Speech of Bishop Paul Colton as Guest of Honour at Launch of Cork LGBT Awareness Week 2014

Cork City Hall at the start of Cork LGBT Awareness Week 2014 (Photo: Diane Cusack)

Cork City Hall at the start of Cork LGBT Awareness Week 2014 (Photo: Diane Cusack)

Cork LGBT Awareness Week is organised to acknowledge and demonstrate that LGBT individuals are family members, community residents, constituents, citizens, visitors, service users and service providers. The purpose of the week is to advance Objective 86 of the Cork City Plan “The gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender communities will be enabled to fully participate in the social, cultural and economic life of Cork City.”

Cork LGBT Awareness Week is supported by Cork City Council, HSE South, Cork Education and Training Board, the Department of Social Protection, An Garda Siochána, Cork City Partnership, LINC, Gay Community Development, Cork Trans Support Group, Ballyphehane-Togher Community Development Project, and Sexual Health Centre. This year the organisers invited Dr Paul Colton, Church of Ireland Bishop of Cork to be guest of honour at the launch of the week in Cork Civic Officer by the Lord Mayor of Cork, Cllr Catherine Clancy. Here is the Bishop’s speech:

Speech of the Right Rev. Dr Paul Colton,

Bishop of Cork

as guest of honour at the launch of

Cork LGBT Awareness Week

Monday, 12th May, 2014 at Cork Civic Offices

I am deeply conscious of how generously gracious and open your invitation to me, a Church leader, is in including me today as your Guest of Honour.  Not gracious in the sense of courteous and kind, but more in the religious sense of grace – your invitation to me is undeserved; it is an unmerited favour.

It is gracious because, whatever about my personal views and solidarity as an individual to gay and lesbian people, it is undeniable that I am part of a religion, and indeed institution, that all too often, over the centuries, has caused deep hurt and tangible damage to gay and lesbian people.

As I said in my Christmas Sermon in St Fin Barre’s Cathedral in 2003: churches have been ‘complicit in injustice to gay and lesbian people and the resulting human suffering.’  That is why, then too, I felt compelled ‘humbly and contritely to ask forgiveness’ of gay and lesbian people, even though it is too late for far too many.

I realise that many gay and lesbian people have given up on institutional religion, or on religion altogether:  ‘a plague on your houses.’  Others are trying to hang in there; as one gay couple in one of our parishes said to me recently ‘we are just about clinging on to the church by our fingertips.’  Hanging in there is hard, faced with what one gay person has described as the Church’s ‘relentless negativity towards me and others’ who are gay.  If you are hanging on to a cliff edge the last thing you need is some fellow believers stomping on those straining finger tips.

In terms of an awareness-raising week like this, it seems to me that it is very fundamental to underscore the diversity of humanity among LGBT people: some are religious: others are not.  Some wrestle with the things of faith: others do not. Equally, although it does not always seem so to the outsider hearing official church pronouncements, there is diversity of outlook within churches on LGBT issues.

There are many Christians, including myself, who believe that God’s justice, God’s love and the inclusiveness of God, must bear fruit in unqualified equality for gay and lesbian people too. As a friend, a gay priest in the UK said only this weekend:

Being gay is not a choice, it is my being, who and what I am as a person before God and though it does not define all that I am it is inseparable from my sense of self and of course from my faith.

Strangely, something that gives me hope  – paradoxically – is the fact that almost from the start, Christians have been arguing among themselves about something or other. First the argument was about circumcision.  Since then the Christian story has been one of prejudice, injustice, labelling as ‘the other’ and failing to show Christ’s love,  being overcome step by step:  slaves, Jews, science,  single mothers, children born outside marriage, people in interchurch marriages, victims of suicide, the downfall of apartheid, divorcees, women (first in decision-making in the Church and then in the ordained ministry); standing up to racism.  Think in our own lifetime of how, arising from our sense of the love of Christ, our attitudes have changed in the Church to many of these people, issues and situations.

Awareness is the state or ability to perceive.  If that is to happen we all need to be open to looking around – to seeing, hearing, listening and encountering, yes, but most especially, to take the risk of reaching out to understand, especially of reaching out to embrace people we think are different from us.

I want, therefore, to encourage especially those gay and lesbian people who are involved in church life, or who once were, to engage with the debates many churches are having at the current time. About an hour ago Shirley Temple Bar tweeted: ‘Sharing LGBT stories is an important step on the road to equality.’ I agree with that, and I ask you not to give up on religion and religious institutions.

It is essential that your voices and experiences are heard and listened to.  More important, it is vital that you do not let people drive you away.  The loving welcome and inclusion of you is not theirs to take away: that love, that inclusion, that welcome, that belonging are God’s gift – God’s grace – offered to you as much as to anyone else.

Senator Deirdre Clune and Bishop Paul Colton chat at the launch of Cork LGBT Awareness Week in Cork Civic Offices (Photo: Diane Cusack)

Senator Deirdre Clune and Bishop Paul Colton chat at the launch of Cork LGBT Awareness Week in Cork Civic Offices (Photo: Diane Cusack)

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Carrigaline Parish Website Wins Church of Ireland National Parish Website Competition

On the final day of the General Synod of the Church of Ireland, Saturday, 10th May, 2014, it was announced that in the awards given by the Church of Ireland Communications Committee, the parish of Carrigaline Union in the Diocese of Cork had won the prize for best parish website.  The rector, the Reverend Elaine Murray, was on hand to collect the prize.  Very well done!

The Reverend Elaine Murray collects the prize from the Archbishop of Armagh, the Most Reverend Dr Richard Clarke.

