"The
Greatest Wound ... in This Present Crisis Is the Betrayal of Love"
MAYNOOTH,
Ireland, JULY 10, 2010 (Zenit.org).-
Here is the address Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O'Connor, the retired
archbishop of Westminster, delivered June 15 at the Maynooth Union
Celebrations to mark the end of the Year for Priests. The address was
written and the invitation extended prior to his appointment by Benedict
XVI as the apostolic visitor for the Archdiocese of Armagh.
* * *
I am delighted to be with you this afternoon and I am very pleased so
many of you are here. Perhaps before I begin I should say that this
address was just about completed before my appointment by Pope Benedict
as one of those involved in the Visitation here in Ireland.
When we come together on these anniversary occasions we have plenty of
stories to tell. Being Irish it would be strange if we didn’t. Stories
are important. They carry our history, our experience, our humour and
our pain. When we tell them, we again put shape on a life and a history.
Sometimes, they carry a memory of which we can’t let go. Often, they
carry a moment, a person, an experience that still nourishes us. In
sharing our stories we share ourselves and express not only our past but
also our future hopes.
As well as our personal stories, there are also the grand ones; those
that have shaped the identity of the nation and of the Church. How many
times has the story of Ireland been told - its sorrow and its triumphs?
To how many foreign lands has that story been carried by generations?
Perhaps the unique feature of these stories was the way in which faith
and Irish identity were so intertwined. This would be true of myself. I
had an uncle a priest who worked in the Portsmouth Diocese and whenever
we had family gatherings he would make a speech beginning with a quote
from one of the Psalms, Remember the rock from which you were hewn ….
How could I forget my Irish roots when the culture I lived in in England
still had deep resonances of the background of my father and mother. How
grateful I am for all that they gave me, nourished and strengthened in
this land of saints and sinners.
Returning from Vatican Two, the formidable Archbishop of Dublin, John
Charles McQuaid is reported to have informed his diocese, “Allow me to
reassure you, no change will worry the tranquillity of your Christian
lives.”[1] His Grace clearly felt that the story was not going to
change. In many ways his confidence comes out of what is sometimes
called, ‘The Cullen Church.’ But for all Archbishop McQuaid’s confidence
the story has changed, deeply and decisively for both the Church and the
country.
There was the great story of the New Ireland, leaving the poverty of its
largely rural past behind and entering the new urban life with all its
energies and opportunity. The New Ireland which economically, culturally
and psychologically emerged from its own history, so closely tied to its
struggle with England, to become a modern European State. We have all
lived through the new story of the ‘Celtic Tiger’ and a nation which was
fast throwing over its religious identity as well, to embrace a much
more relaxed and easy secularism. There was a sense that it needed to
break with the old stories and the way they intertwined faith and
identity in order to live the new modern life that was on offer. The
nation had a new confidence which came with its well educated and
talented younger generations. But these last two years have shown us how
fragile new stories can be – as fragile and as unstable as the economic
movements upon which they have been built. Even so, it is surely a
tribute to the deeper sense of community that the nation can face the
inevitable consequences of a severe recession without social division
and disruption. But it must, in some way, leave a quiet sense of
mistrust, if not betrayal, in the grander stories that society feels
compelled to tell itself.
That is at one level. Then there is the other great story that touches
us most personally and deeply especially as we look back over all the
years of our priesthood. These are part of us; the stories we were given
and the ones that we have made as well.
Theology is, perhaps, a particular way of telling a story. Through all
its abstract categories we can see the structural lines of the
narrative. The great narrative of the Church, its self-understanding and
pilgrimage; it confidence in the sacraments and that the revelation it
has received of Jesus Christ is of fundamental significance for the
world. Within that, too, is the story of our own priesthood; the
archetypal story of the alter Christus, the Shepherd, the father,
teacher, consoler, sanctifier and sometimes prophetic judge. Whatever
shape is given to that theology it is filled out in a life; it has a
human face and a human history. It is, of course, our faces and our
histories; it is our stories. Until relatively recent times, the
theology and the actual life of the Church to which it gave shape was
inseparable from the story of Ireland. The priest, too was part of this;
inseparable from the life of the people and the rhythms of their lives.
