Alastair's Adversaria - The Rise & Fall of Christian Ireland (with Crawford Gribben and Matthew Brennan)
Episode Date: October 15, 2021Crawford Gribben (Queen's University Belfast) and Matthew Brennan (Clonmel Baptist Church) join me for a discussion of Crawford's recently released history, 'The Rise & Fall of Christian Ireland' (htt...ps://amzn.to/3AJR5bt). If you are interested in supporting my work, please consider becoming a Patreon supporter (https://www.patreon.com/zugzwanged), donating using my PayPal account (https://bit.ly/2RLaUcB), or buying books for my research on Amazon (https://www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/36WVSWCK4X33O?ref_=wl_share). You can also listen to the audio of these episodes on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/alastairs-adversaria/id1416351035?mt=2. Or watch episodes on my YouTube account: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmkS1-6kt64WIHegj-h25_g.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome. I am joined today by a very old friend and my pastor throughout most of my childhood,
Matthew Brennan of Clummel Baptist Church, and also Crawford Gribbon, who is back to discuss a new book.
You've written two books within the period of two years, within one year, you've had two books released.
So this is the rise and fall of Christian Ireland. I was raised in the Republic of Ireland, in a beautiful.
beautiful town called Clomel. And Matthew was my pastor, so he's known me probably longer than
anyone else in my life outside of family. You could probably tell all sorts of stories. But we have
so many other things to talk about today. So I'm sure we don't have time for that, Matthew.
But it's wonderful to have you both on for this discussion. And within this discussion, we're
dealing with some issues that are clearly very fraught historical questions that touch deep
nerves of identity for many people. And certainly my own country and my own
denomination does not come out of this picture very well. And I think for that reason,
it's an important story to look into the book is absolutely superb. If you look on
the back, it has a very flattering blurb by Ender Kenny, who was the Taoiseach from 2011 to
2017 in Ireland. And I cannot recommend the book highly enough for anyone who wants to orient
themselves to Irish history more generally, but also to the specific story of Irish Christianity,
which is so completely entangled with it. Crawford, if you could begin, I would be interested
to see your thoughts on some of the key events or the landmarks of Irish Christian history,
just giving us the big bird's eye perspective on Irish history,
what is some of the standout events that will help to orient people?
Thanks, Alistair, and thanks the invitation to come and talk about the book with yourself and with Matthew.
The book covers many thousands of years and about 200 pages are just over.
The history of Christianity takes up the last one and a half thousand of those years.
and as the book's title suggests, I am sort of framing it as a life cycle story so that Christianity is born in Ireland, it develops, it matures, it declines and it dies.
So that's really the sort of sweep of the stories a whole.
Within that, there are, I think, a number of really important moments, obviously, at the beginnings of Christian Mission in the early 5th century.
We don't know a whole lot about it.
We have in the centuries that follow the gradual expansion of Christian influence through the island.
The Irish Church takes on some very idiosyncratic positions in relation, for example, to liturgical issues such as the dating of Easter and so on.
And before a couple of centuries have gone past, the Irish Church is a bit of an outlier, not just geographically, but also liturgically and perhaps even theologically.
within the European Church.
At the same time, the monastic federations,
these loose confederation of monastic institutions,
are really beginning to expand across and beyond the known world.
So just as the missionary enterprise to Ireland in early 5th century
was the first time that missionaries had worked outside of the boundaries with the Roman Empire.
So they move on from there.
They take that opportunity to push even further,
north, even further west, and Irish monks are establishing institutions up and down the Hebrides
in Scotland, but also in Shetland, Pharaoh, and even in Iceland. So that by the time the first
Vikings arrive in Iceland, they discover that Irish monks have beaten them to it by several
hundred years. Then you've got the Irish participation in the conversion of the Picts in
Scotland, in the conversion of the Northumbrians, in the north-east of England, in the
in the conversion of the Anglo-Saxons and then pushing into Europe as well. So that's a really
quite extraordinary passage in this story. And then by the time you come to the 11th, 12th century,
obviously the Norman invasion takes place. And that's justified and in fact warranted by a papal
or a people decree which may or may not have been forged, which asks Henry II, who was king of a vast
empire, which included England, to intervene in Ireland with a view to reforming the Irish
Church to make it Catholic. But that doesn't succeed. And in a way, the church divides between
the parts of it that are dominated by English influence and the parts of it are still deeply
Gaelic in culture and language and so forth. And in the Gaelic parts of the church,
clerical marriage continues and priests continue to have wives and families right the way up to the
16th century when there's a second attempt at reformation, but this time a Protestant attempt at
reformation by another Henry, Henry the 8th, but that reformation also fails. And you could argue,
if you wanted to, that it's really only during the Protestant Reformation that the Irish Church
becomes Catholic, because that's when it's really brought into the European structures of the Catholic
church in a very foundational way. So then, you know, by the early 17th century, you've got two
parallel communities, a tiny minority of Protestants, most of whom, in fact, almost the overwhelming
majority of whom are either settlers, migrants, or the children of migrants into the island.