The Reverend Elaine Murray collects the prize from the Archbishop of Armagh, the Most Reverend Dr Richard Clarke. for the clear layout

The judges said that the website ‘impressed for its clear layout and the information it provided and in its balance of text and image.’

The website may be found here.

Screen Shot 2014-05-11 at 09.47.45

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Some Cork, Cloyne and Ross Photos from General Synod 2014

The General Synod of the Church of Ireland was held in Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin from 8th to 10th May, 2014.  Our media officer, Sam Wynn took some photos of people from the Diocese out and about:

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The Reverend Eileen Cremin makes return visit to Church of England for National Celebrations of 20 years of Women Priests there

The Church of Ireland first approved the ordination of women as priests in 1990 (and the first were ordained in 1991), and the Church of England began ordaining women as priests in 1994.  Among the first was the Reverend Eileen Cremin who is rector of Fermoy in the United Dioceses of Cork, Cloyne and Ross.   Eileen was ordained in St Paul’s on 17th April 1994, when she was ministering in London Diocese prior to her arrival in Ireland.

In glorious sunshine on Saturday 3rd of May 2014, 700 of the women who were the first to be ordained priests in the Church of England, gathered with their families, friends and supporters at St Paul’s Cathedral in London for a special service to mark 20 years since their ordination.  The Reverend Eileen Cremin joined them.

The Reverend Eileen Cremin

The Reverend Eileen Cremin

Eileen writes:

What a day! It began with a Walk of Witness, when many of the women gathered with a huge crowd at Westminster Abbey to begin the hour long walk to St Paul’s. Many carried banners, including a group of Roman Catholic women who were still waiting in expectation that one day they would be given the opportunity.

It was an amazing day, full of laughter and joy, as many were reunited with old friends. When the procession arrived at St Paul’s, the 1994 ordinands went to robe in the crypt, then gathered, dressed in albs and white stoles, for a group photograph with the Archbishop of Canterbury, The Most Reverend Justin Welby.

We then entered the cathedral, where the rest of the congregation had already gathered, to be greeted by a very long round of applause. It was so moving! People were cheering, many with tears in their eyes, as we filed into our seats under the dome.

The service was also relayed via a large screen in Paternoster Square at the side of St Paul’s to a huge crowd who were unable to fit in the cathedral.

For me (Eileen) the service was very special and evoked wonderful memories of my ordination in 1994, which was also at St Paul’s. Having been away from London for 13 years, it was so good to be reunited with many of those who were my colleagues in ministry from the very beginning, and those I trained with. It was great also to meet up with Reverend Judith Hubbard Jones, originally ordained in Hereford diocese, but one time Rector of Kinneigh Union.

The service was a Sung Eucharist; the President was the Rev Canon Philippa Boardman (Canon Treasurer of St Paul’s), fellow 1994 ordinand with me in London diocese. The Deacon (and preacher) was the Archbishop of Canterbury, who took the opportunity during his sermon to apologise to the women priests, for what they had endured (and in some cases suffered) during the long road to ordination, and since. The service also contained testimonies from the Very Reverend June Osborne, Dean of Salisbury, and the Reverend Kate Boardman, Assistant Curate of St Mary’s Heworth. We also remembered many of those women who were unable to be at the service due to illness or disability, or who were mow ministering overseas; also those women who were ordained in 1994 and have since died.  After the service, to celebrate the anniversary, the St Paul’s Cathedral Guild of Ringers rang Stedman Cinques.

One of the ‘stand out moments’ for me was when we all sang the first hymn, and for the first time in a very long while, all I could hear was the sweet sound of lilting soprano voices, echoing round the cathedral like a choir of angels! It was also the first time that I had been present at a major service in the cathedral where a woman presided at the Eucharist. It was very special. It was a day I shall never forget, and all the more special for me to share the day with my beloved husband Tom.

Part of the group photo of the 700 women priests on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral who attended the celebrations

Part of the group photo of the 700 women priests on the steps of St Paul’s Cathedral who attended the celebrations

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Bishop Colton Meets Up With ‘Life to the End’ Mizen to Malin Cyclists

On Saturday, 3rd May, 10 parishioners from the Church of Ireland Parishes of Castleknock and Mulhuddart, with Clonsilla, set off on a charity cycle from Mizen Head to Malin Head – 640 km in 6 days – in aid of the Irish Motor Neurone Disease Association.  They are all friends of Bishop Paul Colton who was rector of their parish from 1990 to 1999.

Eddie Greene

Eddie Greene

What is truly remarkable is that one of their number, Eddie Greene, aged 70, was himself diagnosed with Motor Neurone Disease last October.  While MND – an incurable neurological condition – takes its toll physically, Eddie is undaunted in both spirit and determination.  The cycle has been aptly named ‘Life to the End: Mizen to Malin.’

Eddie started the cycle today at Mizen Head with a group of his friends from Castleknock Cycling Group.  They are aiming to raise funds for the Irish Motor Neurone Disease Association.

Bishop Paul Colton caught up with the group before they managed to get out of the Diocese of Cork, Cloyne and Ross, to wish them well and to give them his support.  (No sign of him getting on a bike too though!).

Meeting up with the Castleknock Cyclists on the road between Durrus and Drimoleague, Co. Cork.

Meeting up with some of the Castleknock Cyclists on the road between Durrus and Drimoleague, Co. Cork.

Bishop Colton said:

They are all an inspiration.  Eddie is an amazing example of human determination and generosity.  He always has been in the way he works voluntarily and helps others in so many practical ways.  Even now he and his friends are still trying to help others.  I hope many will be inspired by their efforts and lend their financial support.

People can donate online via the online mycharity website Life to the End: Mizen to Malin.  (Click on link to make your donation).

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