Gorey Guardian

SOME CHURCH CLOSURES ARE INEVITABLE IN A CHANGING LANDSCAPE

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FR SÉAMAS DEVÁL Bunclody

AT 94 years young, Fr Séamas DeVál says he is considerin­g retiring – at 105!

The oldest priest in the Ferns diocese has lived through a World War, several recessions and the scandal of the Ferns Report, but is not going anywhere any time soon.

Based in Bunclody, Fr DeVal was ordained in 1950 five years after Hitler’s armies were defeated and at a time of growing vocations in the Catholic Church in Ireland.

Having studied at St Peter’s College, he went on to do his H-Dip in UCD, before returning to teach Irish at the college. He was named St Peter’s President in 1973 and held the role for three years, before moving to Oulart where he was parish priest until 1997 when he retired from parochial duties.

His next role was as diocesan archivist, holding the job until 2018. ‘This virus has interrupte­d me because I was due to do a lot of supply for Easter ceremonies [for another priest in Clonegal]. I still work as a priest here in Bunclody and I concelebra­te mass every other day. I am only 35 in my mind.’

Fr DeVál said he never thought about doing any other job. ‘My intention was always to try and be helpful to people in any way I can.’

He said the diocese was different and priests were made to be more deferentia­l to bishops prior to the arrival of Bishop Donal Herlihy.

‘Now bishops are just another member of the group, with more responsibi­lities.’

He said he knew some of the priests who were involved in sexual abuse in the diocese and was shocked for their sake when he learned about what they did.

‘While I was very shocked, the revelation­s of the Ferns Report didn’t affect me at all. I knew some of them and I was shocked because I never dreamt of such a thing before. I was very sad for their sake because they had let themselves down. Things like that have been happening for the last 200 years and not only in the Church.

‘I know some priests were probably depressed about it but I never let it affect me. I didn’t know that such a thing was going on, but I did know there were concerns but it came to me as a complete shock, out of the blue.’

He is concerned but not despairing about the church’s future.

‘I’d imagine things will improve. I would say there will be big changes. It goes in cycles. In the 18th century there were the same amount of priests as there are today. Until the second half of the 20th century there was a great boom in clerical students. In my class in Maynooth there were 80 in one year in Maynooth, with others being ordained in St Peter’s College, in Britain and in the USA.’

He said there were three career options when he was a youth that involved a college education: doctor, teacher or priest.

Attributin­g to the fall off in vocations to modern society and advances in technology and science, Fr DeVál said he has a ‘faint hope’ that the current health crisis might bring people who have stopped attending mass and saying prayers back into the fold and ‘to their senses that not everything in the world is independen­t of God or providence. It might turn people back thinking they don’t have power over their lives’.

He said huge crowds still attend funerals. ‘People haven’t cut themselves away [from the Church] completely. They attend weddings and baptisms and ask for prayers to be said. We are still relevant and I am alive to say that.’

The involvemen­t of lay people in running the Church should be considered, he added. He said without parish priests in communitie­s there would be no point. ‘There would be no mass, no blessed sacrament, that would be the end of religious practise.’

Fr DeVál said having several interests, including Gaelic and local history and placenames, means he is never bored. He has a mobile phone and uses the local library computer, while he has also published several books. Currently cocooning he said one of the perks of the job is that people have been bringing him cooked dinners.

‘I am happy here for the next ten years at least and then I’ll retire at 105,’ he said.

FR PATRICK CUSHEN Ferns

At 73, Fr Cushen is one of many priests in the diocese also cocooning presently.

For anyone struggling with how a compassion­ate God could allow such a virus take hold on earth, Fr Cushen offers these words: ‘We cannot comprehend the work of God from beginning to end and we can see that especially at this time. People will say why is God allowing this. How often do we do what the Lord said? Ask and we shall receive. Start off and ask the Lord of the Harvest. Maybe we can come up with a fantastic way to encourage young people to think about the Church.’

‘Times have changed. Once upon a time we had churches full. The faith of people is not as strong as it used to be. These days people are more interested in human things over spiritual things. We are whole people and it’s important to develop both.’

He said parents are more interested in developing the physical and sporting education of their children than their spiritual side.

A creeping materialis­m in society has meant many adults now base their worth on the kind of car they are driving and the value of their homes, he said.

‘They are concerned about what they are going to get in the future. It’s fantastic what parents bring to their children’s lives but the spiritual side is lacking. They are clearly most generous and supportive of their child but a whole child is spiritual and physical.’

For Fr Cushen the role of the priest hasn’t changed much over the years.

‘It’s about preaching the word of God and showing people that faith means a lot to us and that you are there for them and willing to support children, the sick. I have a great care for the sick.’

Fr Cushen started out in his priestly career in London, having been ordained in 1971.

He said: ‘It was a great experience. I then spent 20 years in Wexford town.’

Marshalsto­wn was his next posting prior to moving to the bigger church in Ferns.

He said although the role can be stressful at times, he gets great support from parishione­rs. ‘I get great affirmatio­n from people when I do all these things’.

He said everyone involved in the church is generous.

‘I am happy in the role. I am lucky in that we have a curate here as well and we are kept busy with paperwork, child protection, GDPR and finance, which the secretary looks after.’

Among the most important aspects of a priest’s role is being active within the community in which they serve and Fr Cushen has been an exemplar in this respect.

‘I think it’s very important for a priest to be involved in all areas of their parish. I go visit schools regularly and am actively involved in the board of management. I go into classrooms because I am interested in the children and I care for them and I want to get the best for them, with Jesus guiding them, telling them of the God that is there, who loves them, and not to think anyone is perfect.’

Fr Cushen said by creating that bond with children he hopes they will come to him and recognise that he is not a threat to them.

He sees the Covid crisis as a blessing, in a way, as he believes it will make people stop and think about what really is important in their lives, including in the spiritual sphere.

He said lay people can get involved, adding: ‘I would be very open to anything that helps the spread of the gospel message and all areas should be looked at. I would have no problem with married priests at this stage; it won’t affect my life.’

Looking back on the Church in Ferns during his time he recalled the dark days of the sexual abuse on children by priests.

‘I knew every one of them, I go back to the scriptures and Judas went astray. That wasn’t put there for nothing. Peter defied the Lord. We are human and we make mistakes but he is a rewarding God and a forgiving God.’

Looking back on his ordination day he said it was the greatest day of his life.

‘I have been most contented in my priesthood. You get out of marriage what you put into it and the same applies to the priesthood. I give 100 per cent. I will continue on as long as the Lord allows me.’

FR JAMES DOYLE Mulrankin, Tomhaggard

Fr James Doyle is, by his own admission, from a uniquely religious family. One of three brothers who are priests – all of whom are former engineers – he got the call in his 30s and has been proudly serving the diocese ever since his ordination in 2006.

Now 47, Fr Doyle ‘supplies’ for local churches, meaning he has four churches under his auspices presently. He can see a time in the not too distant future when

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