I’d like to look at some of the difficulties and pressures that face
us as priests in Ireland today.
I don’t think I have anything profound
or original to say – in fact, I know I don’t. I am not an academic.
I
have no great expertise in or knowledge of theology.
I may be considered
with some suspicion by elements in the Vatican, but anything I say
won’t be news to anyone.
I hope, however, that it might provide a
context for reflection and prayer.
All of us know these are challenging times to be a priest.
The tragic
death two weeks ago of Fr Murdeach Tuffy has reminded us of that again
in a most distressing way. The manner of his passing devastated people
near and far. We will never know why he did it.
He had given over thirteen years of outstanding service as a priest. For
the past ten years he was director of the Newman Institute in Ballina.
Added to this was his parish work, his work in vocations promotion at
local and national level, and his work with Accord. Availability was his
second name.
If he had a fault, Bishop Fleming said at his funeral
Mass, it was his inability to say no to so many people who came to him
with requests, and no to his bishop, when, regretfully, according to
Bishop Fleming, he did the same.
And after Murdeach’s death, people were left with the question. Why? Why
did someone as gifted and as young as Muredach only see darkness and
decide that he could travel no further on life’s journey? Why did he not
share with someone whatever troubles filled his mind?
We will never know, but it is a reminder of the pressures priests face
today, and maybe also of the difficulty we priests have in sharing – our
burdens, and questions, our anxieties and darkness.
It would seem to me that many priests are experiencing unique pressures
today that are, if not the cause of premature death, certainly damaging
to our health – physically, emotionally, psychologically – and that we
need to be aware of, and attentive to, them.
I would like to look at six factors that are contributing to the
pressures clergy experience today, and to which we need to be attentive.
1. Work. You might remember an article by a priest that appeared, I
think, in Intercom about 20 years ago that talked about the leisurely
life of many priests, particularly of country priests, and which caused a
lot of indignation at the time.
It spoke of how after morning Mass and
breakfast, the priest would look for a funeral to go to or maybe head to
the golf course.
It ruffled a lot of feathers.
How times have changed!
I don’t have to tell you that the workload of many clergy has increased
substantially in recent years. Many busy parishes that had two or three
priests 10 years ago now have to make do with one or two priests less.
And it is not the number of Sunday Masses that is the problem (though
that can be too).
It is the many other heavy duty responsibilities that
come with parish ministry, particularly urban parish ministry – the
constant funerals, weddings, visitation of the sick, round-the-clock
availability to deal with all kinds of problems, the organisations and
committees the priest is expected to attend or chair.
And then there is
the management of schools.
Some urban parishes have four or five
schools.
Managing them places enormous burdens on clergy. I know that
many would be thrilled if they could be relieved of the headache which
that responsibility brings.
And we know the problem is going to get worse.
There is a greying of the
clergy. The majority are now aged over 60. Young men are few on the
ground. Seminaries are almost empty. Many parishes will have even fewer
clergy in the next few years.
The clustering of parishes is a stop-gap approach that is not a solution
to the priest shortage.
Some parishes will be priestless, a phenomenon
that has already begun. And the demands on the few remaining priests
will grow even greater. They will become little more than sacrament
dispensers, going from one parish or church to another, with little or
no time to get to know people or to be with them.
As clergy retire or die, there is scarcely anyone to replace them, with
the result that there are fewer active men who are required to take on
more and more responsibilities. It is a phenomenon we are familiar with
in the Redemptorists, where the few we have who are under 50 are asked
to do more and more.
What all of this means is that priests are increasingly stretched and
stressed. People’s health and quality of work are affected. They don’t
have the space they need, the time out, to breathe, to engage in serious
reading and study, even to pray. Their intellectual life can grow
shallow; they become stale – with implications for the quality of
preaching and ministry, and indeed for a healthy, balanced life itself.
Few can take a sabbatical anymore, because there is no one to step in
for him for the time he is away.
Not so long ago, Irish Redemptorists
were permitted to have a sabbatical every 10 years or so. No longer can
they do that.
