| It is often said that the Northern Ireland population is one of the
most politically-aware groupings in western Europe. Certainly our
history over the past 30 years bears ample testimony to the role of
politics in all our lives. At times of absence of political activity
when political violence has occupied our attention, just as now with the
nurture of the tender plant of devolution, political considerations have
dominated life. It is of course arguable whether much of what we
experienced prior to the Good Friday Agreement could qualify as
political experience as that phrase is normally interpreted. However
designation of people in terms of party political allegiance has never
been absent from the life of this community. From the cradle to the
grave we have become a politically aware people simply because so much
of our lives depend on the necessity to succumb to one or other tribal
political philosophies. Frequent recourse to the ballot box has
punctuated our progress not alone in terms of an election of individuals
to office, but to record community opinion. Deep in our consciousness
are questions of identity and that identification is as much about what
we are not as it is about who we claim to be.
Perhaps it is not inappropriate to think in terms of the endless,
though often unconscious, search for identification even more than to
dwell on political awareness. The one can and does substitute for the
other, certainly prior to the Agreement, yet again one is conscious that
identification in this community is often expressed in the negative - we
are what we are because of what we are not...
When we turn to the question of the Church in this community the
generalisations with which we began become even more pertinent.
Identification is again the key. Community consciousness is again the
motivation. Definition of Church allegiance is again often expressed by
what we are not rather than by what we claim to be. We are a society
with a religious consciousness. However that consciousness cannot be
considered in isolation. Traditional means of analysis simply do not
apply here. We proclaim ourselves a Christian society yet so much of
what passes for religious identity is divisive and has more to do with
political orientation than daily practice of religious faith. To be born
into a home which lists allegiance to one of the reformed traditions in
Northern Ireland has in general an assumption that one grows up under
the influence of some form of unionism. To be born into a Roman Catholic
home involves the party political influence of either nationalism or
republicanism. One may well regard such generalisations as inevitable.
However what is not inevitable are the allied assumptions that because
of such historical trends a Church will inevitably or without question
reflect such political views on every occasion. For the purposes of a
paper of limited length on this occasion generalisations are inevitable.
Generalisation is dangerous on any occasion - but do I need to remind
this audience that generalisation has a lot to do with perception - and
perception can become reality in an instant in Northern Ireland? A
majority of people in this society perceive the official structure of
their Church as an extension of their political identification - whether
we like it or not. This raises many issues of a practical as well as a
theoretical nature. For example - is there efficacy in the perception
that a reformed Church in Northern Ireland is merely unionism at prayer?
Is there accuracy of the perception that Roman Catholicism in Northern
Ireland is nationalism or republicanism at prayer? In any society,
in any country, people do not change their party political identity when
they enter a place of worship. What makes our situation here significant
is the expectation that obsession with party politics involves
inevitable support for a party political stance by the individual
Church. It may be a cheap journalistic jibe but how much truth is there
in the comment that it is a Protestant or a Roman Catholic, a unionist
or a nationalist God who is prayed to on a Sunday?
A Church has the duty to take seriously and reflect honestly the
genuine concerns of its members. This is the essence of the Gospel of
social concern. but there is a higher duty for the Church. That is the
duty to reflect and pronounce the Gospel of Christ whether that means
support for a particular outlook in society or a pronouncement which
runs contrary to popular belief. The cost in that can be great. But the
call of Christ cannot and must not be sectionalised.
Few will deny that in this time of change in Northern Ireland the
Christian Church faces its own crisis of confidence. Despite the
admirable record of pastoral care and pastoral ministry during the years
of widespread violence - a record which I feel has not yet received the
recognition it deserves - the real test for the Church today is to move
from the religious pastoral agency of support to a people in trauma to a
prophetic voice of integrity in a society which is changing so rapidly.
Has it the ability to bring the true dimension of Christian faith and
Christian prophecy to a people whose real need is the management or
change? In that process let us all acknowledge that 'religious'
sectarianism with its political overtones continues to be the most
significant ingredient in too many parts of Northern Ireland.
To illustrate how I see the Church in Northern Ireland confronting
the needs of the present let me turn to one area of great concern to all
the Churches in Northern Ireland and an area which holds the real key to
our future as a community,
One of the greatest challenges facing any community is the education
not just of its children - but of all age groups.
The Churches have an honourable record of service in education
through their work in schools and universities today and the challenge
to the Churches, and to every other group in society here, is to be
willing to be involved as partners, pioneers and enablers of education
for lifelong learning. Each stage of life provides us with different
challenges which require new competencies and life skills.
In respect of employment there are very few, if any, occupations left
where retraining and learning afresh is not required and at an
increasing rate in contemporary society.
