Silenced Redemptorist priest Fr Tony Flannery
said in Dublin he believed the best way he could continue to
serve the Church was by bringing into the light of day “the arcane and
unjust processes that are the modus operandi of the Vatican watchdog, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF).”
This was particularly the case as he had “given up hope of being allowed to minister as a priest again.”
Fr
Flannery was silenced, removed from public ministry and threatened with
excommunication by the Vatican last year because of his views on
priesthood and Catholic teaching in the area of human sexuality.
Speaking in the Royal Hibernian Academy at the launch of his new book A Question of Conscience
by broadcaster Bill O’Herlihy, he said “it seemed to me that we had
reached the end of the road. I was forbidden to minister as a priest and
the conditions of returning to ministry were such that I could not
comply with them without compromising my integrity.”
Up
to then “I had remained silent and observed the strictures of secrecy
imposed by the Church authorities. My decision to go public was made
slowly and carefully and for a very specific reason,” he said.
A Question of Conscience
outlines how he was summoned to Rome in June 2012 and told that unless
he revised his view that the church should be open to discussing
subjects he raised, he would not be allowed minister as a priest and
would have to step aside from his leadership role with the Association
of Catholic Priests (ACP).
Having written for the Redemptorist’s magazine Reality for 14 years, Fr Flannery was surprised to find himself suddenly coming to the attention of the CDF. It was headed by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger before he became Pope Benedict XVI in 2005.
“That
such a body, with such a global remit, would be interested in articles
published in a magazine with a monthly readership of 6,000 was
unexpected in the extreme. What followed was a series of encounters that
seemed to defy both logic and justice,” Fr Flannery said.
Former President of Ireland Mary McAleese has written the foreword to A Question of Conscience. She said “Tony will soon celebrate the 40th anniversary of his ordination to the priesthood and what a priesthood it has been.”
He
had been, she said, “a deeply empathetic and listening pastor, a
preacher and teacher par excellence, a loving but scrupulously faithful
critic of his fallible and at times failing Church, a man of faith and
courage, unafraid to be a voice of contradiction, to turn his back on
the crowd and lead in the direction he conscientiously believes the Lord
is calling.”
A Question of Conscience is available in most book shops and at the website www.associationofcatholicpriests.ie