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United Dioceses of Dublin & Glendalough

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28.08.2018

Reflection of the Archbishop of Dublin on the Visit of Pope Francis to Ireland

The Archbishop presented Pope Francis with a pectoral cross made from yew from the churchyard of St John’s, Laragh.
Reflection of the Archbishop of Dublin on the Visit of Pope Francis to Ireland - The Archbishop presented Pope Francis with a pectoral cross made from yew from the churchyard of St John’s, Laragh.
Pope Francis arrives at Dublin Airport.

Now that the visit of Pope Francis has concluded, it is good to pause and reflect. Anyone who gave the visit even a small amount of attention will have her or his own views on its scope and its impact. Almost everyone will have heard once too often the comparison with the visit of Pope John Paul ii thirty–nine years ago. And many of the same people will long ago have worked out for themselves that the Ireland of today is a very different place. They will also know that the capacity for following events from afar by social media is part of what has happened in that timeframe and that numbers, while indicative, have their limitations, particularly if they are overused to prove once too often that an event was in fact a non–event.

The presence in Ireland even for a period of thirty–six hours of a figure of such international stature and significance is exciting in so many ways. Pope Francis developed early in his pontificate an agenda around ecology and theology in the spirit of St Francis of Assisi (Laudato Si). He also developed a theology around the joy of love (Amoris Laetitia). Both themes played their part in the structuring of The World Meeting of Families which came to Dublin following its taking place in Philadelphia in 2015. It goes next to Rome in 2021 with an Irish blessing.

The internationalism of The World Meeting was clear to anyone who went to the RDS for the Congress itself. The space that is associated with horses and dogs and farm animals of the highest calibre along with musical concerts and lectures and that great Leinster passion – rugby – is entirely versatile. It is also easy as a location to find your way around. People from all over the world were there in significant numbers and they came with their children. On the Thursday evening, I saw a small boy with an earpiece for translation settle into a lecture by the Cardinal Archbishop of Myanmar on the ravages of ecological vandalism, ignorance and exploitation of the earth. The boy’s keen interest was infectious.

The shape of each day was one of interactive conversations and lectures on themes of family life and care for the planet. There were also groups from across the Christian world inviting people to engage with them, who they were and what they did in a free and open space in The Exhibition Hall. There was, of course, much interest in the seminars about safeguarding and the responses to abuse within the Roman Catholic Church. There was also a great deal of anger and that too is rightly understandable and understandably right. It is always correct for us to put victims first and this will continue to be the case. Both WMOF and the visit of Pope Francis found that the voice of the victim of sexual abuse was paramount and to the fore. There was no escaping this during or after the visit. Nor could there have been from a human and a divine perspective, from either church or state.

I took the opportunity to go to see the film entitled Pope Francis – A Man of His Word in advance. As well as the obvious meaning in the title, the film left me with a sense of Francis as a man of Jesus Christ, The Word, the Son of God, the Second Person of The Trinity. It is important not to over–inflate someone with celebrity status. Every one of us is flawed and a sinner. Often what you are left with is the question: Is that really all? Was that it? Is it all over? This comes about by the deadening sophistication of contemporary communication. It in effect enables many of us today to know significant figures on our own terms and in our own kitchens and on our own iPhones even if we never meet them face to face or experience their interacting with other people. It is important to accept that much of the mystique is long gone and that we have done this to ourselves. Even if familarity does not always breed contempt, over–exposure breeds a deepening incapacity to be impressed by anyone other than oneself.

What impressed me in the film was not only how Pope Francis spoke but how he engaged with people in silence and with people who simply were not able to speak whether because of their physical incapacity or their circumstantial trauma. The big screen conveyed this beautifully. He brought this spirit to Dublin.

It is a mark of the openness and graciousness of Archbishop Diarmuid Martin that he invited me to so many of the events that were happening in Dublin and in his diocese. This gave me the special privilege of greeting Pope Francis as he arrived at Dublin Airport and of giving him a small gift. I had requested from the rector of St John’s Laragh (the Church of Ireland Parish of Glendalough) a pectoral cross made in wood from a yew tree in the churchyard. These trees are of great antiquity. This is what I gave to Pope Francis when I met him on the tarmac.

My words to him were few and simple: ‘Your Holiness, I first had the pleasure of meeting you at the Five Hundredth Anniversary of The Reformation in Lund and in Malmo in Sweden. This cross is made from wood from the Church of Ireland Parish of Glendalough. You are very welcome to Dublin.’ The large–scale events and the intimate events were equally and differently important as was making the heart of Dublin 1 a priority. Many continue dissatisfied at what they see as the absence of apology for wrongs committed by clergy and bishops.

At important moments, unsung heroes and heroines of Irish life and the tragedies that people suffer and continue to suffer here, in secular and religious life alike, were given centre stage. The Croke Park Celebration had something of Mary’s Song Magnificat about it. It was a dynamically enacted evening hymn of praise to God. Those who might not have featured, had the attention to detail been absent, were the people who in fact carried the evening. The lowly of St Luke’s Gospel were lifted up. Margins created a new centre. The same held at particular moments in The Phoenix Park, not least in the Presentation of The Gifts, during the Eucharist.

Many I suspect are still wondering if The Pope expected to be addressed in the way in which he was addressed by an Taoiseach. He is, however, a head of state as well as a head of church. The issues raised by an Taoiseach not only ask questions of Pope Francis but of all of us who want to live in an Ireland that is not so much defined by the accelerated absence of an historically dominant denomination but defined afresh by shared values of faith and practice on the part of the religious of every tradition and World Faith working in tandem with the principled people of no religious tradition. It is our civic duty to work for what will continue to elude us if anger at structures continues to consume us at the current rate: the common good.

The Most Reverend Dr Michael Jackson                                                                   28 August 2018 

The Papal Mass in Phoenix Park.
The Papal Mass in Phoenix Park.

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