Tuesday, April 23

The Widening Schism Between Ireland And The Roman Catholic Church

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After centuries of blind obedience to the Catholic Church, the nation of Ireland seems to be pulling away from the Vatican – at least politically.

A speech recently given by Enda Kenny, the Prime Minister of Ireland, to the Irish parliment was loaded with invective directed squarely at the Roman Catholic Church.

What brought it on? A recently released report focused on the diocese of Cloyne. There government investigators uncovered a pattern of deception purposefully designed by church officials to keep secular authorities from knowing about alleged child abuse at the hands of priests. This report, coming on the heels of the similarly damning Ryan and Murphy Reports, has only reinforced the creeping feeling that this just the tip of the iceberg.

Fr. John Magee

Fr. John Magee

Guidelines were set up by the Vatican in 1996 that are meant to help dioceses deal with reporting child abuse allegations to secular authorities. Fr. John Magee, the former Bishop of Cloyne, and Monsignor Denis O’Callaghan, Vicar General of Cloyne, were willfully ignoring these guidelines, as at least nine credible accusations of abuse were hidden from law enforcement.

While it might be tempting to lay the blame for lax enforcement of the 1996 guidelines strictly at the feet of Cloyne’s clergy, it has been uncovered that in 1997 the Vatican secretly advised church leaders that the guidelines should only be considered “merely a study document.”

For all the horror found in the previous reports on clergy abuse, the Cloyne Report is particularly damning because it proved abuse was still being covered up within the last few years. “For the first time in Ireland, a report into child sexual abuse exposes an attempt by the Holy See to frustrate an inquiry in a sovereign, democratic republic as little as three years ago, not three decades ago,” said Kenny. “The Cloyne report excavates the dysfunction, disconnection, elitism, the narcissism, that dominate the culture of the Vatican to this day.”

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3 Comments

  1. Schism is the wrong term in this context. The Greeks and the Roman Catholic Church have a schism; the Republic of Ireland and the Roman Catholic Church do not.

     Use “divide,” “discord,” or any other term, but, technically, “schism” is not correct here.