MacKa Moments for Lent

Photo by Aaron Burden.

MacKa Moments (MacKa short for Mary MacKillop) are short, candid videos about moments in Mary MacKillop’s life by Sr Rita Malavisi.

For the season of Lent, Sr Rita will create and share MacKa Moments and release them weekly.

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Reporting on the Vagaries of Life

Founders of the Sisters of Saint Joseph, Mary MacKillop and Father Julian Tenison Woods.

Report cards have always been a source of consternation for teachers, parents, and students of all ages.

People familiar with Mary MacKillop’s Portland story would remember the furore that arose from the efforts of Mr Cusack to impress the school inspector with some clever behind the scenes prompting and a quick switch of the more able students from Mary’s and Mary’s sister Annie’s classes. All to no avail when his deceit was uncovered. Strangely enough when Mary’s father Alexander exposed his folly loudly and vociferously through the local paper, the consequences fell down on Mary’s shoulders.

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Continual Good Light

Photo by Shutterstock.

Recently, my brain has lit up like a lightbulb through counselling study, and the latest New Zealand Catholic Bishops Conference (NZCBC) and National Centre for Religious Studies (NCRS) documents. It has been fascinating to define sexuality, and it’s led me to reflect…

How does it link with Christianity and Saint Mary MacKillop?

Why is understanding sexuality important?

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Alexander MacKillop – Father of Mary MacKillop

Grave of Alexander MacKillop in Hamilton, Victoria.

Mary MacKillop’s father Alexander MacKillop was born in the Lochaber district of Scotland in 1812. He died in Hamilton, Victoria (VIC) on 19 December 1868 and is buried there.

Alexander had studied for the priesthood in Rome and for a short time in his homeland in Scotland. However, as he said, “it was not God’s will that I be a priest”, and so in 1838 he migrated to Australia to start a new life.

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Remembering the Beatification of Mary MacKillop

Beatification Ceremony at Randwick Racecourse.

The Beatification of Mary MacKillop was a historical time for Australians. The naming of a saint born and raised in Australia brought great joy, not only to Catholics, but to many others who had come to know and admire her.

Weatherwise, 19 January 1995 was grey, threatening to rain. In contrast, the prevailing atmosphere was one of pure happiness. You felt it everywhere! This positive atmosphere had also been at the magnificent vigil-concert/display at the Sydney Domain the evening before.

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Mary MacKillop’s Cross from the Beginning

Stone located at the birthplace of Mary MacKillop in Melbourne.

We celebrate the birth of Australia’s first canonised saint and co-founder of the Sisters of Saint Joseph, Mary MacKillop, who was born on 15 January 1842.

Mary MacKillop’s whole life, almost from the time of her conception to her death, was overshadowed by the Cross. Father Geoghegan, priest at St. Francis’ Catholic Church, Melbourne, gave her mother Flora a relic of the Cross said to have been found by Helen, mother of the Emperor Constantine, to wear until her child was born. She would have explained to her daughter the significance of the Cross she had worn day by day during her pregnancy.

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Mary MacKillop and Advent

Mary MacKillop statue at St Francis’ Church in Melbourne VIC.

During a recent trip to Melbourne, I attended Mass at St Francis’ Church in the city. This is a special church as it is Victoria’s oldest Catholic Church, where Mary MacKillop’s parents were married, and where Mary had the sacraments of Baptism, Confirmation, and First Holy Communion.

Visiting St Francis’ Church, which was a significant church in the life of Mary MacKillop and attending Mass there on the first Sunday of Advent, inspired me to reflect on the season of Advent and how it relates to Mary MacKillop.

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In the Footsteps of Mary MacKillop 2022

Pilgrims at the Mary MacKillop Heritage Centre, East Melbourne, Victoria.
Pilgrims at the Mary MacKillop Heritage Centre, East Melbourne.
Pilgrims at St Joseph's Schoolhouse in Penola, South Australia.
Pilgrims at the Mary MacKillop Museum in Kensington, South Australia.
Fr Julian Tenison Woods' grave at Waverley Cemetery, New South Wales.
Tomb of St Mary MacKillop in North Sydney, New South Wales.

There is a quote on Mary MacKillop’s tomb which reads, “We are but travellers here”. Mary was very aware of life as a journey, made up of many smaller journeys, both actual and metaphorical.

The one great journey is that of moving toward the fullness of our relationship with God, which we call ‘heaven’. The Australian National Pilgrimage: In the Footsteps of Mary MacKillop is one of these smaller journeys.

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