Faith
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Carried—Blessings for Those Who Hold and Are Held

In clinical spaces, care often moves quietly—through gestures, glances, and the steady presence of those who stay. Carried is a page of blessings and thanksgivings written for nurses, patients, chaplains, carers, and companions. It honours the unseen labour of tending, the grace of being tended to, and the sacred rhythm of mutual care. Whether offered… Continue reading
Carried, Chaplaincy, ClinicalCare, CompassionInCare, Contemplation, ContemplativeCare, ContemplativePrayer, DivineHealer, Faith, FaithAndIllness, FaithInAction, FaithInTheEveryday, HealingPrayer, health, LifeOnDialysis, LiturgicalLife, OraEtLabora, PatientSupport, PatientVoices, Prayer, PrayerInSuffering, QuietMoments, ResilientSpirit, ResillienceInIllness, Reverence, Ritual, SacredRoutine, Sanctity, Spirituality, SpiritualJourney, SpiritualReflection -
Pattern, Presence, Praise

Even when nights are short, rhythm endures—through psalms, memory, and offering poured out in trust, resistance, and presence. Continue reading
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Dwelling in Constraint, Rising in Praise

This week’s readings speak of exile, endurance, and unexpected healing. Jeremiah writes to those displaced, urging them not to resist the place of their constraint, but to inhabit it fully: build homes, plant gardens, seek the peace of the city. It’s not a call to resignation, but to rootedness—to a kind of holy dwelling, even… Continue reading
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Held in Pattern

Finding grace in constraint, cosmic signs, and the body’s vigil There is a rhythm to dialysis. Not unlike the rhythm of the Divine Office—structured, necessary, and at times, painfully honest. It is a rhythm that reveals what is hidden: toxins, fragility, dependence. And yet, in that exposure, there is mercy. Psalm 51 dares us to… Continue reading
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Wing. Fire. Sign.

A reflection on refuge, consequence, and discernment in sacred pattern. In the hush before dawn, Psalm 57 opens like a breath held in the chest: “Be merciful to me, O God, be merciful.” The psalmist shelters in shadow, not in fear but in fidelity. There is a clarity here that speaks to the autistic soul—the… Continue reading
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Stone Word Witness

Practices that steady the heart through beauty, warning, and faithful speech. I sit with these passages as someone formed by a rhythm of shared work, ordered days, and quiet liturgical practice, and also as someone whose senses and attention follow different pathways. Here the scriptures meet the landscape of island weather, the inward order of… Continue reading
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Worship. Not Warfare.

Militarised Christianity undermines democracy. True discipleship forms citizens through worship, conscience and compassion—not drills, ranks or recruitment. The Church serves best without an army. Continue reading
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Faithful in exile

Grief, grace, and quiet endurance in the margins of scripture and life Reflection on the Sunday readings. Jerusalem sits empty. The psalmist weeps by foreign waters. Timothy is urged to rekindle a gift that feels fragile. The apostles beg for more faith, and Jesus answers with a story about a servant doing what is asked,… Continue reading
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Jesus Loves Me—And That Changes Everything

A reflection from an Irish Anglican autistic perspective on love, memory, and belonging “Jesus loves me, this I know, for the Bible tells me so.” We sang it every week in Sunday School, small voices piping through the church hall, surrounded by crayons, juice cartons, and the gentle chaos of kindergarten faith. I don’t remember… Continue reading
AccessibleGrace, AnglicanTradition, Autism, AutisticFaith, AutisticTheology, bible, Christianity, Faith, FaithAndHistory, FaithAndInclusion, FaithInAction, GodOfLove, InclusiveChurch, IrishSpirituality, jesus, NeurodivergentFaith, NeurodivergentTheology, QuietMoments, SacredSpaces, ScriptureAndStillness, Spirituality, SpiritualJourney -
Thirst, Wisdom, Presence

Reflections on longing, exile, and the liturgy of care inspired by the texts of Psalm 42, Wisdom 10:15–11:10, and Mark 12:18–27 There are days when the soul feels like a bog in winter—still, sodden, waiting. Psalm 42 speaks into that ache: “Why are you cast down, O my soul?” It doesn’t rush to fix the… Continue reading
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Called and Consecrated

Re-reading St Paul and Honouring Women’s Ministry in the Anglican Tradition In the hush of a Friday afternoon, with the Psalms still resonating from morning prayer and the Irish light softening the edges of the day, I return to St Paul’s words in 1 Timothy 2:11–12: “Let a woman learn in silence with full submission.… Continue reading
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Snip. Clear. Breathe.
Clearing brambles with garden shears becomes a focused act of care—restoring the path, honoring presence, and making space. Continue reading
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Mercy, not triumph

A quiet reflection on one pain-free night, naming grace in its fleetingness and giving thanks for small mercies. Continue reading
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Scattered. Rooted. Seen.

Autistic noticing turns a roadside walk into quiet reflection—acorns, oak, and grace revealed in the rhythm of pausing. Continue reading
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Forget, Feel, Forgive

The gentle rhythm of neurodivergent self-care. A second night, and the twinge in my left side is back. Familiar now. Not dramatic, not alarming—just a quiet ache that reminds me I forgot the preventative paracetamol. Again. It’s strange how the body keeps score, even when the mind is busy with liturgies, logistics, and late-night thoughts.… Continue reading
Autism, AutisticFaith, ChronicIllnessCommunity, CompassionInCare, ContemplativePrayer, DialysisLife, Faith, FaithAndIllness, FaithInAction, HealingPrayer, health, healthcare, LiveWithADisability, NeurodivergentTheology, PatientVoices, Prayer, QuietMoments, ResilientSpirit, ResillienceInIllness, Routine, SacredRoutine, SacredSpaces -
Pain, Paracetamol, and the Puzzle of Self-Care

It’s 5am and my side aches again—echoes of a fall from a couple of weekends ago. I’ve taken paracetamol, the only painkiller I’m allowed on dialysis. It’s a quiet kind of surrender, not dramatic, just necessary. But I’m terrible at taking painkillers. Not because I forget, but because I hesitate. I second-guess whether the pain… Continue reading
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Stewardship, Trust, and the Threshold of Mercy

The parable urges attentive stewardship, recognizing overlooked suffering, and trusting in love’s transformative power through compassion and action. Continue reading
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Heritage, Worship, and Shelter

Celebrating Celtic sites and launching a €1 brick appeal for Habitat Malawi—small gifts turning heritage into homes and hope. Continue reading
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Pilgrim, Platform, Synod

Early morning journey to diocesan synod—three trains, one tram, no agenda, but full heart. Autistic voice present in Church democracy. Continue reading
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