We know that there was an idealism and a romanticism in all this. In the
light of all that has happened over these years we may be more
suspicious of this story and more zealous in deconstructing it, but we
should not forget that there was a truth in it as well. At some level it
carried a sense of Ireland’s call to holiness, its mission. It was a
witness to a confident Catholicism which could stand before the world.
It was a theology lived and given real flesh and blood in the simple,
sincere and unpretentious lives of so many priests, religious and people
and the faith they took with them to every part of the world. We have
all lived this story in some way and we have all been formed by it.
Now, this story too would seem to be a broken narrative. Again, we are
faced not only with a sense of loss, but of mistrust and betrayal.
Clearly those who have suffered abuse are foremost in our thoughts and
prayers. Today I wanted to reflect on how these terrible crimes have
affected the Church. It does not matter that the great majority of
priests and bishops are good servants and pastors of their people. When
the scandal of abuse runs so deep, it casts its shadow over everything.
It is not just the public dimension to it all. Painful though it is,
that can and must be faced. It is, rather, the more personal side of it.
It is the way in which we can all feel that our own ministry is somehow
contaminated. There can be a sense of suddenly being exposed and naked,
all too conscious of our inadequacies, and acutely aware that maybe we
have lost part of our moral and spiritual authority. Of course, this is
nothing compared with the pain of abuse suffered by the victims. At
other levels there may be a sense of grieving for the pain that has been
caused, the faith that has been broken and the stories that can no
longer be told. With that there is disorientation and anger. In these
moments, we no longer know who we are and there are plenty of voices
telling other darker stories about our identity and purpose. The scandal
of abuse robs us all of our innocence.
So we meet here today shorn of so many familiar things. The stories
which we have told to put meaning and purpose and value on our lives and
work – nationally as well as religiously – seem to ring strangely
hollow. It is here that I want to begin. But before I do I want to share
with you some of my own experience of being in this place when I was
Archbishop of Westminster.
You know, the things I remember about my life as a priest are not the
successes but rather the failures and one particular and painful failure
occurred ten years ago when, owing to my grave mishandling of a priest
who was an abuser, I was attacked and vilified for nearly two years. You
probably know the story. How well I remember the feelings of failure and
isolation and shame, not so much for myself but for my family, my
Diocese, for the Catholic people of England and Wales who, to a certain
extent, felt the shame of my own failure and of child abuse in general.
But I also began to understand in a new way, by talking with victims,
the pain and grave damage done to them. I say this to show, I suppose,
that I myself am not free from blame but have had to learn from mistakes
to become, as someone described it, a wounded healer. From that
experience I learnt yet again to pray for perseverance, obedience to my
vocation, and of suffering in a way which I did not expect and which, in
the end, brought some positive benefit because of the national
safeguarding policies, procedures and structures which are now in place
and used in all our parishes and dioceses in England and Wales.”
As I lived, worked and prayed through these things I came to see my
experience in terms of a very difficult and unclear journey that I was
asked to make. I thought of it in terms of the Road to Emmaus. It too
comes out of an experience when the story is broken and hope appears
lost. I think it is a journey and a road that speaks to us all. Let me
just recall some of its principal features:
The Road to Emmaus.
The spiritual and emotional landscape of Luke’s story is one that we can
easily recognise. There is the flight from the place of pain, of broken
dreams and lost hope. We cannot mistake the levels of betrayal; it is
not only that these two disciples feel that their own faith in the
Messiah has been betrayed; maybe, too, there is also a sense in which
they have colluded in abandoning him. How understandable that they
should want to get as far away as possible from the scene; get back to
normal, to what is familiar, whatever these things may now mean. But
this, too, is part of the confusion; it is an illusion to think that
they can return to the way things were. For them, there can be no normal
anymore. Even if they spend the rest of their lives in silence, just
getting on with the routine things of life, that very silence will be
filled with the unspoken memory of their crucified Lord. How could they
ever trust the scriptures again? How could they ever trust themselves
again?
