This is Fountainstown a very popular beach in Co.Cork. It is a coastal village situated about  23 km south of Cork. The beach is famous for swimmers who regularly go for their swim from early until late. It was looking so well on Saturday in lovely Autumn sunshine.

Mindful Quote💕: “Nature does not hurry, yet everything is accomplished.” ~ Lao Tzu

Mindful Prayer🙏: Loving God, I am sometimes in a hurry. I can learn a lot from nature where there is no rush. Slow me down enough to appreciate that all will be ok and all will get done.

Videos🎥
https://youtu.be/Nd_8VCSCkWQ?si=fRc0_FJPPhW5jQIN

 

Spiritual Thought For The Week🙏

Next Thursday September 25th is the feast of St. Finbarr. He is the patron saint of Cork and has very close ties with Gougane Barra in West Cork. The world that Finbarr lived in was radically different to the one we live in now. The world back then was much less complicated, life was lived simply with fewer distractions. But they too had their challenges and difficulties. Finbarr believed strongly that God was the one who gave us hope and strength to get us through everything. This was the message that he brought from Gougane Barra to the people of Cork and beyond. His message is still so relevant today.

Psalm 86 echoes a very similar expression of God. It puts before us an alternative to hopelessness. The psalm reminds us that God is kind and full of compassion. We are told that the God we follow, ‘Abounds in love’. If you translate the word ‘abound’, the dictionary says, ‘full of’, ‘overflowing with’, ‘teeming with’ or ‘alive with’. The writer of this psalm adds the word ‘love’. This then translates beautifully in the Psalm as ‘full of love’, overflowing with love’, ‘teeming with love’, ‘alive with love’. To say that God is ‘alive with love’ is such a beautiful description of God.

It means that God is with us right now and with us through everything that is going on in our lives – not last week or next week, but alive in the moment that is now. The spirituality of St. Finbarr makes a lot of sense today.  It is not some old outdated notion of God but is still so relevant for the world we live in today and for our own personal lives too.

Thought For The Week is updated each Monday