Fr Liam Power Fr Liam Power addresses some criticism of the Church’s pre-marriage course A charge that is sometimes – unfairly – made against Accord, the Catholic marriage care service, is that the pre-marriage preparation course is too ‘horizontal’ and therefore, by implication, not ‘vertical’ enough. As Priest-Director of Accord in the Waterford Centre serving…
Catholic education equips students for a pluralist Ireland
Eilis Humphreys Faith schools empower students with an understanding of the spiritual dimension of life, writes Eilis Humphreys We are living in a world that is changing too fast to be easily understood and that poses a challenge to everybody in the coming years not least those involved in our schools. There has been much…
Preparing for the watershed
Sarah Mac Donald Archbishop Richard Clarke tells Sarah Mac Donald about his plans to get the Church of Ireland out of survival mode As the year of centenaries and elections begins to unfold, opinions on party manifestos and commemorative events are reaching a crescendo. Amid the clamouring views, one authoritative voice, with an all-island perspective,…
‘If we believe that we are deserving of a right to life, how can we deny it to others?’
Barry Walsh Striping the right to life from terminally ill children would be a truly shocking development, writes Barry Walsh The use of language matters in any debate, since words have the capacity to cause extreme hurt, particularly when they seek to unfairly marginalise or devalue vulnerable members of society. It is unfortunate then that…
Our silence condones migrants’ deaths – Pope
We share the responsibility for the deaths of desperate migrants when we stand by silently, Pope Francis has said, urging Catholics to see migrants not in legalistic terms but as fellow human beings with their own inherent dignity and abilities to contribute to their new homes. Speaking on the World Day for Migrants and Refugees,…
Ghana’s bishops warn against transfer from Guantanamo
Ghana’s bishops have issued a statement protesting about the transfer of former Guantanamo Bay prisoners to their country, describing it as “wrong and dangerous”. In a statement signed by Konongo-Mampong’s Bishop Joseph Osei-Bonsu, president of the country’s bishops’ conference, the bishops said they had responded to this development with “distress and sadness”, calling on the…
Vatican roundup
Mercy at the heart of the Pope’s new series of talks God’s mercy is constant and limitless, and he is faithful in his mercy for his children, even when they are unfaithful, Pope Francis has said in his first general audience of 2016, the first of a series of weekly talks on mercy. Claiming that in the Bible, from the “Old Testament to the full…
Kenya Government’s new worship rules shock bishops
Kenya’s bishops have said they are “shocked and surprised” by government plans to regulate worship in the east African country. Responding to concerns that some pastors were fleecing followers and some mosques are becoming centres of radicalisation, the government has published new rules requiring religious leaders to have theological degrees and religious groups to submit…
Deportation raids must stop, bishops plead
Two American bishops have written to the government seeking an end to deportation raids that earlier this month rounded up more than 120 Central American immigrants. “We disagree with the underlying rationale behind this action: that sending children and families back to the dangerous environment they fled will serve as a deterrent for other children…
Catholics in Ireland do not face real persecution
Dear Editor, The statistics in the report in last week’s paper (IC 14/01/2016) about the rise in persecution of Christians made for some scary reading. Sometimes Catholics here in Ireland talk about being under attack or being persecuted by the secular culture around us. While it is fair to say our media, our Government and…