Yet it is precisely on this journey – this other journey of loss and
despair – that the stranger comes to walk with them. We know that it is
part of Luke’s apologetics that he unfolds scripture to them. In other
words, that the death of the Christ was actually part of God’s
unfathomable plan, not the pragmatic casual act of some brutal imperial
power. But we also know that in opening scripture to them, he is also
retelling them the story that they had believed in. He is teaching them
how to live again with faith; to believe and even risk their lives for
the sake of the story.
Luke is also teaching something very beautiful about the way the Risen
Christ deals with us. He does not force himself upon us but with a
simple, astonishing humility, he meets us ‘in via’ – on our way not his
way; where we are, not where we think we should be. In this meeting of
the disciples with the Risen Lord whom they do not recognise we discover
one of those Lucan masterstrokes. The Lord invites them first to tell
their story, from their point of view. “They stopped, their faces
downcast...Our own hope had been that he would be the one to set Israel
free ......” (Lk. 24).
They give him the facts; they put before him their despair and broken
dreams. They share with him their confusion and emptiness, “Some of our
friends went to the tomb and found everything exactly as the women had
reported but of him they saw nothing.”
Here we have their story, but the Risen Lord teaches from within this
experience of loss and brokenness how to find the Gospel of Life. He
needed to show them how, within this road, is another road, the road
that the Risen Lord is now walking. It is not a road of denial. It does
not lead to false enchantments but it is a real road of suffering and
confusion. It is the road that God has carved out of all our failures
and mistakes; the road that he walks with us showing us that this road
does not lead to emptiness but it is the road that leads us to Him. This
‘catechesis’ of the Risen Christ was the necessary preparation that
allowed them finally to recognise Him; to understand that even when He
disappeared from sight, they would always recognise Him in ‘the breaking
of the bread.’ And their hearts were alive again. With these new hearts
they return. ‘Did not our hearts burn within us as He talked to us on
the road and explained the scriptures to us (Lk. 24).
My sense is that we are on that same road as those disciples. Though the
recent revelations about child abuse and the failure at so many levels
of the Church’s leadership can make it difficult, I believe we can have
confidence in the road that we are walking. I want to assure you, there
is the joy of resurrection after suffering and death. There is joy in
our faith. Jesus talks to you and to me as He talked to the disciples on
the road. He calls us and sends us out again in His name.
Personal Experience:
The way may be long, but we can learn from this moment of broken stories
and through them we can begin again to find a new understanding. What is
clear is that we cannot go back, nor can we simply repeat the formulas
of the past. Some have spoken of this time as the ‘dark night’ of the
Church in Ireland. Yet, painful though the dark night is, we know it is
also a time of learning; a time of purifying and of trusting. In the
dark night, all we have is our faith that God has not abandoned us, is
working with us, and, of course, we feel the rawness not only of our sin
but also our poverty. In some way, though, that poverty is also a gift
because it strips away all the other structures that we have come to
rely upon. It brings us back to source of our life, our identity and our
call.
Let me now say something very personal. Jesus promised us that he would
not leave us orphans, without a hearth or a home. For me the Church has
always been my home, my mother, my teacher. I am aware, as we all are,
of the narrow-mindedness and immaturity and other things that irritate
one about the Church, but it is the hearth of my soul and the mother of
my spiritual being. I cannot find words to thank the Church for having
made me live with a sense of order and beauty. It gives me the Word of
God in Scripture and the Presence of God in Christ in the sacraments
and, above all, the presence of the Holy Spirit in His people with the
ability, as it were, to live with the saints. The Church puts order into
my life and my mind and is always recalling me to the mission contained
in the Gospel. I suppose, above all, the Church gives me the Holy
Eucharist, with all the People of God gathered around the altar being
united and in communion and being nourished by the Son of God.
This is the story that is never broken because, like the disciples on
the road to Emmaus, we discover that it is not our story but the one we
have been given. It is His story and He tells it again in the lives of
the good, ordinary priests that we know and have known; in the daily
goodness and holiness of the women and men who give us the daily example
of faithfulness. This, too, is the mark of priesthood and the character
of our ministry in the joyous confident times and in the dark nights
where we keep vigil for the dawn.
Looking Forward: Beginning to tell the Story again.
