Y
Yeoman
Guest
And here’s part II
What we’re seeing now is Ireland catching up with all of that with predictable results. The sad thing is that in doing it Ireland is looking absolutely pathetic. It has the feeling to it of the new kid in school who feels that she has to hang out with the cool kids, dress like they do, affect their speech, and avoid being seen with her square parents. Deep down, however, the kid is probably the same kid she’s always been.
That has the impact of making Ireland just another western European small nation. And that’s the irony of it. Now, Ireland isn’t any more interesting or special than any other western European nation. That will be plain soon enough. People won’t be proud to have had Irish ancestry any more than than they are to have had relatives who came from any other more or less generic place.
Sooner or later, however, people will start asking “what makes us Irish” and the answer is only going to be the Church. The same will be true of Quebec, which right now is a social disaster (pray that Ireland doesn’t get as messed up as Quebec). Then people will turn back.
If evidence is needed of that, Eastern Europe provides it. Former Warsaw Pact nations and Russia itself are still struggling with having been one big boring mass during Communist domination and are rediscovering who they are. In the process of doing that, they’re rediscovering the Church.
The Irish will too. But in the meantime, things will get a lot worse. One of the things that’s going to have to be sorted out is whether the Church’s institutional control of some things, such as the schools, is a good idea. Close association with the government hasn’t saved the dying Lutheran churches of Scandinavia nor is it doing the German churches very much good in Germany. In contrast the churches in U.S. are doing much better with no government association and the churches in Africa that likewise have none are going well. Additionally, the religious (i.e., the clerics) in Ireland seem to have gotten a little mushy in their message and are lacking the vigor they ought to have (and there were signs back for decades that this was not going well). There may be a need for some younger, vigorous, Priests, even if few in number, who make people mad and uncomfortable.
What we’re seeing now is Ireland catching up with all of that with predictable results. The sad thing is that in doing it Ireland is looking absolutely pathetic. It has the feeling to it of the new kid in school who feels that she has to hang out with the cool kids, dress like they do, affect their speech, and avoid being seen with her square parents. Deep down, however, the kid is probably the same kid she’s always been.
That has the impact of making Ireland just another western European small nation. And that’s the irony of it. Now, Ireland isn’t any more interesting or special than any other western European nation. That will be plain soon enough. People won’t be proud to have had Irish ancestry any more than than they are to have had relatives who came from any other more or less generic place.
Sooner or later, however, people will start asking “what makes us Irish” and the answer is only going to be the Church. The same will be true of Quebec, which right now is a social disaster (pray that Ireland doesn’t get as messed up as Quebec). Then people will turn back.
If evidence is needed of that, Eastern Europe provides it. Former Warsaw Pact nations and Russia itself are still struggling with having been one big boring mass during Communist domination and are rediscovering who they are. In the process of doing that, they’re rediscovering the Church.
The Irish will too. But in the meantime, things will get a lot worse. One of the things that’s going to have to be sorted out is whether the Church’s institutional control of some things, such as the schools, is a good idea. Close association with the government hasn’t saved the dying Lutheran churches of Scandinavia nor is it doing the German churches very much good in Germany. In contrast the churches in U.S. are doing much better with no government association and the churches in Africa that likewise have none are going well. Additionally, the religious (i.e., the clerics) in Ireland seem to have gotten a little mushy in their message and are lacking the vigor they ought to have (and there were signs back for decades that this was not going well). There may be a need for some younger, vigorous, Priests, even if few in number, who make people mad and uncomfortable.