As I've mentioned before, the tenth anniversary of this blog is fast approaching-- October the fifteenth, as it happens.
Anniversaries and landmarks are a big deal to me, so I feel the need to mark this, even at the risk of being self-absorbed.
I had the idea of re-posting one blog post from every year of this blog, starting with the very first, in the run-up to the anniversary. So here goes...
(The blog I had before this one, Practicing to be Catholic, didn't exist for very long and is no longer online. Sometimes I think I should save some of the posts I've written here, but there are so many...)
I've since learned that the anecdote about G.K. Chesterton is apocryphal, but that doesn't make the sentiment itself invalid.
A few months ago I closed my previous blog, Practicing to be Catholic,
explaining in my final post that I worried about our society's
increasing addiction to technology. I worried about the things we lose
(or at least, weaken) when computers, televisions, MP3 players and
mobile phones are everywhere; silence, patience, the meaningfulness of
time and space, the erosion of interpersonal interactions like
story-telling, ballad-singing and the swapping of comics.
I still feel those anxieties. And I'm still determined to die without ever having read an e-book.
But I think there is a role for blogs. And, when it comes to Catholic life in Ireland, perhaps even a need for them.
The
Church and the faith is under unprecedented media and popular attack--
all over the Western world, but especially in Ireland. (The American
Catholic commentator and biographer of John Paul II, George Weigel,
recently described Ireland as the "epicentre of European
anti-Catholicism".) Scrutiny and questioning of institutions is healthy,
but the kind of relentless hostility the Church faces-- from
journalists, politicians, teachers, university professors, comedians,
rock musicians, and barstool philosophers-- comes close to
villification.
George Weigel
Nor is the assault confined to the secular world.
Self-described Catholics-- all too often, even priests-- attack the
dogmas and truths that the Holy Spirit has revealed to its pilgrim
Church over two thousand years of discernment, persecution and prayer.
There is a widespread consensus amongst the chattering classes that the
oldest institution in the world-- and one which has survived through
fidelity to its mission and message-- must undergo radical change.
There
are too few voices raised in loyalty to the teaching of the Church's
Magisterium; so few, I feel justified in launching yet another blog into
cyberspace. (Also, I can't believe nobody has named a blog Irish Papist
yet.) In fact, the immediate stimulus was an RTE programme I heard mere
hours ago, in which Charlie Bird interviewed various (carefully
selected) Catholic commentators who all agreed that institutional change
(oh deliciously vague word, change!) was imperative. The usual attacks upon the Vatican and the "clerical mindset" ensued.
The
media, politics and the advertising industry are all dedicated to
flattering their audience. The problem with voter apathy never lies with
the voters, but with politicans. Advertisers tell us we "deserve"
pampering with skin lotions or weekend breaks or visits to a beauty
parlour. Even in everyday life, this mentality holds sway. If you admit
that you are terrible at mathematics or history, your listener
invariably assures you that "you must have had a bad teacher in school".
Similarly,
if there is a problem with the Chuch, the blame must lie with the
institutions-- not with the sinners, you and I, who perpetually fail to
live up to our Christian vocations.
The humility of GK
Chesterton-- who famously responded to a newspaper's request to write on
the question "What's wrong with the world?" with the two words, "I
am"-- seems conspiciously absent in our own society.
The idea in
this blog is to provide a rapid and rolling response to the many attacks
on the Church in Ireland. Will I have the time and patience to stick to
that plan? To quote St. Paul, "I do not know; God knows". But I'm going
to give it a go. I hope you join me for the ride, and don't hestitate
to chip in!
I got one am very glad you did indeed such to that plan! Many thanks for these years of wise and uplifting writing.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Dominic! There would be no point of people didn't read and comment so I appreciate hugely those who have.
DeleteApologies for the appalling typos in the first comment. I was trying to type on a phone on a train! It should have read "I for one am very glad you did indeed stick to that plan".
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