Message from Fr Paul for Monday 27th August

Message from Fr Paul for Monday, 28th August 2023
Yesterday was my last Sunday serving as parish priest of Belmont. It was lovely to celebrate the three parish Masses and a Baptism before joining parishioners at the annual parish BBQ. The food was delicious and the company great fun. The Lord was good to us and, after a doubtful beginning, the wind blew the clouds away and the sun came out. Everything was beautifully organised, as Belmont events always are by an amazing team, and I was delighted to receive two magnificent orchids, which I shall treasure, together with the written greetings of many parishioners. Do pray for Fr Augustine as he takes over, that he will be blessed is everyway as Belmont’s new parish priest. I will continue to write these daily messages, as best I can. The content is bound to vary as soon I shall take on the pastoral care of the parishes of Bromyard and Leominster and get to know the northern half of the county. Life is full of surprises and I look forward to that continuing.
Our Gospel for today, taken from Matthew, (Mt 23: 13-22), sees Jesus criticising the scribes and Pharisees for their hypocrisy and lack of integrity. They are the very antithesis of Jesus and what he has come on earth to do. Whereas in Christ God has stretched out his hand to his children and to the whole of creation, offering forgiveness and salvation through his sacrifice on the cross, laying down his own life and shedding his own blood in our stead, what do the scribes and Pharisees offer to help those who have no alternative than to follow them? This is what Jesus says, “Alas for you, scribes and Pharisees, you hypocrites! You who shut up the kingdom of heaven in men’s faces, neither going in yourselves nor allowing others to go in who want to.”
His words get even stronger. “Alas for you, scribes and Pharisees, you hypocrites! You who travel over sea and land to make a single proselyte, and when you have him, you make him twice as fit for hell as you are.” The reading continues, but I’ll stop here. It’s important for the Church and those who follow in the footsteps of Christ as his ministers always to remember these words of Jesus to the scribes and Pharisees, lest we become like them! We have been called by Jesus to help others, indeed to save them, not by making things more difficult for them, but by helping to carry their burdens and encouraging them to turn to God for help. We are here to save souls, as we used to say, not to lose them.






