WHEN HE LAUNCHED the Dublin archdiocese’s new policy on First
Communion on Monday, Archbishop Diarmuid Martin said there had been
“enormous change in the Irish church” since Vatican II.
Those of us
whose childhoods coincided with the late 1950s and early 1960s can
agree, although much remains the same.
Ireland was changed utterly
by two events in those years, the Lemass-Whitaker First Programme for
Economic Expansion, from 1958 to 1963, and the Second Vatican Council,
from 1962 to 1965.
But in October 1962 all eyes in Ireland, as
elsewhere, were on Cuba, not Rome. The end of the world seemed nigh. A
Catholic Irish-American, John F Kennedy, had become leader of the most
powerful country in the world 22 months beforehand, and life as we knew
it seemed on the brink of mutually assured destruction.
Catholicism
in those days seemed to be all about suffering, punishment and
investment in eternity. My teacher at Mullen school, near Frenchpark, Co
Roscommon, was Mrs Ford. A devout woman, she had immense influence on
me. I saw her cry just once. It was the morning after her daughter
entered a convent. She had “died” to the family, who did not know when
they might see her again.
It was a cruel religion, particularly to
women. My devout grandmother buried her son, Matthew, in a field near
our house in Mullen. He died after birth, before he could be baptised,
so he could not be buried in consecrated ground and would never see
heaven. He was in limbo, which was “abolished” by Pope Benedict in 2007.
At
Sunday Mass in Frenchpark, women sat on their own side of the church,
with their heads covered. They rarely went outside the home beyond
attending confession and Mass.
In October 1962 I was being trained
to be an altar boy by Mrs Ford. A Sunday previously there was no altar
boy to serve Mass, and Fr Donnellan berated the congregation in a deep
rage from the altar.
In our house there were intimations of
changes to come. My father had stopped going to Mass. Early in 1961 the
Vatican announced that St Philomena was being removed from the calendar
of saints. To my father that meant she never existed. He was stunned.
His
mother was devoted to St Philomena. She wore a St Philomena scapular
around her neck as she endured a slow death from stomach cancer in the
1930s. When she died, in 1939, she left the St Philomena scapular to my
father, her youngest child.
I never finished training to be an
altar boy with Mrs Ford. In December 1962 we moved from Mullen, a
townland where my ancestors had lived, to Ballaghaderreen, about 10km
away.
Ballaghaderreen was full of priests, brothers and nuns.
At
the time Ireland was producing so many clergy that between a third and
half went on the missions. In 1961 it moved Pope John to say, “Any
Christian country will produce a greater or lesser number of priests.
But Ireland, that beloved country, is the most fruitful of mothers in
this respect.” He might have been talking about Ballaghaderreen.
The
priests taught at St Nathy’s diocesan college in the town; more were in
the presbytery, with the bishop of Achonry living in a palace out the
road. Every committee in the town had a priest on it, and he was usually
its chairman.
Men, passing priests or brothers on the street,
took off their hats and saluted them. They stepped off the footpath to
allow nuns to pass.
IT WAS AT THE cathedral in
Ballaghaderreen that I really became aware of Vatican II.
At the 10am
children’s Mass on Sundays Bishop James Fergus would tell us “boys and
girls” what was going on in Rome, in an avuncular style that conveyed
his wonderment at it all.
We were amazed when the cathedral was
painted in bright creams, an altar was installed in front of the high
altar, and the priest began to face us during Mass, which was now in
English. And sometimes in Irish. More generally, people began to realise
that in the eyes of God they were just as good as priests, nuns and
brothers.
As the council progressed I was very taken with the
document Gaudium et Spes. It felt like a prescription for the Catholic
Church to get involved in creating a just society. And there were the
Nostra Aetate and the Unitatis Redintegratio, documents that were kind
to other Christians and people of other religions.
At the Brothers’
school I sat beside the only Protestant boy in Ballaghaderreen. He was
the most mild-mannered and best-behaved of us all. I could not believe
he was destined for hell.
IN JANUARY 1965 my
youngest brother was born, and it was decided to call him after Douglas
Hyde, who was buried 5km out the road. His grave was beside a church
that, we were told, guaranteed hellfire should we darken its door.
At
the baptism, when the priest at the cathedral was told our baby brother
was to be called Douglas, he turned on my mother and said, “You can’t
call him that. That’s a Protestant name. Whoever heard of a St Douglas?”
My
mother, bless her, responded quickfire “We’ll call him Peter Douglas
so, after the first pope and the first president.”
And it was done, but
my brother has only ever been known as Douglas.
As a young and
devout Catholic I was excited by the developments emerging from Vatican
II. I was convinced I would be a priest then, and very much wanted to
be, in this new exciting Catholic Church.
One day in our Greek
class at St Nathy’s our priest-teacher improved on the philosopher
Heraclitus, who had said you can never step in the same river twice.
The
priest said, “Boys, remember you can never step in the same river even
once. Because it is never the same river.”
It suggested a dynamic
church.
That man, Fr Tom Flynn, went on to become president of St
Nathy’s; later, following the traditional route not of his making, he
became bishop of Achonry.
In the midst of all this heady
ecclesiastical activity some of us kids set up our own youth club. We
were allowed to have a representative on the newly created parish
pastoral council, and I was chosen to be it.
In 1970 Bishop James
Fergus decided the glorious trees around the cathedral should be cut
down and the area be turned into a car park. There was uproar in the
town, but not one person would say it to him.
At a parish council
meeting I did.
The rest were silent.
After the meeting an older woman on
the council came to me and said, “Musha gossoon, what do you know and
you still wet behind the ears?”
I realised two things then: that
the already slow progress in church reform after Vatican II was as much
the fault of a passive laity as of the clergy; and that I would not be a
priest.
I could never take a vow of obedience.
The trees were cut
down and replaced by tarmacadam.
In our youth club Christmas concert
that year, which I scripted, we had a news item detailing
Ballaghaderreen’s contribution to Conservation Year (as 1970 was), “They
cut down all the trees around the cathedral,” followed by guffaws.
Some
older people in the audience walked out, including my neighbour, who
had sons in the clergy.
Yes, there was enormous change in the
Irish Catholic Church after Vatican II, but, as with Heraclitus, it
remained the same river.