The task of education in developing personal life skills cannot be
dumped - as every deficiency in society seems to be dumped - on today's
school curriculums and the teaching profession. Both the curriculum and
the profession are genuinely in overload.
We need more community education and in parenting skills
particularly.
Governments and local administrations may operate schemes which
target social deprivation and educational under-achievement in schools
but you don't have to be an educational expert or a psychologist to know
that the child who has a parent really interested in his/her reading
skills, will tend to get a head start. That child will benefit more out
of formal education than a child who is deprived of such parental
support. There are cycles of social-deprivation caused by long-term
unemployment which are related directly to educational under-achievement
and lack of literacy skills.
Despite our many excellent schools in Northern Ireland there are
still too many adults who cannot read or write. Adults, who as parents,
therefore cannot provide the basic educational nurture which give their
children the start in life they need, This deficit should be high on any
list of priorities at Stormont.
We need to put more resources into adult education, adult literacy
and family education - through funding local schools and FE colleges and
in working partnerships with the widest range of community groups
possible. Education should be on the agenda of every social group in
Northern Ireland, from the local darts team to the Department of
Education.
The principal answer to discrimination in housing in Northern Ireland
was to build more houses. The principal answer to discrimination in
employment in Northern Ireland is to provide enough jobs. The answer to
social deprivation is to break that cycle - through above all else the
provision of appropriate schemes of community-based education.
There are too many schools in Northern Ireland locked up when parents
are available to learn. There are too many Church Halls over-used for
social recreation and under-used for second or third chance education.
The Open University, countless extra-mural courses, the Workers
Educational Association, and FE Colleges tackling adult illiteracy, have
all shown us different successful models We need more models in
operation and in greater variety to meet society's needs. I look at an
organisation within my own denomination, the Mothers' Union, which
engages at parish level in providing parenting courses. I look with
admiration at the work of Michael Quinn and the Family Caring Trust
based at Newry - whose work is being used by small groups from all the
world faiths and major agencies like Barnados throughout Great Britain.
They too are showing us the way to nurture this society's prime asset - our
people.
Thus far I have deliberately avoided schools. Important as they are,
as I have indicated, they are not the only providers of education. For
the most part, the real challenges to this society are created by those
for whom formal education has not been a success.
Maybe we need to spend less time debating about the provision of
Controlled Maintained and Integrated schools. Indeed despite the
forthcoming debate on selection and the Eleven Plus - two concerns often
confused as one - could I suggest to you that the real debate about
education has not started and effectively that is:
- How can we provide a range of options or tracks which enthuse
many more children and young people to acquire the necessary
qualifications and the vocational opportunity which they want to
pursue?
We are all agreed that we have good grammar, secondary and primary
schools. I don't know anyone in the education service who is not
involved in the quest for all-round improvement. But for any youngster
to sparkle there must be a skilled teacher or mentor who has something
to offer which that youngster finds irresistibly attractive. If you feel
you are having a life that is fulfilling - then you know what happened
to you at sometime in your life and maybe even more than once.
We need to find more bona fide alternatives. We need to
applaud and affirm our plumbers, electricians, food technologists and
maintenance operatives - in the same way that we do our doctors and
dentists.
The challenge to a Christian community and to its Church is to enable
each young person and each adult - at no matter what state in their life
to discover their "giftedness". Education, formal and
informal, is about the enabling of that gift and its use on behalf of
the community more so than personal self-aggrandisement.
This to me is a bigger challenge to education than sectarianism.
Most of our schools are attempting programmes of Education for Mutual
Understanding and appreciation of our diverse cultural heritage. All are
required to deliver the Common Core programme in Religious Education. We
are at the forefront of this form of teaching tolerance in the world
today. The Churches in Northern Ireland can take real satisfaction in
their encouragement in this regard.
Recognising this - in an initiative for the Millennium - this term
the four main Churches and the Jewish community have launched a website
- Faith in Schools - to build on the success of the common RE
programme, to enable its development and to support the teaching of
tolerance. It is already one of the largest RE websites in Europe and it
is growing weekly.
Education is a challenge which does unite us - we all want what is
best for our children. We need to be careful as a community however
about creating too many competing demands especially if we are reluctant
to pay more in taxes to meet the immense needs which genuinely do exist
in education. We cannot afford not to meet these needs. Sectarianism is
fed more by unattainable opportunities than by schools which seek to
respect people's convictions and to cater for different people's
preferences.
Surely a prime agenda for the Church in Northern Ireland at this time
of change in our society lies in the encouragement of a really
enlightened attitude to the education of the next generation.
I end with a repetition of the underlying theme of my thesis in this
paper:
- Can the Church in Northern Ireland grasp the challenge to be
the prophetic voice of Christ in a society which wants to progress
but which is going through a period of immense change?
- Can the Church find the degree of faith and confidence to be equal
to need of this hour?
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