And so we have come here to celebrate our anniversaries. You have my
warmest congratulations. But rather than just gather to tell the old
familiar tales, I suppose we have come to discover we have to begin
again. Yes, we have to carry on but we also have to find the truth which
we can speak and live in love that will not only bring a new heart to
the Nation but to the Church. I have no magic formula for this. Indeed,
there is a danger in rushing to find a solution before we have fully
understood the shape of the problem. Of course, there are some things
that can and must be done and are already in hand. As in England and
Wales, we need honest appraisal of where our structures and procedures
failed, not just legally and canonically but humanly. Then we need to
waste no time to get new and more effective ones in place. That is a
beginning but I think there is, too, a deeper and slower process in
which we all have a part. I used to be deeply involved in the ecumenical
movement and I remember being profoundly moved when I read these words
from the Second Vatican Council’s document on Ecumenism: There is no
ecumenism worthy of the name without interior conversion, newness of
attitudes and unstinted love. (U.R. No. 7). So I believe that the
process that has to happen here in Ireland can be summed up in those
three phrases: conversion of heart, newness of attitudes and unstinted
love.
First of all, there is ‘conversion of heart’. Throughout this crisis
there has been a close examination of leadership and the ways in which
it seems to have failed. When writing to the Church in Ireland, the Pope
acknowledged this and began to map out a path of repentance and renewal.
For many, the letter did not go far enough and I know that in a climate
of desolation, where so many feel that justice still needs to be
accomplished, this is understandable. Yet, I think it would be a great
loss to dismiss it or think that it has nothing to say at the present
moment. It is a letter which begins to show us the way of speaking the
truth in love. It understands that renewing structures alone, for all
their necessity, will not heal the grieving soul and wounded spirit.
That is why the Pope also sets another process in motion. It goes deep
into the great spiritual patrimony of the Irish Church. It is about a
genuine and deep repentance which requires not only a commitment to
truth and understanding, especially understanding the roots and
consequences of what has happened, but a commitment also to love.
Now is the time for us to live what we have so often taught and
preached. Repentance is about change; a seeking of the grace we need
because without it, no change can go deep enough to really transform us.
That time of repentance is a time of grieving which is more than just
apology. To use the biblical word, it is a time for lament, a really
honest acknowledgement of what has been done and what has been lost.
Yet, such an act of truth is also an act of courage and hope. It turns
us again to the source of our life and faith; it opens us to God. It is
our cry that He would ‘rebuild the walls of Jerusalem.’ ‘Create for us a
pure heart’ and put a new spirit within us and it is about taking the
time to let that desire go deep. When we can say ‘yes’ to this sort of
change then not only our words but our will and our understanding are
changed too. Then we shall find new possibilities in our relationship to
God and to each other.
I do not for a moment think this is easy, but I do think that there is
such a deep spiritual resource in the Church in Ireland that it can be
done. But it takes time. Understandable as it is, one of our greatest
temptations in situations of desolation is to try to hurry through it.
But we must have the courage and faith not to rush; to give it the time
it needs; time to hear all that we need to hear, and to say all that
needs to be said from the depths of our hearts. It takes a different
sort of leadership to persevere in the desert times and to remain
faithful to the truth that needs not only to be spoken, but also heard
and understood. If we can allow this time then I think there opens up
opportunities for renewing leadership and discovering what it means in a
fresh, perhaps, liberated way. Perhaps Ireland will develop a new
relationship with the Church in this post-modern age.
Second, I speak of ‘newness of attitudes’. What is needed is something
at a deeper level, something that demands a change of life-style.
‘Change of heart is central’ but it is not just a end in itself. It must
be so that God can bring something new to birth in us and through us,
personally and as a community. As we walk our own road to Emmaus, could
it not be that Jesus Christ is both stripping us of our defences and
false stories and teaching us again how to be priests and bishops for
his people? To be ordained priest is to live with Christ as Head of His
Body, the Church, not for the salvation of the priest or, indeed, of the
bishop, but of others. To discover again how to live this daily gift of
self is to discover how to trust in Him and in His people.
