The editor of the Redemptorist magazine, ‘Reality’, has called for a
“robust religious press in Ireland” to “champion the Catholic
perspective”.
Fr Brendan McConvery CSsR made his comments as he marked 80 years of publication of the magazine.
In a statement, the former lecturer in theology at St Patrick’s
College Maynooth stressed the need for a strong and diverse religious
media in Ireland, and he regretted the closure of several religious
publications and the pressures facing the religious press in the 21st
century.
“It is abundantly clear that if ever we needed a robust religious press in Ireland, we need it now,” Fr McConvery said.
“We need a Catholic media to champion the Catholic perspective and to
which Catholics can turn for support, information, and guidance.
Reality magazine and Redemptorist Communications hope to be able to
fulfil this role for many years to come.”
First published in November 1936 as ‘The Redemptorist Record’,
Reality describes its mission as being to “inform, inspire, and
challenge today’s Catholic.”
Fr McConvery commented on its evolution from a magazine which, in the
1950s, had a reputation for its stringent line on sexual matters to a
publication which by the mid 1960s had become so ‘dangerous’
that Archbishop John Charles McQuaid felt it required three
diocesan-appointed censors. “We have had a fantastic if, at times,
colourful history,” he said.
In 2012 it was revealed that the then editor of Reality, Fr Gerry
Moloney, and columnist, Fr Tony Flannery, had both been censured by the
Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith over their liberal views on
priesthood, married priests and women priests.
According to Fr McConvery, the magazine is particularly proud of the
part it played in trying to bring the vision and promise of Vatican II
to the Irish faithful, and of being a facility that allows people to
reflect on the myriad issues facing the Church at home and abroad –
“uncomfortable though some of these issues may be”.
To celebrate its birthday, the November 2016 issue of Reality
contains a mini edition of the first issue of the Redemptorist Record.
The first part of the November edition is devoted to how the good
news of the Gospel can be promoted with the help of modern media.
Dr John Horgan, a Labour TD, member of the European Parliament and
first Press Ombudsman, recalls his time as a young journalist in the
Irish Times, when he covered the final session of the Second Vatican
Council.
Fr Tom Rosica, a Canadian priest who worked for the Vatican Press
Office and who is head of Salt and Light Communications – which uses
radio and television as well as the print media – writes about the
church and the media today.
Other articles describe the challenges and opportunities of Irish local radio and modern social media.
The second part of the November issue is an edited edition of the
first number of the Redemptorist Record which eventually became Reality.
Link to November issue: http://issuu.com/redcoms/docs/realitynov16online