Irish Catholics keep the faith ahead of
Pope's visit
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[August 22, 2018]
By Clodagh Kilcoyne
KNOCK, Ireland (Reuters) - Bernie and Tom
Byrne can barely conceal their excitement as they prepare for a visit to
Ireland by Pope Francis that they hope will bring back the young
believers that have deserted the Catholic church after decades of
scandal.
Their grandfather Dominic was one of at least twenty-two people that
claimed to see Mary, Joseph and John the Evangelist hovering near the
gable end of the local church in the western Irish village of Knock on a
rainy evening in August 1879.
Francis will pray at the Knock shrine as part of his two-day visit to
Ireland this week, the first by a Pope in almost 40 years that have
transformed the once staunchly Catholic country into a far more secular
and liberal society. https://tmsnrt.rs/2N95yFI
"Houses are being painted and streets are being scrubbed... trying to
get everything ready for him, even though it's only a short visit," said
Bernie, 74, who like his brother Tom, runs a small shop selling
religious goods to the 1.5 million pilgrims that come to Knock each
year.
"Because he is such a humble man, and a nice man, everybody is dying to
have a look at him."
Religion is still deeply embedded in the face of the Irish countryside -
roadside grottos with statues of the Virgin Mary are a feature of almost
every Irish town and village, with most erected in 1954 when the Vatican
called for a Marian year of celebration and devotion.
Like many practicing Catholics across the country, the Byrne brothers
hope the papal visit will bring back those that abandoned the church
after its standing and influence collapsed over a string of clerical
child sex abuse scandals.
"A lot of the youngsters are not going to church now at all, with all
the scandal," said Tom.
"The church would have to change to accommodate younger people.
Possibly, more than likely, they will have to ordain women priests
because they have no priests at the moment to succeed the older priests
that are here."
"A-LA-CARTE CATHOLICS"
Pope Francis will be the second pope to visit Knock after Pope John Paul
II said mass to a crowd of around 450,000 there in 1979. Organizers are
expecting a crowd of around 45,000 for Francis.
The proportion of Catholics fell to 78 percent in the most recent census
of 2016 from a peak of 95 percent in 1961. Many of those no longer
practise, as seen by dwindling mass attendances and the fact that only
half of all marriages last year were Catholic ceremonies compared to
over 90 percent 20 years ago.
Still, another 500,000 people are expected to watch Pope Francis say
mass in Dublin's Phoenix Park on Sunday, including Joe Towell who
remembers the "euphoric" scenes in the park 39 years ago when Pope John
Paul II prayed there.
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A pilgrim is blessed by the newly ordained Father Gerard Quirke
after Mass at the summit of Croagh Patrick holy mountain during an
annual Catholic pilgrimage near Lecanvey, Ireland, July 29, 2018.
REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne
Towell, 68, lives with his mother by the nearby O'Devaney gardens
flats where he tends to the 1950's complex's statue of Mary. While
some locals' cars have been stolen and homes broken into, nobody
touches Mary, he says.
Excited about the visit of "another extraordinary type of pope", he
sees Francis as bridging a generational gap that has opened between
the conservative and liberal wings of the church.
"He's still preaching the same gospel as they've all been preaching.
He's just got a little more understanding of the present way people
are feeling," Towell said.
For other Catholics, the visit provides a boost to the faithful who
are struggling with a social landscape changed beyond recognition by
votes in recent years to remove constitutional blocks to abortion
and gay marriage.
Ireland became the first country to adopt same-sex marriage by
popular vote in a landslide 2015 referendum and last year ended one
of the world's strictest abortion regimes by an even larger majority
of 66 percent.
"A lot of Catholics have gone a-la-carte, but being Catholic is very
serious," said Marie Campbell, who joined thousands of pilgrims who
scale Croagh Patrick in the western County Mayo every July in honor
of Saint Patrick, Ireland's patron saint.
"Our Catholic faith stands for life. It's the very center of being
Catholic. We cherish life, life is sacred, and a lot of Catholics
need to be reminded of these things."
(Writing by Graham Fahy, editing by Padraic Halpin and Alexandra
Hudson)
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