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Catholic Priests’ Convention Told That the Irish People Would Axe Church Leaders By Cathy Hayes Irish Central October 6, 2011 http://www.irishcentral.com/news/Catholic-priests-convention--told-that-the-Irish-people-would-axe-church-leaders-131209514.html
Irish priests were told that at the first annual meeting of the Association of Catholic Priests that if citizens could vote on religious affairs, church leaders would be swept out of office, the Irish Times reports. Over three hundred people attended the meeting in Dublin on Tuesday. If Catholics in Ireland were able to convey their feelings in a democratic way “church leaders would suffer a defeat as cataclysmic as that administered to Fianna Fail in the recent general election”, Fr Kevin Hegarty said. The Ferns, Ryan, Murphy and Cloyne reports “highlight the acute level of dysfunction in the church,” he told the gathered crowd. Hegarty added that the church needed to open its doors to “married priests and women priests”. He said the church would work at developing a “healthy and holistic theology of sexuality”. Not since the 19th century “has there been such public disagreement among the bishops. Cardinal Cullen’s Tridentine temple has come tumbling down” the Mayo priest said. _____________ Read More: Amnesty’s report finds Ireland’s clerical sexual abuse was ‘torture’ Kenny issues fresh warning to Vatican over co-operation on abuse allegations Irish government denies rift with Vatican over Cloyne Report _____________ A priest of the Killala diocese said there was “a torpidity about the Catholic Church in Ireland today. Take the preparations for the forthcoming Eucharistic Congress” with “earnest emissaries from the congress office . . . travelling throughout the countryside valiantly trying to drum up some enthusiasm”. Ordained in 1981, he spoke about the decline of the Catholic Church saying: “the sea of Catholicism has receded”. He said: I have heard its long withdrawing roar . . . I have worked in a crumbling church. In 1981 it seemed as if it might be different.” Then “the golden glow of the papal visit still enveloped the institution. Now we recognise it as the last ard fheis of traditional Irish Catholicism. It induced a sense of complacency and hubris; a deadly combination.” |
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