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United Dioceses of Dublin & Glendalough

General

03.10.2013

Autumn ‘SEARCH’ Due Out Soon

The autumn issue of SEARCH – A Church of Ireland Journal will be out around October 11, offering a wide range of articles on issues demanding attention in the world at large, the Churches and society in Ireland, and Northern Ireland in one particular case.

To take the wider canvas first: much attention has been focused this year on Pope Francis and Archbishop Justin Welby, elected within months of each other to lead the Roman Catholic and Anglican Churches respectively; and much hope is being placed in these two “new brooms”, whose style is refreshingly different from their predecessors. So we find here a close consideration of their words and deeds, both recent and less recent, in an attempt to consider the challenges that lie ahead in our two communions. Peter Admirand and Yazid Said, Roman Catholic and Palestinian Anglican theologians respectively, both teaching in Dublin at the Mater Dei Institute in Dublin, collaborate in the reflections from their own perspectives.

Moving to a narrower focus, and the deep concern at the street violence prompted by flag riots and Orange marches around Belfast over the past eighteen months: Bishop Harold Miller, who was present through some of the worst events, reflects on the lessons the Church needs to learn from them, and how we can best minister to those involved so as to go forward into a truly Christian future.

Increasing poverty at home and the threat of climate change world–wide, are two other concerns that have led to animated discussion this past year, and particularly last month. Alec Purser of the St Vincent de Paul Society and Andrew Orr of Eco–Congregations Ireland respectively offer some challenging thoughts on these two subjects.  And relating to another issue, the noticeably increasing number of people of different faith traditions in Ireland north and south, Celia Kenny takes a radical look at how we read the Bible in relation to pluralism.

To complete this issue, past relationships between different cultures in Ireland get a look–in with Mark Empey’s careful study of Protestant links with Gaelic culture in the 17th century; and the historical theme continues with Samuel G Poyntz’s celebration of Bishop Jeremy Taylor, 400 year’s after the great churchman’s birth. Finally Robert MacCarthy offers an In Retrospect on an episcopal figure of more recent times, Robert Wyse Jackson. A varied crop of book reviews closes the issue.

The Good Book Shop in Belfast and “Best Sellers”, (the Bible Society shop in Dawson Street,) Dublin will both have a supply of copies, as will Christ Church Cathedral in Dublin. Otherwise copies can be supplied by the subscriptions manager, Michael Denton. 10 Dun Emer Drive, Dublin 16. <mjsdenton3@gmail.com>. Price €7.50 per copy.

GINNIE KENNERLEY

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