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Sean O'Conaill |
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Last Updated: 15/08/2007
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This reflection on the crisis in the Catholic Church in Ireland in the Jubilee year appeared in Doctrine & Life, August 2000. The
Father Ted
TV show
hit
Catholic
Ireland at
a
psychologically
interesting
moment.
Bishop
Eamonn
Casey's
flight
from
Ireland in
1992 had
begun a
spate of
clerical
sex
revelations
deeply
damaging
to a
clerical
church
whose
foundations
had been
built
largely
upon lay
sexual
guilt, and
had thus
been
thought
secure for
all
eternity. This question still hangs in the air here, as good people struggle to separate in their minds an ecclesiastical system that has let them down from a God who promises never to do so. At first furious at a comedy show that poked fun at the upholders of sacred truth, many staunch Catholics then began to grin ruefully in recognition at some of the most awful pathologies of 'Catholic Ireland' - especially the priest's housekeeper whose hairnet is as permanent as her wheedling 'ah go on' insistence upon the cup of tea. (The latter becomes a kind of lukewarm and very extreme unction that will heal all ills, available at all hours - even to the crack of doom.) It
seems that
only
laughter
can save
us now - a
laughter
that will
put us all
on the
same level
again.
Clerics,
too, are
people, in
the end -
worthy of
the same
respect as
any child
of God.
Many have
found the
grace to
join in
the joke.
Some may
even be
able to
weep a bit
also - in
relief at
the fact
that they
do not
need to
climb back
onto the
social and
spiritual
pedestal
the
poverty
and
illiteracy
of Ireland
had put
them on in
penal
times, as
the only
educated
leadership
we had. This
was common
knowledge.
And for a
variety of
other
reasons
the last
thing the
hierarchical
Catholic
Church in
Ireland
should be
setting
out to
preserve
in the
present
situation
is its own
dignity. Another
cause for
deep
concern is
that
despite a
series of
cataclysmic
public
relations
disasters
that have
shaken
Irish
Catholicism
to its
roots over
the past
eight
years,
there has
been
absolutely
no serious
attempt to
measure
the
effects of
this upon
the morale
of
Catholics
generally
by the
church's
leaders.
What
information
we have we
owe - once
more - to
the
secular
media, or
Andrew
Greeley.
Wondering
at first
when
effective
leadership
might
eventually
emerge at
the summit
we now ask
'What
leadership?'
A way of
being
church,
constructed
over 150
years by
upwardly
mobile
ecclesiastics
contemptuous
of
democracy,
is now
plainly
dead - but
there
hasn't
even been
a wake. It is, I believe, precisely the process that Jesus Christ came to accomplish - the equalisation of human dignity. At some stage this process must destroy the religious pyramid of esteem that every religious elite in history has built. That pyramid preserves itself - as did the Temple pyramid in Jesus' time - by declaring itself the only source of wisdom and salvation. But laughter is another kind of grace, and in Ireland today it is as free as Jordan water. 'The
faith' is
dying, the
pessimists
say - as
though
faith was
a kind of
abstract
bundle of
Greekified
and
Latinated
truths
that only
bishop-theologians
fully
understand.
In fact
gospel
faith was
simply
trust - in
a man who
did not
believe
that
religious
leadership
could only
be
accomplished
from a
position
of
eminence
and power.
Far from
setting
out to
build a
pyramid
through
which he
could
dominate,
Jesus made
himself
deliberately
approachable
and
vulnerable,
and it is
that truth
that draws
those
without
dignity to
him. An
ecclesiastical
leadership
that sets
out to do
the
opposite
cannot
image, and
can only
confuse,
that
truth. The
hierarchical
church has
lost the
trust of
many good
people in
Ireland -
and its
inability
to
understand
and deal
with this
is testing
the
patience
of even
the
staunchest. True, the hierarchy does try to engage with the rampant covetousness of Ireland's entrepreneurial revolution, calling for a juster society and basic humanity in dealing with the flood of refugees from Eastern Europe. However, the bishops need to realise, and urgently, that you cannot challenge the hubris of secularism while clinging on to the vestiges of the power and status inherited from the cosy patronage of yesterday's secular regimes. Today's secular regime is dismissive of what the bishops say, because it knows that the days when the bishops had clout with the people are over. The bishops need to discover urgently why this is - by engaging for the very first time in direct, serious consultation with those on whose behalf they presume to speak Their continuing failure to do this, when those people are their only source of revenue and recruitment, and are now voting with their feet in massive numbers, is a greater mystery than Arthur C Clarke has yet stumbled over in the jungles of Central America. Everyone
I talk to
gives me
the same
analysis:
top-down
manipulation
of Irish
society by
Irish
Catholic
bishops,
for
whatever
cause, has
had its
day. Every
twelve-year-old
in Ireland
knows
today what
most of
our
bishops
apparently
do not -
that
leadership
by verbal
exhortation
and
condemnation
can easily
be
replaced
by a
recorded
message. © Doctrine and Life 2000 |
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Copyright © 2007 Sean O'Conaill
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