Author

Born in Dublin in 1943, I studied English and History at UCD in the early 1960s. Developing a deep interest in the European Enlightenment – the historical origin of modern secularism – I was also fascinated by the Second Vatican Council of the Catholic Church, ongoing in those years. My abiding intellectual fascination has been the problem of reconciling faith and personal freedom.

For thirty years a teacher of secular history in Catholic schools in Northern Ireland, I retired from teaching in 1996 to write on the gathering crisis of church and culture in the West.

It was a personal mid-life crisis that led to this retirement, described in The Prayer That Changed Everything for Me.

Since the 1960s I have been increasingly concerned about the failure of the designated Catholic leadership in Ireland to realise the Vatican II vision of the church as the ‘people of God’. The parallel rise of secularism in Ireland has flowed from the continued identification of ‘church’ with clergy – an identification that is all the more troubling as the mean age of priests now rises almost year-on-year, and younger generations abandon religious practice.

However, secularism has not overcome its own crisis of confidence, so poorly named by the term ‘postmodernism’.  The Lord of the Gospels speaks to this crisis also, and the salvation of the western church will lie in discovering the voice and the lifestyle through which he can do so.

This tends to be the theme of much of what I write – especially of the short reflection on western history Scattering the Proud (1999, 2012 and now on this site). Essentially I am arguing that we need to reconnect our understanding of good and evil with the most constant theme of the scriptures – the dramatic conflict between humility and vanity. Jesus’ own radical humility challenges us to question the idea that we need to climb the social pyramid of our own time to be happy.

Vanity arises out of our human insecurity. Uncertain always of our own value we typically look for the approval and admiration of others. From this springs our tendency to mimic the desires and the lifestyle of others – the foundation of most culture. This status anxiety is the simple source of social hierarchy, of injustice, of tyranny and of all violence – including the violation of our own environment.

But these afflictions compel us always to seek a deeper source of inspiration and self-validation. The source we find in many different ways speaks to us of the need for humility – self-unconcern and concern for others. This source found its most obedient servant in Jesus of Nazareth, and speaks to us most powerfully through him.

Although the long association of the church with political power has unfortunately compromised its ability to convey this truth, the Gospels, and the continuing tradition of renewal and reform, convey it to us – and call us now to find a mode of life that can respond to the crisis of secularism.

The Articles page lists chronologically the shorter pieces I have written for various Irish Catholic and secular media since 1995. These will often point to sources outside the Gospels that I have also found inspirational.

In 2004 I became active in the Boston-founded Catholic victim-support movement ‘Voice of the Faithful‘and fronted VOTFI until 2010.

Since about 2013 I have been a member of the Association of Catholics in Ireland, writing for and helping to edit ACI’s website.  Most of what I write, day to day, appears there. Occasionally I move articles from there to here.

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5 thoughts on “Author

  1. Am impressed by my first short visit to your site. I will return for a fuller viewing.

    In the meantime, God speed your good work.

    Ed

  2. I’m an Anglican and a Grandma living in East Anglia, England. I’m also an Open University student who is following a very successful module in ‘Introduction to Religions’ with one on Children’s Literature.

    Finding this website feels like an additional Christmas present.

    Every blessing for 2015!

  3. Hi, Sean. You came to mind today while I was perusing my browser bookmarks from long ago. Thought I’d come see what you’ve been up to in the interceding years. Hope all is well.

  4. Dear Sean – insightful and forthright statement that a Synodal church must embody a culture and the practice of transparency and accountability in order to foster trust necessary to walk together in co-responsibility to the common mission.

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