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So You Can't Forgive?
There has been a great focus on reconciliation in recent years. But how does this sit with those...

Cancer, Prayer, Survival
Each short chapter in this book described a new disappointment, a different shock – all the...

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What have we Lost?
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There can be no denying that in the past the Catholic Church in Ireland exerted an undue influence on affairs of state. It was also intrusive in its attempts to control the sexual lives and practices of its members. Similarly, a tiny minority of priests and religious abused their power and indulged in what were heinous crimes against innocent and vulnerable children. Nevertheless, the great work the Church did in the realms of education, health and culture is often conveniently forgotten. The strong social justice agenda of the Church has the potential to run contrary to the tide of consumerist values that have come centre stage since the advent of the Celtic Tiger. In our blind pursuit of the pleasures of this world, is there not a danger that we have lost sight of some of the positive aspects of religion?

The question of what we've lost and what has emerged to replace some of the vital roles the church played in Irish society is what prompted John Littleton and Eamon Maher to edit a collection of essays that would tease out in a critical and detached manner the state of contemporary Irish Catholicism.

Patsy McGarry ('Of Scribes and Pharisees') supplies a moving and at times impassioned account of how certain female members of his family fell foul of the hypocritical and Pharisaic attitudes prevalent in the Ireland of the recent past. Catherine Maignant ('The New Prophets: Voices from the Margins') believes that genuine Christian witness and spiritual vibrancy in Ireland are most often situated among marginal figures like Sr Stanislaus Kennedy and Fr Peter McVerry. John F. Deane ('The Jesus Body, The Jesus Bones') provides a poetic interpretation of his personal experience of Catholicism while Colum Kenny ('Reporting Religion') examines the proper business of a journalist writing or making programmes about religion.

John Littleton ('Being a Catholic in Ireland Today') expresses an insider's view of the debasing of certain religious practices and sacraments in contemporary Ireland. Larry McCaffrey ('From Devotion to Dissent: Irish-American Catholicism, 1945-2006') draws some extremely interesting parallels between the problems besetting Irish-American Catholicism and those visible on the other side of the pond.

There are also chapters on education, art and popular culture, Church-State relations, as well as on literary figures such as Dermot Bolger, EilŽan N’ Chuilleanáin and the French priest-novelist, Jean Sulivan, whose poignant memoir is compared to that of the late John McGahern.

Note The editors are available for interview. For further information contact Teresa Daly, Tel. 01 2942556 ext 222, Email. This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

The Editors John Littleton, Head of Distance Education, The Priory Institute, Tallaght, was President of the National Conference of Ireland (NCPI) for a number of years.

Eamon Maher is Director of the National Centre for Franco-Irish Studies in ITT Dublin (Tallaght) and the author of a number of books (on John McGahern and the French priest-writer Jean Sulivan among others).

Contemporary Catholicism in Ireland: A Critical Appraisal is published by The Columba Press, priced at EUR 16.99.

 
The secular is not opposed to Christianity, says new book
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The secular should not be seen as the enemy of Christianity but as a challenge to the Church to focus more on spirituality than dogma, says a priest and author in a new book.

In Begin with the Heart, Father Daniel O'Leary, a priest of the Leeds diocese and well-known speaker, argues that many people find little meaning in the Church because it often presents the world as divided between sacred and secular.

'This false notion springs from a dualism, the idea that there is a part of life where God is not present.Ê Vatican II tried to move beyond this unhelpful way of looking at the world by reminding us that grace builds on nature, that God is present in all things.'

With its preoccupation hierarchy and the institutional, the Church no longer feeds the souls of many people today, he claims. 'Just because many people no longer go to Church doesn't mean they are not seeking a spirituality or relationship with God.

'And many Christians exist in two parallel worlds, one they encounter in church and one they encounter in what they see as their real lives. But it shouldn't be this way.'

'A lot of the tensions today in the life of the Church are caused by misunderstandings about the nature of revelation.Ê And one of the reasons for our difficulties with dogma and doctrines is their loss of relevance in our lives.'

A priest of 45 years, he thinks the Church has lost much of its imagination and courage and that it needs to rediscover music, paintings, dance, literature and movies as doorways into spirituality.

He says it is only this recovery of this 'sacramental vision' - finding God in the ordinary -Êthe theme of the Bishops' Conference 2005 document On the Way to Life, that can transform Catholic education, liturgy and catechesis.

Father O'Leary's previous books include the award-winning Already Within, Travelling Light and Passion for the Possible.

Begin with the Heart, which is accompanied by a DVD, is aimed primarily at teachers and catechists.

Published by The Columba Press, it's in all good bookshops now, priced at EUR 19.99, £13.99.

For more information or to interview Father O'Leary contact: Teresa Daly on 01 294 2556 ext 222 or e-mail This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

 
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