have faith is to trust and to entrust. It means taking a step, sometimes a leap, without full certainty. Faith does not require doubt, yet because we are limited creatures, doubt often accompanies the journey. In trusting, we hand our doubts to God, and God receives them. Simple? Yes and no. Life is rarely clear‑cut, and questions press in on every side.
Thursday, 9 April 2026
A second century celebration of the Mass
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Throughout the Easter
season we repeatedly hear Gospel accounts of the Risen Jesus sharing meals with
his disciples. On the road to Emmaus, for example, we read that Jesus “took
bread, blessed and broke it, and gave it to them” (Luke 24:13–35). The evangelists
clearly intend us to recognise in these moments the early Eucharistic life of
the Christian community.
A century later, Saint Justin Martyr—born in Flavia Neapolis (modern‑day Nablus, north of Jerusalem) around the turn of the first century and martyred in Rome about AD 165—gives us one of the earliest detailed descriptions of how the Eucharist was celebrated following baptism (First Apology, 65–67). He explains that:
Wednesday, 8 April 2026
Silence and listening
How might our parish churches look like in 2050 #6
It seems to me that people hunger, thirst, and cry out inwardly simply to be heard — by someone, anyone, at some moment, in some way. A lack of opportunity, space, or means to be listened to lies at the heart of many personal and societal wounds. We carry so much within us, and often we do not even know the half of it.
Tuesday, 7 April 2026
The new passover
Jesus and the Jewish roots of the Eucharist #4
Picking up again on the Jewish roots of the Christian
Eucharist the author, Brant Pitre, draws together several themes that have echoed through
the Easter Triduum:
- The once‑for‑all sacrifice of Jesus on Good Friday – the true Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world.
- The meal of the Last Supper, where Jesus gives his Body and Blood “for you and for many.”
- The proclamation of a new covenant, sealed in Christ’s blood.
- The liberation of God’s people on the night of the Pasch or Passover.
- The real presence of God among His people, made sacramentally present in the Eucharist.




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