trinity college dublin auditing ireland’s religious diversity: 21 st century faith reports on the...
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Trinity College Dublin
Auditing Ireland’s Religious Diversity: 21st Century Faith
Reports on the Surveys of Faith Leaders & Laypeople on the island of Ireland
By Dr Gladys Ganiel
Trinity College Dublin
•Part of the IRCHSS-funded research project•To be completed over three years•To mark Centenary of 1910 Missionary Conference•Surveys comprise first stage of the project
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Purpose of Surveys
• To audit religious diversity on the island – Ethnic diversity within congregations – Perceptions of reconciliation (what is
reconciliation & who should be reconciled?)– Perceptions of ecumenism (what is ecumenism &
does it matter today?)– Perspectives of both faith leaders & laypeople
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Surveys of Faith Leaders
Clergy, Pastors, Ministers, Faith Leaders
• More than 4,000 direct email or postal requests
• April-July 2009• Response rate 18%• Evangelicals over-
represented• Highest response rate
among Methodist & Church of Ireland
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Surveys of Laypeople
On-line Exploratory Survey• More than 900 respondents• April-July 2009 on
www.ecumenics.ie • Atheists & evangelicals
over-represented• Provide useful points of
comparison for survey of faith leaders and provide directions for future research
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Key Findings: Diversity• 54% of faith leaders have
preached or taught on diversity within the last 12 months
• 44% of faith leaders have never done anything out of the ordinary to accommodate immigrants or ethnic minorities
• Diversity is the reality for many faith communities on the island
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Perspectives on Diversity
Welcoming the 'alien' and ensuring their flourishing is a big theme in Hebrew Scriptures. I preach fairly often on this to a congregation some of whom employ Polish or other Eastern European nationals, yet are not welcoming to them when their children come to our school. Church of Ireland Minister, Co. Tipperary
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Perspectives on Diversity
[A challenge is the] hidden prejudices of those who believe such strangers in our midst are responsible for taking "our" jobs or "free-loading” on welfare at a time of economic down-turn. –Catholic priest, Limerick City
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Key Findings: Reconciliation
• People think of reconciliation in individualistic terms (between individuals & God, and between individuals)
• Faith leaders do not spend as much time preaching & teaching on reconciliation as they would like
• Faith leaders were more likely than laypeople to say their wider faith community had provided them with adequate training about reconciliation
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Perspectives on ReconciliationI am back in favour with God because of what Christ did on Calvary. – Male,
Evangelical Christian, Co. Clare
Asking for forgiveness, forgiving, sharing common ground, having fun. – Female, Catholic, Co. Dublin
The acceptance of others’ opposing background faiths and beliefs. – Female, Jewish, Co. Dublin
Though holding different cultural, political and religious views I believe it means ‘doing unto others as you would be done by.’ – Male, Hindu/Non Subscribing Presbyterian Church, Belfast City
What it is meaning is one group is walking on another, but it should mean they should walk side by side, and enjoy each other’s marches and parades. Live and let live. – Female, Church of Ireland, Co. Cork
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Perspectives on Reconciliation
Not sure I agree that reconciliation is what we should be looking at, the ‘re’ of the word suggests that we have somewhere to go back to. Think I would just want to look forward to create new ways of being together. – Church of Ireland minister, Co. Londonderry/Derry
I feel this question could be misconceived. If we believe that reconciliation comes from the gospel, then the outworking ofthe gospel will drive reconciliation. What do you mean by reconciling Muslims and Christians? If it is not in the gospel – is it really reconciliation? – Presbyterian, Co. Donegal
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Key Findings: Ecumenism• Most reported positive conceptions
of ecumenism (67% of laypeople)• There was some confusion about
what ecumenism actually is• Most conceived of ecumenism in
terms of Catholic/Protestant relationships, but laypeople were
more likely to include Other Religions in it
• Leaders did not spend as much time on ecumenism as they would like
• Laypeople thought more time should be spent on ecumenical activities
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Perspectives on EcumenismIt’s a word that sadly needs to go on the junkpile because of the
way that it is received. Although, I appreciate it and would unashamedly call myself an ecumenicist, I think it is commonly read as a word for exchange without critique; a project of empty relativism that can't feed into discipleship of Christians or the increase of justice in the land. –Presbyterian minister, Co. Kildare
What I experience is nothing short of tokenism; avoidance of risk, of experimentation for fear of 'higher authorities'. Ecumenism in Ireland has become a form of clericalism. Many good, unannounced forms of ecumenism happening between individuals. –Catholic priest, Co. Mayo
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Perspectives on Ecumenism...To be honest the first time I heard the word being used in any sense
was on Father Ted "that would be an ecumenical matter" so I suppose my definition would be a vague one - about matters relating to faith. – Female, Catholic, Co. Longford
A joyous and positive thing! I believe that there is more to unite all Christians of all persuasions than there is to divide. – Male, Church of Ireland, Co. Down
The opening of dialogue between the denominations to bring a greater level of right relationship and understanding/ fellowship...knowing there can be no return to a single branch but hoping that we can work as a single branch in our unique ways. – Male, Catholic, Co. Kildare
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Questions Raised
• Are our faith communities responding adequately to immigration and ethnic diversity?
• Is focusing on individualistic conceptions of reconciliation done at the expense of other forms of reconciliation?
• What can be done to better prepare leaders to preach & teach on reconciliation – and find the time to do so?
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• Can ‘dialogue’ and ‘good civic relations’ do enough to construct a meaningful ecumenism?
• Should Other Religions be actively pursued for participation in ecumenical activities? What about atheists?
• What do some of the strong & emotional responses to the term ‘ecumenism’ tell us about the state of ecumenism on the island today?
Questions Raised
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• Identify at least eight case studies to investigate issues raised in the surveys in more depth
• Theological reflection and research, the development of new theological perspectives and resources
Visioning 21st Century Ecumenism: Next Steps