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Dear Parents,
We are thrilled to unveil an exciting addition to our school community: our Catholic Reflection Garden. This contemplative space is a resource for both our students and teachers, offering a multitude of benefits that enhance spiritual and educational growth.
What is the Catholic Reflection Garden?
Placed outside the front of our new Stage 2 building, the Catholic Reflection Garden is designed as a space where students and staff can pause, reflect, and connect with their faith. This carefully crafted outdoor space incorporates 17 tiles of images of Jesus Life. Each tile has an individual scriptural background and reflection. The tiles were made and kindly donated to the school by a former parishioner Ms Rosmarie Lennox.
We encourage parents to explore the Catholic Reflection Garden during school drop off and pick up times and thank you for your support and commitment to our school’s Catholic ethos.
Congratulations Ms Braun
Congratulations to Rachel Braun and her partner Matt who got engaged over the school holidays. We wish them well during this exciting time in their lives.
Baby News!
A big Congratulations to Meg and Jesse Cribbes on the safe arrival of Bobbie Anne Cribbes born on Sunday 7th. Meg and little Bobbie are both doing well.
Blessing & Opening
We would like to invite our school community to the official Blessing and Opening of our Stage 2 Classroom Building. Please see invite with details below;
Reflection With Deacon Mark Kelly | Not Doing - Resting!
Parents empathise with Jesus’ predicament in this gospel from Mark (Mark 6:30-34). Murphy’s law applies that when parents are exhausted and all they want is rest, their children make demands on them. Parents rise to the occasion, as Jesus does when the people want more. Nevertheless, he and we need rest.
Rest is a good thing! It is not laziness. Hopefully we all have purpose in our lives and spend much time and effort pursuing that: studying, exploring, parenting, making a living and compassionately outreaching to the world.
Our value though is inherent in us, not a function of what or how much we do. We “do” in response to the needs we prayerfully discern when we spend quiet, reflective time with God. Recharging our batteries.
God already knows us intimately and isn’t impressed by our crushing workload, our imposing titles, or our remarkable achievements in work and play. Astoundingly, what God wants is quality time with us. Quality time in 2024 might mean no devices or media – even for a whole day (horror of horrors!), alone with none but our God. If this sounds difficult (as it does for me) then you probably really need it!
Deep within we crave this time of stepping aside from all our tasks and activities, into a quiet place, quietening our minds, allowing Jesus to nourish us with his life-giving word. Perhaps (and parents know this well) a total rest day is an unattainable luxury at present. Then we need to find other ways and strategies. To build in an early morning and/or a late evening time of prayer and quiet reflection on the day to come [or the day past] and our place in it with God.
Deacon Mark Kelly