Might I mention also the impact of men leaving the ministry?
The
departure of friends and people I admire has had a huge impact on me.
There is the sense of loss, of betrayal, of being let down, of
abandonment. It leads to a questioning of one’s own vocation and
ministry. It has a tremendous demoralising effect.
2. Loneliness. I think loneliness is an issue for many clergy, and
one that may become even more pronounced as work and other pressures on
clergy increase.
When I was thinking of priesthood all those years ago, a
fear of loneliness was one of the main reasons why I opted for a
religious order, why I decided to hook up with the Redemptorists.
I
didn’t fancy coming home alone to an empty house every evening. Of
course, I’ve since discovered that it’s quite possible to be very lonely
even when living in the context of a large religious community. And I
know lonely religious; in fact, I’ve been there myself.
Loneliness brings particular dangers that I don’t have to tell you about
– a sense of isolation, the risk of addiction, a tendency towards
melancholia. We all know clergy who have found solace in the bottle, or
another addiction, or who have developed an obsessional interest in
something trivial or that should be peripheral to their lives as a
response largely to the pain/dread of loneliness.
They turn to whatever
might distract them from the emptiness within. And so you can have the
Golfer, the Gambler, the Racing Man, the Obsessive.
I know one parish priest who in his old age became obsessed with litter.
He preached about it every Sunday, and spent his days going up and down
the village streets chasing after litter.
Some people laughed at him;
many felt sorry for him – and it was very sad.
The need for healthy friendships is obviously critical, and not just
inside the priesthood, even though that is so important, and not just
with men.
It’s something Donald Cozzens stresses in his book, The
Changing Face of Priesthood, that it is critical we priests cultivate
intimate relationships and that we cultivate female friendships too;
that we develop, if at all possible, a healthy, intimate relationship
with a female soul mate.
Such a relationship will offer a sense of
perspective and give a balance to our life that is essential.
Aside from
the loneliness issue altogether, to be fully human, to be effective
ministers, to be mature sexual beings and to be healthy celibates, we
need to nurture authentic celibate relationships. I myself have been
very fortunate in that regard, and I thank God for it.
Of course, this is difficult to do. Suspicions will be aroused if you’re
seen too much with a member of the opposite sex, so it is important to
keep the relationship in the public domain – so that family and friends
know about it, so there is nothing secret about it.
3. Fallout from sex abuse scandals. I’m sure that, like me, you have
been upset, appalled, depressed after the publication of the various
reports and audits into clerical sexual abuse.
The fallout from these
has had a hugely demoralising effect on clergy.
Each time a report has
been published, my way of dealing with it has been to not listen to the
radio or read a newspaper for about a week afterwards.
I have to tune
out.
Otherwise I wouldn’t be able to cope.
I remember after the Ferns
Report came out, one parish priest telling me that he decided there and
then never to wear his collar again when going into town. He was so
embarrassed and ashamed.
And while we appreciate the need for effective child protection
policies, we all feel threatened ourselves also – because we know how
open it leaves us to false or malicious allegations being levelled
against us, and how difficult it is to defend ourselves against them.
The Fr Kevin Reynolds case that brought this home to us in a very real
and frightening way.
So there is, naturally, a worry about policies and
how they might impact on us individually.
This is perhaps the one
instance above all others where someone is guilty ‘til proven innocent,
and even if you are acquitted, you remain tarnished forever.
And then there is the loss of trust that was for so long taken for
granted. We all feel more circumspect in our dealings with young people,
and we feel that many parents view us with greater circumspection too.
In that context, it is understandable that we should experience a number
of maybe even conflicting emotions in response to the clerical sex
abuse problem.
Certainly, I have.
I have felt a great deal of self-pity. Here I am a poor, innocent priest
getting a terrible bashing, getting fierce flack for the sins of the
few, even though I myself have done nothing wrong and am a mere foot
soldier doing my best. To wallow in self-pity is a useless exercise –
but it is understandable.
