In his first week at the Vatican, Pope Francis called for a leaner,
no-frills church rooted in Christ's original mission of serving the most
needy.
Many heralded his vision for the future, but not everyone is
convinced that Francis can reposition the diverse global institution.
Dublin City Councillor Mannix Flynn is among the naysayers. A victim
of sexual abuse while at a church-run industrial school in Ireland,
Flynn said he believes the church will continue down a perilous course.
"You get people projecting onto the person that he's a very simple
man, that he's a humble man, that he’s broken with precedent, that he's
doing everything differently. But it's the same make, same shape — only
different color," Flynn said of the pope during a recent interview.
“The idea that a man from Barcelona, or from Argentina or from Berlin
is going to change the dynamics of what's been around for a long time
is completely crazy," continued Flynn, a 56-year-old Independent who
represents the posh southeast section of Dublin's inner-city.
Flynn grew up in a large, poor household in Dublin and was described in a 2003 newspaper profile
as a "hell-raiser" from an early age. He spent a year in a youth
correctional institution that was run by the Roman Catholic Church's
Christian Brothers society. Flynn said he was abused from his first day
there.
After Flynn finished his time at the correctional facility, he became
alcoholic and was barred from scores of Dublin pubs. But the actor and
playwright has changed his ways in the past two decades, and in 2009, he was elected to public office.
Flynn said he wants to see the church finally take responsibility for its scandals, including clergy sexual abuse.
"Everything has changed, but nothing has changed," he said. "People are still answer-less."
Some in Ireland, like Father Leon O’Giollain, say that the church needs to move on from the sex abuse scandal.
During the St. Patrick's Day homily at Dublin's St. Mary's
Pro-Cathedral, Father O’Giollain said he wants the church to move toward
forgiveness and reconciliation. He held up St. Patrick -- an Englishman
enslaved and abused by the Irish, who returned and forgave them -- as a
great example for sex abuse victims to follow.
Ireland’s government has clashed with the church over payments to
sexual abuse victims. In 2002, the church agreed to pay a fixed sum, but
a few years ago church leaders refused to pay more at the request of
the government, saying that the money was earmarked for health care for
its aging nuns and priests.
Flynn accepted the Irish church's position on this issue, explaining
that denying benefits to church leaders would just create another wrong.
But what he would not accept, Flynn said, is a continuing lack of
accountability. The church asks for forgiveness for things it won't even
admit it did it, he said.
His concern, he said, is that Vaticanism — the doctrine of absolute
papal supremacy — has already corrupted the church’s original mission
and created an empire. And like the empires before it, he predicts that
the Catholic Church will fall into ruins.
"You have to actually walk among us, you have to be mortalized to
understand the exact nature of the wrongs," Flynn said. "Christ was the
person, the mortal, who challenged the material, who challenged the
commercial and the profiteers who would enslave people."