Ireland, a country that used to export its Catholic clergy around the world, is running out of priests at such a rate that their numbers will have dropped by two thirds in the next 20 years, leaving parishes up and down the land vacant. The decline of Catholic Ireland, for decades the Pope’s favourite bastion of faith in Europe, has been regularly predicted, as the economic successes of the Celtic Tiger brought growing secularisation.
One-hundred and sixty priests died last year but only nine were ordained. Figures for nuns were even more dramatic, with the deaths of 228 nuns and only two taking final vows for service in religious life. The priestly age profile is creating another dilemma because most priests are already close to normal retirement age. The average age of Irish priests is currently 61.
Regular church attendance, which was at 90 per cent at the start of the 1990s, has suffered a collapse
1 comment:
Interesting post, Alan. There is a dearth of catholic priests in Britain too. Where I live, for instance, we have two RC churches, looked after now by the one parish priest from Nigeria. When I was a kid just one of these churches had 7 priests attached to it, the other had 3 (most of them Irish). And altar boys! the competition for these high ranking posts was akin to the competition to get on X Factor. The enforcement of religion was strict here too. At school, the class would be grilled, tested on a Monday, to see who had been to church, and any child who could not prove they had been there (by remembering the sermon or the readings from the gospels) was humiliated, threatened with eternal damnation, told their soul was black, and given a strongly worded letter to take home to their parents.
I for one look forward to the day when there are no more priests.
Post a Comment