Brendan Hoban: Rome must move towards a People’s Church                   

Western People 23.1.2024

The title of last week’s RTÉ documentary, The Last Priests in Ireland, reflected the grim reality for Irish Catholics – no longer a perception or a wild prophesy – that priests are not just becoming fewer but in danger of almost disappearing in Ireland. 

The statistic that hung over the discussion was that the number of Catholic seminarians in 1965 was around 400 while now it is ‘around 50’ according to the presenter of the documentary, comedian Ardal O’Hanlon, though Katie Hannon, the presenter of the later Upfront programme, would marginally move the latter number to a more specific 64. Not that the extra 14 matter all that much in the cliff-face of Irish priests’ numerical decline, given that there is usually no correlation, now as earlier, between the numbers starting in seminary and those ordained years later.

I’ve been banging on about this for years and I don’t want to exhaust my readers’ patience but a few statistics make the point. In huge urban dioceses like Dublin with over a million Catholics, at one point recently there had just one seminarian. And Dublin has 199 parishes!

In mainly rural dioceses like Killala, which covers north Mayo and west Sligo, future statistics for priest numbers are proportionally critical. Two different assessments of future priest numbers for Killala reached a similar conclusion – within a matter of a few years, there could be as few as eight priests and possibly no bishop as the rumour mill suggests that the probability is that Killala will be ‘merged’ or, in everyday language, ‘amalgamated’ with either Tuam or Achonry.

In Killala diocese, a total of eight priests would mean two in Ballina, two in Tyrawly deanery –  one in Ballycastle, serving Tyrawly North and one in Ballycastle, for Tyrawly South – one in Tireragh and one in Erris, with the remaining two as ‘flying curates’ covering the inevitable gaps. An indication of the dramatic change that has already taken place is that when I served in Tireragh, there were ten priests in the six parishes of that deanery and there are now four.

But back to the RTÉ programmes. What struck me about the discussion on Upfront was the series of yawning gaps that emerged between the Catholic Church and a variety of interest groups calling for change: the gap between the expectations Catholics have and the possibility that they might be delivered; the gap between how the official Church sees things and what Catholics expect; and the gap between people’s continuing perception of themselves as Catholics while accepting a detached attitude to now moveable feasts like going to Mass or contributing to the upkeep of their parishes, its services and facilities.

There was a telling moment on Upfront when Bishop Brendan Leahy of Limerick suggested, as a possible explanation for the Catholic Church’s reluctance to ordain women, that even though there was almost a consensus among lay Catholics in Ireland and around the world that it was both acceptable and necessary, that the Church ‘didn’t want ‘to rush things’. The slip of the tongue, while it had its own internal logic, seemed almost to echo the famous or rather infamous comment of Archbishop John Charles McQuaid of Dublin when, on his return from the Second Vatican Council in Rome, he reassured the Catholics of Dublin that none of the proposed changes would ‘disturb the tranquillity of your Christian lives’.

On the one hand, Bishop Leahy holding the line is marked, for example, by lay Catholics holding an opposing line by refusing to compromise on issues like the ordination of women. Or even parishioners reacting to the withdrawal of priests by saying that they don’t mind what changes are made provided they can retain the same number of priests and the same number of Masses at their present time. There are times when the gap between this rock and hard place seems insurmountable.

The compelling point is that the Church’s gradualism in terms of reform inevitably conflicts with the perception of most (though not all) lay Catholics that time is running out and that, unless there is significant movement, Catholics who have been grimly hanging on to the doorposts in expectation of change will be running out too.

Fr Roy Donovan, with whom I share a vested interest of membership of the ACP, and who is at present part of its leadership, seemed one of the few participants who detected a silver lining to the decline in clergy numbers. It promised, he suggested, an exit from the cold dead hand of clericalism as exemplified by the past domination of clergy who had presided over the people in a role that placed a focus on status, precedence and control. The decline of priest numbers, he continued, would open up the possibility that the gifts of the laity would be released in a very different kind of Church.

Roy’s relaxed manner and his bright and breezy personality as well as his casual dress sense placed him in a different category to the invariably buttoned-up black uniform of his colleagues.

An obvious conclusion that might be drawn from the debate is that unless, in the conclusion of  the Roman Synod in October this year, there is some movement towards a People’s Church, as envisaged by the Second Vatican Council 60 years ago, the future of the Catholic Church in Ireland will look even bleaker than at present.

Bishop Leahy suggested that the possibility of women deacons was ‘under consideration’ but that the ordination of women was not on the agenda. Anyone watching the RTÉ documentary The Last Nuns in Ireland (on the following night) would realise how impoverished the Catholic Church is by the exclusion of the gifts that women would bring. The competence, sensitivity and emotional intelligence of the leadership of a number of nuns were impressive, indeed it might be said, quite stunning. We were given a glimpse of what we’re missing as we fiddle around while Rome burns.

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4 Comments

  1. Sean O’Conaill says:

    What is it, specifically, that makes a church a ‘People’s Church’?

    Isn’t Roy Donovan’s ‘take’ on all this reinforced by the ‘Irish Catholic Vocations Office’ which implies all over again that the merely baptised have opted for spectator status, to cheer from the sidelines as the ordained and the ‘religious’ – the ‘consecrated’ ones – do the truly risky and heroic work of ‘following Christ’?

    What exactly is the distance between baptism and ‘consecration’? Merely, I would suggest, the fact that history has determined that for most of us baptism was a completely involuntary event in infancy, and Catholicism still provides no voluntary rite of adult affirmation of a baptism received in infancy.

    By now everyone knows, surely, that baptism in the New Testament was always an adult and fully conscious choice of the recipient, following some form of catechesis, and was seen as the primary sacrament of personal commitment. The distance then between that and ‘consecration’ was obviously far less than it became under Christendom.

    And in Ireland, of course, while Lumen Gentium tells us that the role of the ‘laity’ is to ‘consecrate the world to God’ no Irish bishop ever convened his flock to determine what that might mean. To be ‘consecrated’ one had to opt, either as a man or as a woman, for celibacy.

    How exactly are the merely baptised to ‘consecrate the world’ if they cannot see themselves as ‘consecrated’ to that task unless they opt for celibacy? It is obvious nonsense that this option is not available to those who opt for Christian marriage, given their likely parenting role – but no adult Catholic surely should be excluded.

    When our schools have proven that if parents are tuned out of observance, Catholic faith formation doesn’t happen – and then the seminaries are empty – why the endless dithering over the problem of providing an adult initiating rite of affirmation of an infant baptism?

    One of my adult sons summed up the consequence as follows: ‘we were taken for granted’. That’s what Christendom did to the church. It clericalised some – the ‘consecrated ones’ – and infantilised almost everyone else.

    Roy Donovan is right. With news today from CRUX of most religious orders in the US reporting that no one took perpetual vows in 2023, the conclusion is obvious: the church will be starved of ‘vocations’ until the primacy of baptism is restored.

  2. Paddy Ferry says:

    “When our schools have proven that if parents are tuned out of observance, Catholic faith formation doesn’t happen – and then the seminaries are empty – why the endless dithering over the problem of providing an adult initiating rite of affirmation of an infant baptism?”

    I have never heard it explained quite like that, Sean, but oh! so true.

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