A Celebration of Gathering
This year we celebrate the Gathering. The Gathering may be social,
sporting, cultural or religious. In the gathering we are welcoming
back, enabling people to re-establish contact with their roots,
appreciate their history, acknowledge where we are presently and prepare
to go forward to face the future with hope in our hearts. Our faith
gatherings share all these elements. For the past week we have
celebrated the Croagh Patrick gathering, which included pilgrimages and
Mass on the summit each day, historical and heritage talks each evening,
as well as music and guided walks. This morning I extend a very warm
welcome to you all as we celebrate the National Pilgrimage to Ireland’s
holy mountain, the legacy of the wellsprings of our Patrician faith.
Faith and Pilgrimage
Faith and pilgrimage are inter-related. In this Year of Faith the
Croagh Patrick Pilgrimage affords us an opportunity to reflect on some
aspects of faith and the light it throws on our life in various areas.
The Church ought to be about gathering, about embrace, about welcoming
home all sorts and conditions of people. Home is a place of the mother
tongue, of old stories told and treasured, of being at ease, known by
name, belonging without qualifying for membership. The ministry of
gathering is one to which God has always been committed and one which is
central to the ministry of Jesus Christ and his Church.
Getting a Perspective of the Sacred from the Holy Mountain
There is a Chinese proverb that states “if you don’t scale the
mountain you can’t view the plain”. The occasion of the Croagh Patrick
Pilgrimage provides us with an opportunity to get a clearer vision and
adjust our relationships in two areas.
Location in venerable and ancient Spiritual Heritage
Firstly, because of its location, scenic beauty and the
place which it holds both in Celtic and Irish spirituality, the
pilgrimage helps us to enter into a relationship with nature, not in a
controlling, consumerist manner but rather seeing nature as a gift of
God, as a communication from God. Responding appropriately to creation
is part of knowing and responding to God. Creation itself is an act of
divine self-giving. The world is a gift, a means of receiving something
of the life of God. As Pope Francis says “faith enables us to discern
in nature a grammar written by the hand of God and a dwelling place
entrusted to our care and protection”. This mountain has been made holy
by the long lines of pilgrims who struggled to the summit as they
endeavoured to find meaning and purpose. Croagh Patrick as a pilgrimage
centre challenges us to respect our environment. Ancestral memories and
cultural inheritance is an essential part of our inner human landscape.
The absence of those and an alienation from nature in the concrete
jungles and artificial land-scaping, makes us uprooted and restless
creatures.
Sacred Journey – Giving perspective and meaning to our Vulnerability
Secondly, as we climb Croagh Patrick we become more
conscious of our limitations and of the vulnerability of others. This
enables us to recognise our relationships with others in the way in
which we negotiate our own and other people’s frailties. We become
conscious of weakness and powerlessness. This ought to influence our
behaviour. It helps us to respect what is at risk in the life of another
and to work on behalf of another’s need.
The Perspective of Faith
In all of this faith has a significant role to play. Far from
standing in the way of human development faith inspires personal
development and initiatives; it gives a sense of identity, leads to
intimate friendships and integrates persons and society. At the same
time it warns against self-centredness, isolation and misuse of others.
Faith must find expression in justice, be of service to the common good
and be capable of throwing light on all our relationships in society. As
Christians we seek to act in the market place “in the name of God”. To
believe in God is to be a “trustee” of God’s truth.
Implications of Weakened Faith
When faith is weakened, the foundations of humanity also risk being
weakened. The light of faith can never allow us to forget the
sufferings of this world. Faith does not dispel all our darkness, but
rather guides our perilous steps on life’s journey. The service which
faith provides to the common good is always one of hope. Religion and
faith are persisting features of the human situation and will not
disappear so long as we ask the fundamental questions of why we are here
and what kind of world we seek to create.
Perspective on Economic Crises
The opposite of faith is idolatry. Reflecting on our recent economic
woes, many claim that greed was the underlying problem. I wonder whether
pride may have been an even more significant contributory factor, the
pride that refuses to acknowledge my lack of control over the
environment, my illusion that I can shape the world as I wish. The
freedom of the few was purchased at the expense of the enslavement of
many to poverty and deprivation. Our lives ought to reflect truth. Real
change can come only through freeing ourselves from the illusions which
enslave us. Therefore the importance of empathy, of developing a kind
of intelligence that will reflect on who we are will help to control and
limit a purely technical approach. Faith can be a great help in
developing this type of thinking.
Safeguarding the Common Good
When we take time out from the routine of busyness and our daily
concerns, personal, community and national – we afford ourselves some
time to stand back and think. This different, sacred location, well
worn by the footsteps of generations of pilgrims freshens our
perspective on the lives we live, the issues that occupy us. During
this past year a number of issues concerning the common good in relation to peoples lives have come into sharp perspective. Whenever the service of the common good is in question the Church involves herself in public debate. The service of the common good surely also is a key criterion for political and civil leaders.
Making provision for the Religious Voice to be heard
The Church does not seek to have her moral teaching enshrined in law
simply because the Church teaches it. Instead, the Church proposes that a
particular issue on which she has clear moral teaching, ought to be
safeguarded in civil law. When the Church seeks this, it is not doing so
out of a sense of entitlement or wish to dominate. Instead, the Church
is concerned that the value at stake ought to enjoy the protection of
civil law. In fact, the status in civil law of such an issue does not
affect its moral value.
Allowing the Religious voice to be heard in an inclusive way
To deny the right of the Church, or any religious body, to
participate in public debates is a hallmark of a country that seeks to
deny a fundamental human right: the right of religious freedom. It
attempts to corral religious believers and excises their contribution to
important discussions about the kind of society that twenty-first
century Ireland should have. It also reduces religion to a sort of
private sphere that is prohibited from influencing public life. A mature
secularism would welcome and provide space for religious believers in
the public sphere. A mature Catholicism would make its contributions
with courtesy and respect for those with whom we disagree. I cannot
speak too highly, in this regard, of those who do not share our beliefs
but who have insisted throughout recent crucial public debates that we
be heard. This is an approach which may truly be called liberal. I
only wish we had encountered it more. It should be remembered here that
religion is more than just worship; freedom in matters of religion also
involves freedom to propose a moral code. A truly liberal atmosphere
not only permits but actively encourages the Church’s voice.
Conclusion
Croagh Patrick, Reek Sunday, this annual, great festival of faith,
this last Sunday of July has for so long been a great place of gathering
for so many generations to take stock of our lives. To return to that
Chinese Proverb it gives us collectively an opportunity to ‘scale the
plains’ of our lives, our communities and our society from the
‘mountain-top perspective’. From this vantage point we open up to the
assistance of faith, the presence, company and blessing of the sacred.
We renew our appreciation for the gift of nature and the many other
gifts. We allow, finally, each others voices to be truly heard,
trusting in the integrity and goodwill of all, and remembering those who
as yet have no active voices in our society, but still exist and claim
our protection and our love.
+ Michael Neary
Archbishop of Tuam