From http://ncronline.org/news/global/irish-priests-push-reform-pledge-stimulate-groundswell
Oct. 28, 2011
DUBLIN,
IRELAND -- Ireland’s Association of Catholic Priests marked its first
year in existence with a Dublin meeting at which more than 300 priests
heard a call for an end to mandatory celibacy and for the ordination of
women.
The growth of the association has been rapid, with 540 Irish priests
-- or one in eight -- now opting for membership. However, the absence of
younger priests, sometimes called the “John Paul II generation,” was
evident at the gathering.
Fr. Kevin Hegarty, a member of the association’s leadership team,
told the Oct. 4-5 meeting that what was needed was a church that would
open its doors to “married priests and women priests.” It would benefit
from secular insights, such as those on human intimacy and democracy, he
said. It would work at developing a “healthy and holistic theology of
sexuality.”
Hegarty said that church structures were a barrier to conversation
and “despite the promise of the Second [Vatican] Council ... the church
in Ireland failed to evolve a strategy that could learn from and
contribute to the new consciousness.” An authoritarian hierarchical
structure “is contemptuous of intellectual challenge and is fearful of
leaps of the imagination. The consequences have flowed.”
In its first year, the Association of Catholic Priests led opposition
to the new translation of the Roman Missal and appealed to the Irish
bishops’ conference to delay the introduction of the changes. However,
the hierarchy dismissed the concerns as “first premature and then
irrelevant,” Hegarty said.
“In my 30 years as a priest, 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.”
Dominican Fr. Wilfrid J. Harrington, one of the priests attending the
meeting, said he was motivated to join the group because of “the
betrayal of Vatican II over the past 30 years.”
“I now know, from our meeting, that Vatican II is not dead. Now I am
aware that I belong to a sizable group of priests, diocesan and
religious who still believe in Vatican II. And, happily and vitally, not
only clergy, but very many lay women and men.
“After our [annual general meeting] I confidently expect that
membership of the Association of Catholic Priests will grow
substantially,” Harrington said.
Redemptorist Fr. Jim Stanley told the gathering that the association
must now reach out beyond clerical structures. “We need to stimulate a
groundswell among the Catholic people of Ireland,” he said. “So begin
now to make preparations for a national assembly of people, religious,
missionaries and priests. Don’t consult the bishops, just go ahead.”
The Association of Catholic Priests makes no apology for the fact
that it is a liberal group and does not seek to represent all priests.
“The Association of Catholic Priests does not intend to water down its
objectives in order to attract a larger membership,” said Fr. Brendan
Hoban, another member of the leadership team.
The Irish association has already established links with similar
movements. Msgr. Helmut Schüller, leader of the Austrian clergy who have
issued an “Appeal to Disobedience,” was a guest at the meeting, as was
Fr. Bernard Survil of the newly formed Association of U.S. Catholic
Priests.
Not all Irish priests who long for reform in the church are
enthusiastic about Ireland’s Association of Catholic Priests. Fr. Paddy
McCafferty, who is himself a survivor of clerical abuse and an outspoken
critic of the Irish hierarchy, insists that the group is “not prophetic
in the true scriptural sense.”
He insists that the group cannot claim to be a “loyal opposition”
because it is “not loyal at any level and pushing its own agenda all the
time.”
“To be loyal to the church is to expose evil for the good of the
church,” McCafferty said, adding that he “utterly rejects” the
Association of Catholic Priests as “having anything truthful or
constructive to offer in the current crises afflicting the church.”
The reaction of the Irish hierarchy to the association has been at
best indifferent. There were notably mixed opinions at the meeting of
the Association of Catholic Priests, with many priests believing that
the group must maintain links to the hierarchy while others dismiss
relations with the hierarchy as irrelevant.
As the movement looks to the future all are agreed, however, on the
necessity of reaching out to laypeople and ensuring that the voice of
ordinary Catholics be heard in shaping the future of Irish Catholicism.
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