Belfast Telegraph

Shining a light on the lonely life of priests in modern Ireland after Church scandals

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Struggling with the near impos- sible expectatio­ns of the priesthood is a familiar subject in the work of William King, parish priest at Rathmines.

Thomas Galvin finds himself at the steps of Coghill House, St Paul’s seminary, where he trained almost five decades previously, for a retreat with his ageing counterpar­ts in the clergy.

Through alternatin­g chapters, he relives the memories of his youth, and recounts how he and his peers were seduced by the promise of power, and the supposedly modern outlook now favoured by the Vatican Council.

What is most striking, perhaps, is how far the Church has fallen in the eyes of Irish society today.

The seminary that once turned away hopeful entrants now has just one student up for ordination this year.

The reality for Galvin, and his colleagues, is a life of isolation, loneliness and, in some cases, harassment.

Many suffer from depression and alcoholism; one priest candidly admits that he turns the radio on so as to feel as if someone else is in the house.

Lively, engaging characters populate this novel — Mac, a spirited young seminarian later expelled for a late-night romp with the enchanting ‘Lovely Legs’, and Damien Irwin, astutely ambitious and hell-bent on reaching Rome. But they are relegated to the peripherie­s of the narrative, their dynamism thwarted by the oppressive forces of the Church.

Galvin himself is helpless in the face of the whimsical demands and fancies of the Church’s upper echelons, and is often moved from parish and post with little forewarnin­g or considerat­ion for his well-being.

This frustratin­g passivity and refusal to take a stand means that, through sheer lack of action, Galvin becomes an unwitting accomplice and wrongly accused of both financial corruption and, later, covering up abuse within the establishm­ent.

While not wholly defending the role of the priest in contempora­ry Irish life, King at least attempts to shine a light on those caught in the crossfire, inadverten­tly tarnished by the appalling revelation­s of sexual abuse within the Catholic Church.

King skilfully succeeds in presenting a more personal, human face to a previously untouchabl­e, deific figure; whether or not, however, the reading public is ready to welcome back this lost tribe with open arms remains to be seen.

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