And the vast majority of the population, 80, 5, perhaps even higher percent in the 17th century,
who remain committed to the Catholic Church.
And that's the position through the 18th century,
which is a century of tremendous difficulty.
Obviously, there's violence at the start of the 18th century
in a failed rising.
The history of English intervention in Ireland
is, of course, notoriously violent.
And through much of the 18th century,
it's given a distinctive religious over.
as well. Penal laws are brought in which support the economic benefits that are given to members
of the established church, but which preclude participation in professions or university education
or other kinds of occupations from the vast majority of the population. All the Catholics, of course,
but also all the Protestant dissenters, Presbyterians, Baptists and so on. And those penal laws
affected different religious communities in different ways. So while Catholic marriage is always
legally recognised in Ireland, Presbyterian marriages are not. And in fact, it's only an act of
parliament in 1844 that regularizes the legal status of Presbyterian marriages. So 18th century
into the 19th century, we've got really two different revival movements going on more or less
simultaneously from the middle of the 19th century onwards. And even,
evangelical revival, which brings these competing groups of Protestants together and gives them a common sense of religious identity, which at the end of the century during the home rule crisis becomes a common political identity under the rubric of unionism. And at the same time, on Catholics, you've got a devotional revolution, which is really encouraging for the first time weekly mass attendance. It's regularizing what parish community, what parish life is meant to look like. And that's really consolidating, a,
a Catholic population, which is also forming its own political character under the rubric of nationalism.
So at the end of the 19th century, you've got now a united, for the first time, really, a united Protestant community,
united by politics and a united Catholic community, which also has a shared political goal.
And if Protestants are identifying with the British state, Catholics are identifying with the Irish nation.
and that's what sets up the very real, visceral political problems of the early 20th century.
Early 20th century, the third home rule bill leads to the raising of private militia on both the part of loyalists,
those who want to remain attached to United Kingdom and nationalists, those who want to pursue a different future
and an independent future for Ireland.
The prospect of civil wars initially staved off by the breakout of World War I,
where in which both members of both the loyalist and nationalist militias, the volunteer forces,
serve with distinction and honour.
And at the same time, back in Dublin, 1916, there's a rising of a small group of very committed
Republicans, nationalists, arising that's condemned by the Catholic Church,
but a rising that promotes a kind of ideology of the necessity of blood sacrifice for Ireland's
redemption and new birth. It's very striking. Matthew might want to comment on this. It's very
striking that so much of the language used around 1916 and in the foundation of the state,
once partition happens in 1922, is deeply religious language, language of atonement of sacrifice,
blood sacrifice in particular, and new birth. And then from 1920 onwards, after partition,
the island is divided, the six countries in the north constitute Northern Ireland. It's governed,
consistently by Protestant politicians, even though about a third of the population as Catholic,
they really struggle to make effective political representation. In the South, there's a tiny
proportion of Protestants to begin with in an overwhelmingly Catholic culture, and the architects
of that new state in the 1937 constitution set out to turn the free state, which becomes
later on the Republic, now officially known, of course, simply as Ireland, as Michael D. Higgins
has reminded us recently. They really set out to turn it into a model Christian state using
very up-to-date Catholic social theory, thinking about what's the nature of democracy
in a truly Catholic state? Well, it's not going to be one-for-one voting. It's going to be
some kind of Chesterthonian-style guild representation in this model's
society. And, you know, some of this takes effect. Other parts of it don't take effect.
1937 constitution recognises the special status of the Catholic Church. That status is continued
until a referendum. I forget when the 1970s, Matthew, 1970s or 80s, the status of the Catholic
church is, is normalized. And so you've got these twin parallel projects of religious nationalism.
and the South gradually, economically, it moves up and down quite a lot,
but as time goes on, the influence of the church begins slightly to wane.
