When Pope Francis comes to Ireland in two weeks’ time it will be 39 years since the last visit by a head of the Catholic Church.
Since then the status of the church in Ireland has declined dramatically.
Those identifying as Catholic are down by 20 per cent, according to the last census.
Mass attendance has fallen away, seminaries and religious houses have closed, and parishes are now often run by a single priest.
The majority of people no longer look to the church for guidance in their everyday lives.
When the leadership speaks out on current issues as during the two recent recent referendums many, particularly the young, are antagonistic or indifferent.
The church in Ireland has lost respect and credibility.
A main reason for this has been due to actions by the church itself, including the way in which its clerics and religious have abused their power.
The guilty are those who destroyed the lives of untold numbers of men, women and children in orphanages, industrial schools, reformatories, Magdalene laundries, mother and baby homes, and through sexually assaulting children in parishes.
Protected perpetrators
But not those alone.
The church leadership in Ireland and in Rome who allowed this to happen are equally to blame.
They protected perpetrators and refused to take responsibility when this became known.
The Vatican has been complicit in this cover-up through withholding approval for safeguarding provisions prepared by the Irish bishops, for canon law reasons, and arrogantly ignoring requests from two Irish State inquiries for documents.
Pope Francis must be aware of all this. Saying sorry it happened, sorry you were hurt, does not cut it anymore.
We have heard it all.
What is needed to restore some respect for the church and to give struggling Catholics hope for the future, is for the pope to admit responsibility. He should do so on behalf of the church for the part played by the hierarchy and the Vatican’s systemic obsession with secrecy and canon law – which showed a total disregard for the lives of the abused people concerned – in all of this.
Many survivors no longer care what the church says but others are still waiting to see it take responsibility for its actions.
Data protection laws
The bishops in Ireland are still using data protection laws to avoid sharing information with their own safeguarding office. The religious orders are still refusing to honour their financial commitments to survivors, and what happened in Ireland is still happening in countries around the world. Continue reading
- Marie Collins is an abuse survivor from Ireland. She resigned last year from the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, after serving for three years, due to its work being frustrated by Vatican officials.
- Image: iCatholic.ie