Bishop Kenneth Kearon raises the school’s fifth green flag at Rathkeale No 2 National School
Rathkeale and Kilnaughtin Group of Parishes
Rathkeale, Askeaton, Kilcornan and Kilnaughtin
Priest-in-Charge: Revd Canon Patrick Comerford
The Rectory, Askeaton, Co Limerick.
Sunday Services in September:
3 September: 9.30, Saint Mary’s Church, Askeaton (Holy Communion); 11.30, Saint Brendan’s Church, Kilnaughtin (Morning Prayer).
10 September: 9.30, Castletown Church, Kilcornan, Pallaskenry (Holy Communion); 11.30, Holy Trinity Church, Rathkeale (Morning Prayer).
17 September: 9.30, Saint Mary’s Church, Askeaton (Morning Prayer); 11.30, Saint Brendan’s Church, Kilnaughtin (Holy Communion).
24 September: 9.30, Castletown (Morning Prayer); 11.30, Holy Trinity, Rathkeale (Holy Communion).
Harvest Thanksgiving Services:
Canon Patrick Comerford has been invited to preach at the Harvest Service in Ballingrane Methodist Church on Monday 9 October. The Harvest Thanksgiving Service in the Group of Parishes takes place in Saint Mary’s Church, Askeaton on Friday 6 October at 8 p.m.
Flag raising at school:
The end of year service for Rathkeale No 2 National School took place in Holy Trinity Church, Rathkeale, on 20 July. Bishop Kenneth Kearon preached at the service and handed out the prizes.
Earlier in the morning, Bishop Kenneth raised the school’s fifth Green flag – a true achievement for the school. The school Board of Management meets again on 25 September.
Holy Baptism:
Louis Simon Serge, son of Elizabeth Patricia (Ebie) Delbarry (née White) and Emanuel Vincent Delbarry was baptised in Saint Mary’s Church, Askeaton, on Sunday 23 July 2017. The sponsors were Joris Clément Delbarry and Nicola Catherine White. Louis is a grandson of Hilary and Simon White of Nantenan.
Louis Simon Serge Delbarry is baptised in Saint Mary’s Church, Askeaton
Summer barbeque:
After the open-air service at the Rectory on Sunday 30 July, over 50 people enjoyed a summer barbeque in the Rectory garden. This was a united service for the Group of Parishes, and the afternoon was marked with a good sense of fun and community. Thanks to all who brought food, set up the gazebo and who were involved in the catering. The generous collection has allowed the parish to make a generous donation to groups working with suicide awareness on the River Shannon.
The open-air service at Saint Mary’s, Askeaton, marked the end of summer
Tarbert anniversary
A number of parishioners took part in the annual commemorative service in Tarbert recalling the Shannon Boating Tragedy on 15 August 1893. A party of young people from Tarbert – 10 men and seven women with an average age of 24 – were drowned in what remains the biggest loss of life on the lower River Shannon. Four of the dead were Church of Ireland parishioners. Canon Patrick Comerford delivered a short reflection and led the prayers.
Irish Palatine Weekend:
The Irish Palatine Weekend was held place in Rathkeale on 25-28 August in affiliation with Heritage Week. On Saturday morning, Canon Patrick Comerford spoke in the Rathkeale House Hotel on ‘Sir Thomas Southwell (1665-1720), 1st Baron Southwell of Castle Matress in Co Limerick: the first protector of the Palatines and his family.’ On Sunday morning, many of the conference delegates were present at the Parish Eucharist in Holy Trinity Church, Rathkeale.
Recent visitors:
Recent visitors to the parish included the Revd Abigail Sines, Dean’s Vicar, Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin. Please pray for Abi and Karl Tyrrell as they prepare for their wedding on 3 November.
Thanks to Colonel Edward Buckingham, Mrs Raylene Downes, and the Revd Joe Hardy, who took services in the group of parishes during the recent holiday periods.
These parish notes were published in September 2017 in ‘Newslink,’ the Magazine of the Church of Ireland United Dioceses of Limerick, Killaloe and Ardfert
05 September 2017
The Precentor joins the bell ringers
at sunset in Saint Mary’s Cathedral
Sunset on the River Shannon seen from the tower of Saint Mary’s Cathedral, Limerick, last night (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2017; click on image for full-screen view)
Patrick Comerford
In Anglican cathedrals, the precentor is often the canon or chapter member who is in charge of preparing liturgy, worship and music.
Most Anglican cathedrals have a precentor in charge of the organisation of liturgy and worship. The precentor of a cathedral is usually a residentiary canon or prebendary, and may be assisted by a succentor, particularly in the daily task of leading choral singing.
In some cathedrals, including Canterbury and also in Westminster Abbey, the Precentor is a minor canon, and therefore part of the foundation but not a member of the chapter.