The sacrament of priesthood is not just something we receive, it is
rather something we become; it is marked by the same surrender and gift
of Christ’s own life. Surrender to the Father is not a loss of self but
its deepest expression.
For us, as priests, I believe that that surrender to the Father is lived
as our obedience to the Word of God and our vocation which the Church
interprets for us. It is something that we have to learn, and learning
takes patience, which has been called the little sister of hope. Perhaps
in these hard times we are learning to have that patience, that
surrender and that hope. If all this is obedience to the Word of God, to
the priest it also means obedience to the mind of the Church and to the
Paschal Mystery. Here we touch the core of Christ’s life – His
continuous self-gift which is at the heart of his whole being. It is his
self-gift which never ceases, even in the silence of the Cross and in
the dark emptiness of death. Christ lives that self-emptying because it
is the most complete act of love.
Some years ago I met the Archbishop of Prague, Cardinal Vlk, and during
the meal we had together he told me about his experiences during the
Communist era in the Czech Republic. He told me how, for ten years of
his life, he was persecuted by the authorities and his licence to
practise as a priest was removed. He was thrown out of his parish and
told to earn his keep and make his own hidden way in the world. He
became a window-cleaner in the city of Prague. One day, while high up on
a ladder cleaning windows on one of Prague’s beautiful streets, he saw
below a group of German tourists window-shopping. He could hear them
laughing, joking and chatting about what they wanted to buy. And then it
struck him. A voice deep within him: “Nobody knows who you are …. Nobody
cares that you are a priest, nobody cares that you have faith, nobody is
interested in the message of Jesus that you preach”. He shared with me
his sense of abandonment and isolation. Then he said, very beautifully
and profoundly, “But suddenly, like a revelation, it became clear to me
that the Cross is not a pious object out there but the Cross is a living
reality in my life, for on the Cross of Jesus God is present but
hidden.” To be a priest is to make this self-gift the rule of our lives:
it is simply to be love. Perhaps the greatest wound for every one caught
up in this present crisis is the betrayal of love. But we can learn to
find it again in Him through His grace. It is the Eucharistic pattern of
our lives.
So maybe now is the time for a newness of attitude towards that
sacrament within us, to make our priesthood again the sacrament of love,
lived freely in self-gift, truth and the service of God’s People. It
means a celebration of the Eucharist in a way that is profound. The
priest presides over the Eucharist and does not control it; he enables
there to be a proper participation by all the lay people. It is the
experience of Emmaus which we have been reflecting upon: to recognise
him in the breaking of the bread. In that moment is also a recognition
of their unity with him and with one another.
In my experience, I have to say that I think the liturgy in our
countries can be greatly improved. In some parishes there are bad
readers, bad singing, bad preaching and, sad to say, priests as I have
said, who control the liturgy instead of presiding over the liturgy. How
crucial is that celebration every day and, above all, every week, when
the people come together knowing that their unity is not fundamentally
focused on the Pope or the Bishops, though obviously both have their
part to play in the communion of the Church. Our unity and our strength
and our hope is the Mass, the people gathered round the altar where the
Eucharist is celebrated and we are in communion with Jesus Christ and
offer our sacrifice to the Father in and through and with Him and then
receive Him. Our unity is, quite simply, Jesus Christ, and our belief
and our hope and our love of Him.
When I speak of newness of attitudes, perhaps I would also like to speak
of us as priests and, indeed, as bishops, to be more in communion with
our people. This can only happen when trust is given and restored where
it has been lost. But that restoration comes when relations are built to
those actions of which the Prophet Micah speaks: This is what God wants
of you, only this, to act justly, to love tenderly and to walk humbly
with your God. So it is when we speak authentically, simply, honestly
from our own love of Christ and of His Church and not from any
second-hand formulas or headline- grabbing sound-bites. When trust in
the institution is weakened, we can only turn to the person and begin to
rebuild from there. But let me encourage you. I once had a questionnaire
in my former diocese of Arundel and Brighton and, among other things,
asked the people what were the good things about their parish and what
were the things that could be improved. I was quite delighted when about
eighty per cent of the eight thousand responses said the best thing
about their parish was their parish priest. I am quite certain that the
same is true here in Ireland. The people have a respect and a real
affection and love for their priest, not only in the past, but to-day.