I have felt anger at the media, not so much for highlighting the problem
because it was essential that they did that, but because of the
impression created that this is exclusively or primarily a Catholic
Church problem.
It is understandable that we would feel defensive, and
hard done by, and believe that the media have not been fair to us, and
that we would want to lash out at them – though that too is a useless
exercise.
I have felt anger at the abusers, for getting us in this mess in the
first place, for betraying their religious vocation in a most appalling
way, for the damage they have done to their victims and their victims’
families, as well as to their own families, and to the family of church.
And I have felt anger at the bishops and congregational leaders, a real
frustration at the poor leadership they have shown.
My God, how could
they have mishandled the thing so badly?
Why were they not more
pro-active in dealing with it?
Why, in God’s name, couldn’t they get
their act together?
So, a feeling of disappointment, of frustration, of
being let down.
And all of this compounds the already strong feelings of pressure and
vulnerability so many of us feel. It’s hard enough doing our job without
having to deal with the devastating impact of the clerical sexual abuse
scandals on top of everything else.
But I think we should note a
positive in all of this too – and that is the continued support and
understanding of so many ordinary Catholics, their appreciation of the
good work their good priests do. So many have gone out of their way to
offer their support and appreciation.
4. Life of prayer. Many priests are men under pressure, and one area
of our lives that can suffer as a result is the spiritual. As priests,
it goes without saying that the spiritual dimension must be at the core
of our lives, and all the more so in times of stress like we are
experiencing now.
But it can be hard for us to integrate the spiritual
dimension into our lives, certainly to do so in a way that is authentic
and is suited to our particular needs.
In this regard, diocesan priests may have a particular problem because
the model of spiritual life that the diocesan is given so often tends to
be based on the monastic tradition, and may not be suited to the
particular situation of the diocesan clergyman.
Almost all clergy
retreats, for instance, are given by religious.
The spirituality they
propose may not be suited to the needs of those who live and minister
outside of religious community.
Even the Divine Office is not meant to
be said alone, or is more easily prayed in the context of a religious
community. In monasteries and religious communities, too, there is some
prayer structure to the day, whereas diocesan priests are left to their
own devices.
And some sort of regular, structured prayer life is more
difficult if you are living alone, irrespective of whether you are busy
or not. I think it’s also true that on-going spiritual direction, in
many cases, just doesn’t seem to happen.
5. The impact of secularisation. I was ordained in 1988. It was the
culmination of nine years of study that had begun in September 1979 –
the month of the pope’s triumphal visit to Ireland. I was in Ballybrit
for the youth Mass.
I will never forget the 10 minutes of cheering that
interrupted John Paul II’s address. The pope was Bono. You’d have to go
to Slane for that today.
Twenty four years is an insignificant period of time when measured
against the great expanse of history, but in terms of the recent history
of the church in Ireland they seem an age.
When I was ordained, things,
at least on the surface, seemed rosy in the garden. It was a good time
to be a priest. Weekly Mass attendance was extraordinarily high by
Western European standards. Respect for the church and its leaders and
clergy was high.
The church’s power and moral authority were still
strong, as the referenda results of the mid-80s showed.
By no means was
that power and influence at a level comparable to that of the early
decades of the modern Irish state, but there was little reason to think
that things would change substantially as we moved towards the new
millennium.
But change they did. And at a rapid pace. We have undergone a quite
phenomenal process of secularisation in recent years, compressing into
less than two decades something that took over half a century to happen
in other Western countries. So, the transformation from a religious to a
secular society has been more traumatic for us.
And that secularisation had had huge implications for the church and for
us priests. There are falling levels of attendance at religious
services.
All of us have noticed it, even if in rural areas it is not as
pronounced as in urban areas. From a situation where Mass attendance at
the time of the papal visit was in the 85-90 per cent range, it has now
fallen to below 40 per cent. In some urban areas, it’s 10 per cent or
lower.
Conspicuous by their absence in urban and rural parishes alike
are those aged under 30.
These people are in all likelihood lost
forever.
