Te Tai Tokerau - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Thu, 04 Aug 2016 17:31:17 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg Te Tai Tokerau - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 El Camino de Te Tai Tokerau with an App to guide you https://cathnews.co.nz/2016/08/05/el-camino-de-te-tai-tokerau/ Thu, 04 Aug 2016 17:01:31 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=85347

There are plans afoot to develop an App to assist individuals, families and groups make a self-guided pilgrimage of Te Tai Tokerau. The App will provide for GPS coordinates, accommodation options, prayers, historical information and recorded talks by people of Te Tai Tokerau. This development has been inspired by a pilgrimage led by Wiga Autet Read more

El Camino de Te Tai Tokerau with an App to guide you... Read more]]>
There are plans afoot to develop an App to assist individuals, families and groups make a self-guided pilgrimage of Te Tai Tokerau.

The App will provide for GPS coordinates, accommodation options, prayers, historical information and recorded talks by people of Te Tai Tokerau.

This development has been inspired by a pilgrimage led by Wiga Autet from the Auckland Diocese Religious Education Team.

The party of 8 visited the significant Catholic sites in Te Tai Tokerau to learn more about their faith and to pause ponder and prayer at them.

The sites visited included:

  • Tane Mahuta: Maori gatekeeper to spirituality and Te Tai Tokerau
  • Omapere Heads: Kupe's and Bishop Pompallier's entry to Hokianga
  • Our Lady of the Highway - Our Lady of Passchendaele - Omanaia
  • Totara Point: Site of the First Mass Bishop Pompallier
  • St Gabriel's Church at Pawarenga
  • Hata Maria - St Mary's Church, Motuti: where Bishop Pompallier's remains are kept.
  • Our Lady of the Assumption Church, Motukaraka.
  • The National Shrine of St Peter Chanel: Russell

Look out for news of the App on the Auckland Catholic Diocese's website.

Source

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100 year old crozier accidentally discovered https://cathnews.co.nz/2014/11/25/100-year-crozier-accidently-discovered/ Mon, 24 Nov 2014 18:02:25 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=66155

The Anglican Bishop of Auckland, Ross Bay, has accidentally come across a 100 year old crozier (bishop's staff) locked away in a storage room. On Sunday night Bishop Ross and Bishop Jim White gave it back to Maori at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Khyber Pass. It was accepted by Bishop Kito Pikaahu, Read more

100 year old crozier accidentally discovered... Read more]]>
The Anglican Bishop of Auckland, Ross Bay, has accidentally come across a 100 year old crozier (bishop's staff) locked away in a storage room.

On Sunday night Bishop Ross and Bishop Jim White gave it back to Maori at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Khyber Pass.

It was accepted by Bishop Kito Pikaahu, of Te Tai Tokerau.

Bishop Kito intends to carry it round his hui amorangi and will take it to Oihi on Christmas Day.

During Sunday's service Bishop Kito invited descendants of those who gave the crozier 100 years ago to come forward and hold it.

He named the crozier Te Take ki Oihi , which identifies Oihi as the beginning of a bicultural journey.

"The shape of this crozier tells of the wellspring of life and it symbolises the continuity of a strong relationship between the Diocese of Auckland and the Diocese of Te Tai Tokerau," Bishop Kito added.

He noted that it was made from four woods, showing the tribes' various identities but also their unity in one crozier.

The service on Sunday night was part of the bicentenary celebrations marking the arrival of Samuel Marsden and other Anglican missionaries, alongside Maori chief Ruatara in New Zealand and the establishment of the first permanent European settlement with Maori at Oihi in the Bay of Islands.

The crozier was originally presented to the Bishop of Auckland in 1914 to mark the centenary of the same event.

It was presented by the four northern Maori tribes.

Very little else is known about the crozier including who carved it.

The diocese is asking anyone who knows its history to come forward.

Source

 

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