I think being in communion with our people has practical consequences.
One of the real works of leadership is to bring forth and confirm the
gifts of others in the community. As you will know from your own
experience, a parish has a profoundly rich resource of talents in all
its members. Since the Council, the Church has developed and deepened
its theology of the laity. It is one of the principal ministries of the
bishop, together with his priests, to seek, to nourish and to foster the
self-understanding and mission of the laity in the Church and in the
world. This must go beyond the routine and necessary chores. They must
embrace responsibilities which allow for a real participative
leadership. There is real wisdom and expertise, both secular and
spiritual, among our people and we must not be afraid to let their
abundant gifts serve the good of the Church. They are, after all, the
gifts of the Holy Spirit. I know it is a challenge to get a huge
response from some of your people. But there has to be good
communication with the people whom you serve. The structures of the
parish must express that oneness and cooperation in which all can come
to a common mind. This means, I think, more open and consultative
processes at every level of the Church’s life. If there is a fear of
losing control or power, it is a false one. So, I repeat, what is hoped
for is conversion of heart, newness of attitudes and unstinted love.
In Orthodox monasteries, there is a lovely custom that at the end of the
day, following Night Prayer, the Abbot sits in his chair and one by one
the monks approach him and kneel before him. The Abbot then kisses each
monk on the top of his head as a sign of forgiveness, acceptance and
love. That is for me a symbol of what the people of this country and,
indeed, the people of Europe, are looking for. I believe in the God
revealed to us by Jesus, who is a God who forgives us, accepts us and
loves us. He is the God who speaks to us about who we are, how we should
live and teaches us the ways that will lead us into a responsible
exercise of our freedom. If we close our hearts and minds to Him, if we
forget or exclude God, then our lives lose both meaning and hope. Pope
Benedict expresses this beautifully in his encyclical on Christian hope
when he says, We need greater and lesser hopes that keep us going day by
day, but these are not enough without the great hope which must surpass
everything else. This great hope can only be God, who encompasses the
whole of reality and who can bestow upon us what we by ourselves cannot
attain. The fact that it comes to us as a gift is actually part of hope.
God is the foundation of hope, not any God but the God who has a human
face and who has loved us to the end, each one of us and humanity in all
its entirety (Spe Salvi 31)
The challenge confronting the Church today is, as always, how best to
communicate the richness and newness of the Gospel message to the people
of our countries. The centrality of that message is of a God whose love
for us is unlimited. We learn about this love in our families, our
relationships, above all in the communion of the believing women and men
who are the Church. So we should not fear. In our prayer, our worship,
our contemplation before God, and following the teaching of the Church,
for those who believe in Christ, the future is always full of hope and
open to new life. Nor should we forget the words of Mother Teresa: God
has not called me to be successful – he has called me to be faithful.
The literary scholar Daniel Corkery used the term the ‘hidden Ireland’
to refer to the popular culture of the Catholic, Irish speaking,
under-class of the eighteenth century. I think there is also another
‘hidden Ireland’ in our own time. The media exposure of these last
years, and the broken narratives that we can no longer return to, can
easily lead us to miss this other quieter Ireland in our midst. Yet we
find it there in the holiness of so many women and men. They carry the
story for us – one that is old yet forever new. In their faithfulness we
can see God’s faithfulness to us and we can learn from them how to be
their servants, how to be their priests. So my hope and my prayer this
afternoon is that you continue to create a culture in which God is
honoured and worshipped and all men and women cherished, valued and
supported from the beginning of their lives to their end when they enter
into the fullness of the Mystery of God. God matters to everyone and it
is because of this we must worship and serve Him.
Let me end with these words of St. Paul to the Ephesians: Glory to Him
whose power working in us can do infinitely more than we can ask or
imagine. Glory to Him from generation to generation in the Church and in
Christ Jesus, for ever and ever. Amen.
[1] Quoted by James S. Donnely Jr. in Christianity in Ireland,
Revisiting the Story, (2002) ed. Brendan Bradshaw and Dáire Keogh, The
Columba Press, p. 272.