One of the biggest challenges facing the Irish church at the moment
is the shortage of candidates coming forward to priesthood and religious
life.
The sharp decline in numbers studying for the priesthood obviously
has huge implications for the future shape of ministry. It also impacts
on the present by undermining and sapping our morale.
The effect of this should not be underestimated. I know farmers and
business people, who when they realise that none of the family are
interested in continuing on the farm or in the business scale back, and
even sell up.
They lose heart, they see no point in continuing when it becomes
obvious that nobody is going to come after them. This realisation can
take its toll in priesthood and religious life too.
We keep reading articles entitled ‘’ The Last Priests in Ireland ‘’
and ‘’ Priests under Pressure.’’
We see communities that always had a
resident priest now being served from a distance by hard-pressed,
hard-working priests, who are often getting on in years.
Much has been written and said about why priesthood and religious
life have lost their attraction, about why they are not on the agenda
for young people today, or indeed for their families.
Priesthood and religious life need a context, a context of faith and
practice, a context where they are understood, valued, and supported.
It’s a cliché now to talk about how Ireland has changed in recent
years. In the 2016 Census 10% indicated they had no religion. It should
not surprise us that this cultural change should impact on the life of
the church.
The scandals have had an impact too, they have poisoned the well, but
this cultural shift had begun before the scandals broke. They didn’t
cause it but they certainly didn’t help, especially in the negative way
they allowed priesthood and religious life to be portrayed.
The cumulative effect of all this is that many church people are
unsure about the future. In the face of this uncertainty we need to
remember that we are not the first generation of Christians to be
anxious about the future, to wonder what will happen to us, to the faith
we cherish, and what we are called to do by God in the midst of our
uncertainty.
The walkers on the road to Emmaus were anxious about the future too.
All their talk was of the past ‘ we had hoped……‘ they said. They didn’t
think they had a future, they thought it was all over.
And then as Luke says their eyes were opened……and they understood
what the stranger had been saying to them on the road. In this broken
world faith has to be sacrificial, faith has to struggle, faith has to
suffer, and faith has to believe in the future.
A spiritual writer has written ‘’ the contemporary situation arouses
our hopes while it nourishes our fears……….we are where Christians should
be, poised on the razor’s edge between present and future, aware of the
possibilities for good or evil which open up in front of us.’’
In the Year of Consecrated Life the Holy Father asked us to do three things;
• To look to the past with gratitude.
• To live in the present with enthusiasm.
• To embrace the future with hope.
Looking to the past should not be in the words of the Holy Father ‘’ an
exercise in archaeology ‘’ but an opportunity ‘’ to give thanks for a
journey which for all its light and shadow, has been a time of grace,
marked by the presence of the Spirit.’’
Speaking about living in the present with enthusiasm Pope Francis
says ‘’ none of us should be dour, discontented or dissatisfied, for a
gloomy disciple is a disciple of gloom.’’
Thirdly, he asks us to embrace the future with hope, whatever that
future may hold or mean. This hope is more than the vague feeling that
all our endeavours will have a happy ending, it is the conviction that
whatever happens the Kingdom of God will continue to be proclaimed and
revealed.
In Ch. 43—v18/19 Isaiah says ‘’ do not cling to events of the past or
dwell on what happened long ago…..watch for the new thing…..’’
As Easter people this should be our default position, we must work, hope and pray for a new outpouring of God’s Holy Spirit.
Speaking of new things the Bishop’s Conference is at the moment setting up a National Vocations Office in Maynooth.
Its mission will be;
• Build a culture in Ireland where vocations to the priesthood are talked about, prayed for, and encouraged.
• Promote the call to Diocesan priesthood.
• Animate and coordinate Diocesan Vocations initiatives.
It is envisaged that this office will work in cooperation with
Vocations Ireland, the office which promotes vocations to the Religious
Life.
It has been said that the vocations crisis of those called is also a
crisis of those calling. If no one calls, how can anyone respond?
So we must go on calling, praying and working, realising that while
fostering vocations is the task of some, it is the responsibility of
all.
Lord of the harvest, bless our Diocese of Ferns with many priestly
and religious vocations. Give the men and women you call the light to
understand your gift and the love to follow always in the footsteps of
your Son.
Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit, as it
was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end.
Amen.