Encourager

Encourager Autumn March 2022

With Easter just around the corner my mind is drawn towards my favourite Easter exclamation, “We are an Easter people and ALLELUIA is our song!” As I reflect on this, specifically for my first Encourager article, it has got me asking myself what would be our Cursillo version of this? I think it might be “We are a fourth day peo-ple and De Colores is our song!”

De Colores is believed to have been around since the 1500s and, throughout the Spanish speaking world it is often used at rallies. It has a catchy tune, with child-like farm animal lyrics and yet contains the profound idea that for all our differences, be they the different colours of a rainbow or animals in the farmyard, we collec-tively come together as a perfect whole.

This child-like song, with a profound Christian ideal, reminds me of Matthew 18:3 “Truly I tell you, unless you change and become like children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.” Children need to rely totally on their parents for everything, the older you become the more self-reliant and somewhat jaded you be-come.

De Colores can revive that spark of childhood enthusiasm for our faith. A faith that, at its core, calls us to rely on God for our good and our future. De Colores also calls us into a community of acceptance, all the colours, all the barnyard animals come together to form the perfect whole.
We are also a fourth day people. It is definitely not that Cursillistas are better Christians than those who have-n’t been to Cursillo, but the experience often awakens in the Cursillista the understanding that the Christian life calls on us to use our gifts as a member of God’s family. All these gifts individually are like a colour or a farmyard animal. By themselves they are good and useful, but together they are spectacular.

In the 1990s the word synergy became popular. It means that our combined efforts are greater than the sum of our separate efforts. I know this sounds like an illogical math equation but together in our Christian com-munity we can inspire creative ideas, energize each other, and do more than we might have thought possible.

The Cursillo weekend is the perfect example of this happening Though a lot of hard effort goes into these weekends (I write this in the middle of preparing for Men’s 49) the weekend itself is one full of energy, fun, learning, and God’s spirit.
We must remember that this is the community energy we bring back into our Group Reunions, Ultreyas, and parish life. All we do is a blending of our individual gifts, com-bined team work, and the Spirit of God. We are a Fourth Day people and De Colores is our Song.

Fr Mark Cooper 

Bishop Greg Thompson Writes

Bishop Greg

Bishop Greg

I experienced Cursillo in 2009 and found the encouragement and fellowship a profound blessing to me.

It has been a source of building community and faith in the Northern Territory Anglican parishes with the diverse cultural and literacy background of its peoples.

I look forward to sharing the journey with Newcastle cursillistas as your Bishop and fellow pilgrim. We need to be open to the Spirit deepening our faith and community that Cursillo affords whatever the season of faith and life that people find themselves in.

Every blessing

+Greg

Encourager

The Encourager Spring/Summer 2013

EncouragerDear brothers and sisters in Christ, Recently on Father’s Day, my children gave me the DVD “Cliffy”, a story about the 61 year old Victorian potato farmer who won the Sydney to Melbourne Ultra-marathon. In preparing for the race he had to try and manage to get his distance per day up to something like 125km. I don’t know about you, but I think the greatest distance I have ever run has been about 13km, in the Senior Cross Country, when I was at school. It was completely exhausting! I can’t even imagine what it must be like to run 125km in a day, not to mention the whole 862km, as it was then to Melbourne. It makes one weary to even think about it!

At around the same time I have also been reading a book by that title, “Weary” which is a biography of the life of Sir Edward Dunlop. As a Prisoner of War in WWII, first in Java and then on the Thai-Burma railway, his race was of a different nature. It was a race to stay alive and keep others alive. As he battled as a doctor amongst his troops with cholera, vitamin deficiency, malaria, not to mention the wounds inflicted by both harsh conditions and an often intolerant captive force with very slim supplies is an amazing story. It is a very detailed account of those times, and so takes quite a bit of getting into, but very well worth the effort.

Why am I raising these little snippets of ‘running the race’ you may well ask? To answer that is to realise that all of us in one way or another are involved in a race. The analogy of using a race to describe life is often a very apt one. There are often many priorities, busy lifestyles, urgent action that requires our attention etc. How important it is to realise Christ at the centre of all that has to be done and needs to be done in the course of a day, a week, a month, a year. Grounding this race in prayer and realizing Jesus presence with us as we meet the challenges is a vital one. Christ through his Holy Spirit can
also help us NOT to miss what is important as we continue to run the race.

As it is written in the Letter to the Hebrews (Heb 12:1-2) “Let us run with perseverance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus the pioneer and perfector of our faith.”
De Colores,
Fr Ian—Diocesan Spiritual Director

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Cursillo_Encourager_Newsletter_September_2013

Ruth Brand, Past National Lay Director

The experience of Cursillo can enrich and deepen your relationship with Jesus and can empower and encourage you to live your life as a confident Christian, bringing the love and influence of our wonderful Lord into your everyday life. Cursillo may be seen as an opportunity to grow in faith and spirituality, gaining a deeper understanding of the teachings of Jesus and how you can serve him in the world.
Ruth Brand