The experts tell us that as a consequence of secularisation, we can identify three categories of Catholic in Ireland:
• The committed – still a lot of people but mostly older, greyer,
traditional. These are the ones who go to Sunday Mass weekly or often.
• The casual – these would consider themselves to be fairly good
Catholics, but are a la carte (particularly in the areas of sexual
morality and fulfilling the Sunday obligation). Many of my friends and
family fall into this category.
• The disengaged – those who no longer go, who don’t care, or who are downright antagonistic.
For many people, religion is now a cultural thing, confined to first
communions, confirmations, weddings, and funerals. In another
generation, the sons and daughters of those who no longer practice will
form the majority.
Religious language and culture will be alien to them.
At the time of the pope’s visit, most Irish people looked (or at least
said they looked) to the Church for guidance on moral issues, and Irish
law and the Irish constitution broadly reflected Catholic moral
teaching.
Today the gap between Rome and the faithful is growing, the
majority of people do not look to the Church for guidance on how to live
their lives, and Irish law has been ridded of its more overtly Catholic
elements.
All the evidence would suggest that these trends of declining
Church allegiance and attendance will continue.
This growing secularisation has had, and will continue to have, an
impact on us priests. We live in a very different country to the one in
which we began our priestly ministry and for which so many of us were
trained.
And we can be left confused and uncertain, unsure what to do,
or how to respond. We worry about youth and the disaffected, about
falling numbers and the increased demands on us.
We worry – but we don’t
know what to do about it. Many of us can be tempted to settle simply
for maintenance mode.
Of course, secularisation has brought some positives, too.
Priests and
bishops have been knocked from their pedestals, the culture of
clericalism is being challenged as never before, and lay people are
beginning to find their voice and to claim ownership of the Church.
6. Lack of support structures.
It seems to me, given the work
pressures and the isolation and the fears priests can feel today, that
there is a real lack of structures in place to offer clergy the kind of
support they need.
This lack of support is apparent on several levels,
and is very damaging.
Priests need help from those in authority. They need to feel that their
bishop or religious superior cares about them, and that he knows their
story, and that they feel they can turn to him if and when necessary.
Bishops and religious superiors need to engage with their priests at a
human and pastoral level, to be available to them and not set themselves
apart.
Bishops need to be pro-active at the practical level, too, in
encouraging their priests to delegate more and to take better care of
themselves. Indeed, they must insist on it when clergy are reluctant to
do it.
Priests need to help themselves also. Where do we go when we need real
support, someone to unburden ourselves to?
The clerical world can be
unnerving, even cold. Adolescent bonhomie can substitute for real
communication and intimacy. We can feel alone.
Many clergy are also set in their ways, afraid or unwilling to delegate.
Some still feel the need to be personally in charge of everything.
Others do not promote active participation by lay people, and oppose the
setting up of pastoral councils on the grounds that they only create
extra work or are difficult to control.
How many of us would dare to
employ a full-time pastoral assistant, even if we could afford it? We
need to look at how we can help ourselves in practical ways.
We need help on the emotional level too. We clergy feel uneasy about
sharing our emotions, our fears, our frustrations, at a personal level.
I
know we Redemptorists aren’t good at it. We don’t like faith sharing.
We all seem to detest small group sharing.
But now, more than ever, we
need to explore ways in which we can offer each other the emotional and
spiritual support and solidarity each one of us so badly needs. If the
structures do not exist, we need to create them.
And in this context, we need to acknowledge the role and good work of
the Association of Catholic Priests.
Even if one doesn’t agree with all
its objectives, no one can deny that it offers priests a support
structure, a voice, a forum for the exchange of views that otherwise
would not exist.
Given the context in which we minister as priests
today, the very real problems that exist in the universal Church and the
dysfunctionality at the centre that is becoming ever more obvious, we
need that support, that voice, that common vision, now more than ever.
Thank God for it.
• This is the text of a talk given by Fr Gerard Moloney CSsR at an afternoon of reflection for priests in Esker Retreat House.