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How the Catholic Church in Ireland can survive

We are a wounded church but not defeated


Is the Catholic Church in Ireland down but not out?
Is the Catholic Church in Ireland down but not out?
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Some in religious life in Ireland are close to despair when they see the enormity of the challenges facing them. These challenges include overcoming ridicule in the aftermath of the Ryan Report, the long and lasting lack of vocations, the lack of energy, the clear need to do something positive, to cast out into the deep, to change or die.

With an average age of 70, according to one congregational leader I spoke with recently, if the challenge can be described as a mountain to climb, it is of Everest proportions. And yet, this is to see it all through the eyes of worldly thinking and not through the eyes of faith like St ThérÉse of Lisieux, and realise the littleness of our ability, and place the mountain of cares in God's hands.

Our natural instinct is to fix, repair and grow -- we've been born and raised in an institutional Church that was far reaching and extremely well-resourced. We've never known institutional weakness in the Irish Church since independence, until now.

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We are a wounded Church. Perhaps that is God's greatest gift to our Church at the moment, its wound. Otherwise how can an institutional religion understand the wounds of its members or have compassion for them?

Institutional religion quickly becomes the religion of the Pharisee, the path of perfection and lacks in compassion for the not so upstanding members whose wounds are easy to point out, which cannot be covered up by wealth, or office or uniforms or sacramental garbs. That is why Jesus speaks so often of those who see without seeing and how they are truly blind. The truly blind didn't see that an innocent child should be protected.

I was doing an interview last week with a local Christian (Catholic) radio programme and when I said that the institutional Church was dying, the interviewer said ''that's a bit harsh''.

I countered, saying it may be harsh to her ears but the question she needed to ask was ''is it true?''

And if it is true then it is fact, and facts are neither harsh nor sweet but speak for themselves.

There is a soft-focus in much of Catholic Ireland that would prefer a few painkillers along with their weekly diet of Catholic news, but dulling the senses is not the way to new thinking.


Nster.com


34 Comments

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Every empire has its day. The Sumerians - Babylonians - Persians - Greeks - Romans - British - American, etc. Why should the Holy Roman Empire be any different. Now we can get back to an authentic generic Christianity, before orthodoxy highjacked a good money spinner 2000 years ago.
The Catholic Church is just about Dead in Ireland. Its Time Ireland take over and bring back Jesus Christ in a New Church . let it Be a United Cheistian Church of Ireland. Forget those Fat Pagan Sinners of the Vatican.
If the Catholic church stopped worrying so much about gay people and started concentrating on the real message of Christ which was Love, Compassion and Charity.. they'd have a lot less problems. Protecting pedophiles and their assets make them the rich man through needle, ie the camel.. The death of the institutional church is not a bad thing, a happy more understanding church with less emphasis on sexual morals and more on human morals being kind and decent to each other will attract more people.
Well said, 'adrienrain'!! Point #2 and #5 nail it on the head!
@GeorgeDillon - "Why should Catholics turn Protestant?" I didnt say that they should. Were that to happen then the uniqueness of one branch of the Christian Family would be lost, and despite all that has happened, there is no need for that. No, what I am referring to is Reformation of the Church Body; Clergy, laity and the mechanisms by which both are governed and by which both interact. Whether you want to acknowledge it or not, the drive to this Reformation has already started across large parts of the Catholic world. I say that because the single most crucial element of the church; that is the laity, the faithful recognise the need for change, and are articulating that demand for change. How? in different ways. Many "voting with their feet" and not darkening the door of their church. Many who continue to articulate the need for change from within the Church. And many whose personal journey of faith has been radically altered by the recent revelations about how many have conducted their ministry, at total variance with the true teachings left to us by Christ as Man during his earthly ministry. "Love one another as I have loved you" this was the greatest commandment of all given by God. And this in my view is the greatest deficit in the Clerical Church today."Cardinal Brady settles the latest claim by abuse victim he swore to secrecy" is a story widely reported today."I accept that the vast majority of Catholic clerics are good men. Can the Catholic Church not see that if it wishes to regain the almost universal respect which it once enjoyed and the moral authority which it would wish to wield, it must come to terms with all such just claims against it?" (Brendan Boland)
Because celibacy is as virtuous as constipation. Because evil flourishes in secret. Because women are at least as good as men, and men have no legitimate claim of domination over them. Because no one should have to tell their most intimate secret thoughts to someone in authority. Because for all the RC's preference for the poor, its HQ are richly furnished and the pope sits on a golden throne while children starve. Because the obscenity of hierarchy is indefensible. Because the foundation for all the abrahamic religions is patriarchy and genocide. Let the rotten old structure fall forever.
The need for a church of one's own as in the St Patrick model, a model that served so well until Anglo Adrian trigged the invasion which forced them to pay up and to obey Roman dictates. Collection monies be kept at home and not send a cent to the Vatican. This approach will serve to place blame wherever it correctly belongs.
The need for a church of one's own as in the St Patrick model, a model that served so well until Anglo Adrian trigged the invasion which forced them to pay up and to obey Roman dictates. Collection monies be kept at home and not send a cent to the Vatican. This approach will serve to place blame wherever it truly belongs.
The need for a church of one's own as in the St Patrick model, a model that served so well until Anglo Adrian trigged the invasion which forced them to pay up and to obey Roman dictates. Collection monies be kept at home and not send a cent to the Vatican. This approach will serve to place blame wherever it belongs.
@merefalow, you make a good point. Religion, like other things, can become a source of evil when it's abused and corrupted. It's not the message of God/Jesus that's the problem, it's some of the messengers and the receivers who are the betrayers and corrupters of the message who are the problem.
By packing there bags and feak off to Rome
Reform is needed in the RCC in the way the hierarchy deals with priests engaged in child sex abuse. This could be referred to as a "reformation" that has nothing to do with the historical Reformation that established the Protestant churches 500 yrs. ago. Even Protestant churches have made reforms in their practices over the years. I doubt anyone is seriously suggesting that Catholics become Protestants, although they need each other where Christianity is constantly under attack.
By keep hiring peeping priests!
barnyjo: Why should Catholics turn protestant? We had that debate 500 years ago, attended by slaughter and cruelty on both sides. And it's not as if the Protestant Churches in Ireland are actually thriving. Take the Nigerian migrants ouit of their congregations and you're left with two senior citizens and a dog. And don't forget that the Protestant Churches in Ireland have also had their sex abuse scandals, thouigh not surprisingly on a proportionate scale to their numbers.
The Catholic church in Ireland will survive, despite so many bishops having no understanding of or use for Christianity, and concerned only with scoring points with some dodgy cardinals at the Vatican.




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