Irish Republic - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Mon, 02 Nov 2020 06:14:48 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg Irish Republic - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Priests 'face prison' for saying Mass in public https://cathnews.co.nz/2020/11/02/priests-face-prison/ Mon, 02 Nov 2020 06:55:04 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=131941 Under new Covid restrictions passed into Irish law recently, a priest can now be fined, or imprisoned, or both, for saying Mass in public. The same applies to any minister of religion who holds a public act of worship. This is drastic, draconian and unacceptable and must raise questions about the Constitutionality of the measure, Read more

Priests ‘face prison' for saying Mass in public... Read more]]>
Under new Covid restrictions passed into Irish law recently, a priest can now be fined, or imprisoned, or both, for saying Mass in public. The same applies to any minister of religion who holds a public act of worship.

This is drastic, draconian and unacceptable and must raise questions about the Constitutionality of the measure, quite apart from its total disproportionality.

Aside from Wales, the Republic of Ireland appears to be the only place in Europe where public worship has stopped, and in our case, now attracts penal sanctions.

Prior to this pandemic, when did such a law exist in Ireland? You have to go back to penal times.

Deputy Michael McNamara pointed out the implication of the new law to Health Minister, Stephen Donnelly, in the Dail last night. Minister Donnelly said Deputy McNamara was wrong, but a reading of the relevant law shows he is correct.

Priests ‘face prison' for saying Mass in public]]>
131941
Pre-famine Irish Catholics: fewer priests, less devout says new doco https://cathnews.co.nz/2019/04/11/doco-irish-catholics-famine/ Thu, 11 Apr 2019 08:05:05 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=116795

A new documentary claims many Irish Catholics practised a mixture of Catholicism and pagan rituals before the Great Hunger (1845-1849) triggered a major turning point for the Church in Ireland. Released yesterday, Irish broadcaster Raidió Teilifís Éireann (RTE)'s documentary Rome V Republic examines the events that led up to and followed the Church's hold over Read more

Pre-famine Irish Catholics: fewer priests, less devout says new doco... Read more]]>
A new documentary claims many Irish Catholics practised a mixture of Catholicism and pagan rituals before the Great Hunger (1845-1849) triggered a major turning point for the Church in Ireland.

Released yesterday, Irish broadcaster Raidió Teilifís Éireann (RTE)'s documentary Rome V Republic examines the events that led up to and followed the Church's hold over every aspect of Irish life after the foundation of the state in 1922.

Although the early 19th-century Irish politician Daniel O'Connell's campaign for Catholic emancipation in Ireland energised Irish Catholics, the mid-century Great Hunger (often called the Potato Famine) triggered the major turning point for the Church.

Having reduced the population from just under 8.2 million in 1841 to just under 5.8 million in 1861, the famine unexpectedly strengthened the Church's influence.

Professor Mary Daly from University College Dublin explains the problem in pre-famine Ireland wasn't that people were atheists - it was the lack of priests to serve them.

"Basically the Catholic Church in 1841 did not have the manpower to really look after the six million-odd Catholics in Ireland at the time," Daly says.

However, the deaths of millions of Catholics as a result of the Great Hunger meant the church had smaller numbers of more God-fearing parishioners, she adds.

"A lot of the population loss occurred in the poor and very poor people who were not regular Sunday mass goers, who would have practiced a different form of Catholicism based around a good mixture of superstition and folk belief with Catholicism."

With the deaths of the bulk of the country's poor, the rising middle class - shop keepers, merchants in town, farmers - became a dominant influence, as they were much more devout as a group than the poor, Daly says.

"They were the people who would have educated their children, they would be God-fearing. Respectable is the word worth using.

"Many would have aspired in time to send a son into the priesthood, so the Catholic Church is in a stronger position, absolutely."

Fast-forward to 1922 and the documentary shows how strong the Church's influence in Ireland has become.

The documentary presenter, former Justice Minister Michael McDowell, says Ireland's first free state constitution (1922) was drawn up by a committee which included Michael Collins.

McDowell says the constitution was a very secular document until a raft of "Catholic morally inspired legislation" was brought in.

It catalogues how the new cash-strapped Irish Republic was forced to rely on the country's 13,000 religious personnel.

This situation continued until the huge numbers of vocations fell dramatically as soon as free secondary school education came in 1967.

"After that vocations literally fall off a cliff," Dublin City University's Dr. Daithí Ó' Corráin says.

Despite all, however - including the lack of priests, two decades of scandals, cover-ups and revelations - the documentary concludes that church remains embedded in Irish life.

Source

Pre-famine Irish Catholics: fewer priests, less devout says new doco]]>
116795