Traditionally, the Precentor’s stall in an Anglican cathedral is on the opposite side of the Quire than that of the Dean, leading to the traditional division of the singers into Decani (the Dean’s side) and Cantoris (the Precentor’s side).
As bell-ringers call people to worship in a cathedral and to join in the Liturgy, I felt privileged as Precentor of Saint Mary’s Cathedral, Limerick, to be invited by Kieron Brislane and the bell-ringers to join them at their rehearsals last night [4 September 2017].
With bell-ringers in the tower of Saint Mary’s Cathedral, Limerick, last night (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2017)
There was a warm welcome from Mike Pomeroy, the captain of the bell-ringers, and his colleagues in the 14th century tower of Saint Mary’s Cathedral, which rises to 36.58 meters (120 ft), immediately above the west door of the cathedral.
I climbed to the top before last night’s rehearsals to catch the sunset to the west of the tower and the panoramic views across the city and the River Shannon.
The cathedral tower is older than the few buildings in Limerick City that may be taller. But then it is not possible to climb the spire of Saint John’s Cathedral, and booking a room in some of the high-rise hotels along the banks of the River Shannon would not necessarily guarantee the view that I had from the top of the tower at Saint Mary’s Cathedral last night.
Bells in the tower of Saint Mary’s Cathedral, Limerick (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2017)
The first reference to the cathedral bells is found in 1401, when John Budston or Buston was the Bailiff of Limerick and gave a gift of four brass bells to the cathedral to celebrate the marriage of his daughter Margaret to Peter Arthur.
The next reference to cathedral bells dates from the 17th century, when William Yorke presented six bells to Saint Mary’s. Yorke also financed the building of the Exchange on Nicholas Street, and was mayor of Limerick on many occasions in the 1670s.
Yorke’s peal of six bells was first rung in March 1674. In 1703, two more bells were added by Tobias and Edward Covey, eight bells rang out in 1712 to welcome James Butler, Duke of Ormond, to Limerick as the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.
The fifth and sixth bells, cast by T Mears of London in 1829, are now the oldest bells in the tower. But by the late 19th century, the bells and frame had fallen into disrepair, and the full tone of the bells was not heard across the city for three decades.
However, a public appeal was launched to restore the bells and they rang out once more on 22 December 1906, with the help of ringers from the Redemptorist church at Mount Saint Alphonsus, once again that Christmas Eve.
When the fourth bell became defective, a new bell was cast by John Taylor and Co of Loughborough, thanks to the generosity of Everard Hewson of Castle Hewson, Askeaton.
The third bell was recast at Taylors in Loughborough in 1927, at the expense of Sir Alec Shaw. Meanwhile. Everard Hewson continued to contribute generously to the upkeep of the bells and paid for recasting the eighth (tenor) bell in 1930.
A view across the River Shannon from the tower of Saint Mary’s Cathedral, Limerick, including Thomond Park and King John’s Castle (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2017; click on image for full-screen image)
On the other hand, there is a local legend in Limerick that says the cathedral bells in Saint Mary’s were originally brought from Italy. They had been made by a young Italian, whose finished them after many years of toil in Florence, and he prided himself on his work. The bells were subsequently bought by the Prior of a monastery on the shores of Lake Como, and with the money the young man was able to buy a small villa, where he had the pleasure of listening to the chiming of his bells from the lakeside cliff and growing into old age in the joys of domestic happiness.
However, war and civil disturbances put an end to his idyllic retirement, and he lost family, home and friends. The monastery was razed to the ground, and the bells were carried away to a foreign land.
After years of wandering forlorn, he sailed to Ireland, and his ship anchored near Limerick, in sight of Saint Mary’s Cathedral and the tower.
Thomond Park and King John’s Castle seen from the tower of Saint Mary’s Cathedral, Limerick, last night (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2017; click on image for full-screen view)
The evening was calm and beautiful, and reminded him of his own home in Italy. As he heard a bell ring from the cathedral tower. As the bless chimed from the tower the rowers ceased rowing to pray, and the boat went slowly forward from the impulse it had received.
The old Italian crossed his arms and looked fondly towards the city and the cathedral. When the rowers looked round his face was still turned towards the Cathedral. But his eyes were closed, and he had died.
They realised the weak old man had discovered his long-lost tolls, and had died in the joy of hearing them peal once again.
Sunset seen from the tower of Saint Mary’s Cathedral, Limerick, last night (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2017; click on image for full-screen view)
Patrick Comerford
In Anglican cathedrals, the precentor is often the canon or chapter member who is in charge of preparing liturgy, worship and music.
