THE DOMINANCE of the Catholic Church in the patronage of the State’s
primary schools is “a remnant of the past and no longer tenable today”,
Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin has said.
The Government had
been “very slow in providing a plurality of patronage models”, Dr Martin
added, calling for a national forum to debate such plurality.
In a
lengthy address to the Cambridge Group for Irish Studies at Magdalene
College yesterday, he said: “I am the patron of about 93 per cent of all
primary schools in the archdiocese of Dublin, while Catholics compose
only about 85 per cent of the population.”
Such “a massive
presence of the Catholic Church in the management of schools is,
however, patently a remnant of the past and no longer tenable today”.
It
was “obvious that there is a desire for change in the management
structure of Irish schools.
It is recognised that the Irish Government
has an obligation to ensure that parents who do not want a religious
ethos in the formation of their children can, as far as possible,
exercise their rights.”
A very high proportion of Catholics would
prefer their children to attend a school with a pluralist mix, albeit
with some basic religious culture.
“I believe that there is need for a
national forum to debate the issue. Plurality in management is needed to
address the changed Irish culture. Plurality in school management can
only benefit the true Catholic identity of Catholic schools.”
Dr
Martin said the Catholic Church in Ireland would “inevitably become more
a minority culture.
The challenge is to ensure that it is not an
irrelevant minority culture”.
In the talk,
Keeping the Show on the Road: Is this the Future of the Irish Catholic Church? ,
he said the place of the church in the political discussion was
increasingly marginal.
“I would say that none of the political parties
even thought of seeking the views of the church around their policies
for the current general election. If anything, they would seem to prefer
not to be seen in any way to be associated with the church.”
Ireland was “undergoing a further phase in a veritable revolution of its religious culture”.
In
Dublin there were parishes “where the presence at Sunday Mass is some 5
per cent of the Catholic population and, in some cases, even below 2
per cent”.
On any Sunday, “about 18 per cent of the Catholic
population in the archdiocese of Dublin attends Mass. That is
considerably lower than in any other part of Ireland”.
For the
second time since he had become archbishop, this year there would be no
ordination of priests in Dublin, “and the coming years indicate only a
tiny trickle of new vocations”.
His greatest discouragement as
archbishop came “from the failure of interaction between the church and
young people. I visit parishes where I encounter no young people . . .”
Change required in the life of the church in Ireland was such that “even experts in change management would feel daunted”.
Dr
Martin added: “Despite all my efforts, I am failing in my attempts to
lead such change. Change management has to have the patience and the
strategy to bring everyone along with it, and that may not be my
talent.”
Catholic culture in Ireland “does not have the prominence
or the intellectual leadership that it should have”, with “few writers
or artists who would present themselves as Catholic”.
He was
convinced that “one of the principal ways in which the church can reform
itself and bring its message more incisively to society is through
developing a renewed biblical apostolate”.
The Irish church, in
its recent history, had “failed to introduce its people into a real
relationship with Jesus and his life and teaching.”
Such “a biblical
basis for its action” was “also a sound basis for ecumenical
collaboration”.