Most Anglican cathedrals have a precentor in charge of the organisation of liturgy and worship. The precentor of a cathedral is usually a residentiary canon or prebendary, and may be assisted by a succentor, particularly in the daily task of leading choral singing.
In some cathedrals, including Canterbury and also in Westminster Abbey, the Precentor is a minor canon, and therefore part of the foundation but not a member of the chapter.
Traditionally, the Precentor’s stall in an Anglican cathedral is on the opposite side of the Quire than that of the Dean, leading to the traditional division of the singers into Decani (the Dean’s side) and Cantoris (the Precentor’s side).
As bell-ringers call people to worship in a cathedral and to join in the Liturgy, I felt privileged as Precentor of Saint Mary’s Cathedral, Limerick, to be invited by Kieron Brislane and the bell-ringers to join them at their rehearsals last night [4 September 2017].
With bell-ringers in the tower of Saint Mary’s Cathedral, Limerick, last night (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2017)
There was a warm welcome from Mike Pomeroy, the captain of the bell-ringers, and his colleagues in the 14th century tower of Saint Mary’s Cathedral, which rises to 36.58 meters (120 ft), immediately above the west door of the cathedral.
I climbed to the top before last night’s rehearsals to catch the sunset to the west of the tower and the panoramic views across the city and the River Shannon.
The cathedral tower is older than the few buildings in Limerick City that may be taller. But then it is not possible to climb the spire of Saint John’s Cathedral, and booking a room in some of the high-rise hotels along the banks of the River Shannon would not necessarily guarantee the view that I had from the top of the tower at Saint Mary’s Cathedral last night.
Bells in the tower of Saint Mary’s Cathedral, Limerick (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2017)
The first reference to the cathedral bells is found in 1401, when John Budston or Buston was the Bailiff of Limerick and gave a gift of four brass bells to the cathedral to celebrate the marriage of his daughter Margaret to Peter Arthur.
The next reference to cathedral bells dates from the 17th century, when William Yorke presented six bells to Saint Mary’s. Yorke also financed the building of the Exchange on Nicholas Street, and was mayor of Limerick on many occasions in the 1670s.
Yorke’s peal of six bells was first rung in March 1674. In 1703, two more bells were added by Tobias and Edward Covey, eight bells rang out in 1712 to welcome James Butler, Duke of Ormond, to Limerick as the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.
The fifth and sixth bells, cast by T Mears of London in 1829, are now the oldest bells in the tower. But by the late 19th century, the bells and frame had fallen into disrepair, and the full tone of the bells was not heard across the city for three decades.
However, a public appeal was launched to restore the bells and they rang out once more on 22 December 1906, with the help of ringers from the Redemptorist church at Mount Saint Alphonsus, once again that Christmas Eve.
When the fourth bell became defective, a new bell was cast by John Taylor and Co of Loughborough, thanks to the generosity of Everard Hewson of Castle Hewson, Askeaton.
The third bell was recast at Taylors in Loughborough in 1927, at the expense of Sir Alec Shaw. Meanwhile. Everard Hewson continued to contribute generously to the upkeep of the bells and paid for recasting the eighth (tenor) bell in 1930.
A view across the River Shannon from the tower of Saint Mary’s Cathedral, Limerick, including Thomond Park and King John’s Castle (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2017; click on image for full-screen image)
On the other hand, there is a local legend in Limerick that says the cathedral bells in Saint Mary’s were originally brought from Italy. They had been made by a young Italian, whose finished them after many years of toil in Florence, and he prided himself on his work. The bells were subsequently bought by the Prior of a monastery on the shores of Lake Como, and with the money the young man was able to buy a small villa, where he had the pleasure of listening to the chiming of his bells from the lakeside cliff and growing into old age in the joys of domestic happiness.
However, war and civil disturbances put an end to his idyllic retirement, and he lost family, home and friends. The monastery was razed to the ground, and the bells were carried away to a foreign land.
After years of wandering forlorn, he sailed to Ireland, and his ship anchored near Limerick, in sight of Saint Mary’s Cathedral and the tower.
Thomond Park and King John’s Castle seen from the tower of Saint Mary’s Cathedral, Limerick, last night (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2017; click on image for full-screen view)
The evening was calm and beautiful, and reminded him of his own home in Italy. As he heard a bell ring from the cathedral tower. As the bless chimed from the tower the rowers ceased rowing to pray, and the boat went slowly forward from the impulse it had received.
The old Italian crossed his arms and looked fondly towards the city and the cathedral. When the rowers looked round his face was still turned towards the Cathedral. But his eyes were closed, and he had died.
They realised the weak old man had discovered his long-lost tolls, and had died in the joy of hearing them peal once again.
Sunset seen from the tower of Saint Mary’s Cathedral, Limerick, last night (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2017; click on image for full-screen view)
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