But in the 1990s, it's almost as if a dam burst and there's just revelation after another
of incidents of clerical abuse and which seem only ever to grow in the horror that they represent.
And so, you know, we come to the present day, and Ireland, south of the border, 26 counties, is one of the most secular progressive nations in Europe and is very proud of that fact.
In Northern Ireland, the same direction of travel is evident, but it's happening in a different kind of culture where religion is much more balanced in terms of, or mixed, in the sense of being mixed.
And also where religion is seen to be something that has provoked a 30-year-stoucels.
Civil War known as the Troubles in which around 3,500 people were killed variously by
terrorist organizations or by representatives of the British Crown. So, you know, while North and
South are different kinds of stories, they're ending up now more or less in the same place.
The South, I think, a little bit further ahead, but both jurisdictions heading broadly the same
direction. There are prominent voices in both sides of the border that speak on behalf of what we
might call a Christian culture. But there's no doubt, I think, that that culture has been,
it has been eroded and is eroding at a very significant rate. And so at the end of the book,
I think we come to the end of Christian Ireland. I'd be interested to hear your thoughts, Matthew,
on just the experience of being a Baptist minister from the early 1980s onwards and seeing
the fall in many ways of Christian Ireland.
What you would describe as some of the key changes, the events, the more gradual shifts
and changes that you've seen over the course of your ministry, and how the position of the
the church and Christianity more generally has changed over the course of that time.
Thank you, Alastair. Thank you very much for including me in the discussion on Dr. Gribbon's book.
Dr. Gibbon has just outlined the book in 10 minutes, but it's a suede of extraordinary history in a
condensed format. It's one of the most dense books, densest books I have read in a long time,
but that's no insult to the writer. It's just that the detail is.
so full.
And he covers ground
at a colossally fast pace,
but it's a,
you almost want to pause
at every few paragraphs because he says
something so complex and
prescient.
Come to your question,
Alistair,
I'd like to think that
there was a time when you could
see the turn
in the decline
of the Catholic faith.
I'd like to say that
there was a specific event.
I mean, from the 60s,
70s and 80s and onwards.
Nothing was thought on the horizon
with said by the late 60s or early 70s, mid-70s even.
There was no great clouds in the distance.
I think our nearest neighbor,
the advent of television, media, travel,
people going away,
people picking up ideas,
contraception been available in other states,
devotionary marriage been available in other states,
people living different kind of lives in other states.
We're getting the BBC on our televisions.
All of those things, I think, had an impact.
And then I think there was the decline of civil war politics.
The old guard of the Civil War era would have been Catholic in the main.
So they would have, I suppose, I wouldn't say,
I wouldn't have, it wouldn't have non-interferred with their, with their politics,
because the church was still very, very powerful up until we say the mid-70s and around that period.
So you can't put your finger on a particular thing and say this was the turn.
But as people are traveling, as people are getting more influence from outside the country
and it's no longer sort of sealed off, because I mean, the interesting thing was Devalier said when he became president,
it was an Irish country for a Catholic people.
And I think in saying that, you could almost say in saying that the death knell for the community to mix and grow and expand together was gone.
Within a very short period, I think 33% of the Protestant population left the south.
That was a significant figure, Alistair, because then the diluting of a very condensed and intense capital.
faith wasn't going to happen now.
So the state itself, I suppose the state itself saw the seeds of its own destruction
by knocking out those who could have had a say in the Republic and in the long-term good
of the country.
I think that was a factor.
And then I think when the media and the BBC and the influence of other countries
began to impact Ireland.
and television programs of an entertaining nature
with singers and personalities
were on the increase.
And into that came priests like Michael Cleary.
And other men like him.
They came on the scene
and at first people thought this was the odd
that we were a priest doing,
singing at a concert.
And then after a while,
it was around for a while,
and then they began to see it well,
even those who approved
of the singing at one level
I think they were saying that this was a denial
of what they ought to be at another level
so there was a sort of a
duplicitous outlike
mentality at that time
that popularity of the clergy
becoming more and more dominant on our media
and having a voice
was there for a while
Alistair
but then
there was this one of the leading members of that
there was a scandal of family
that he was maintaining as a clergyman
that came as a shock to some people
and then the bishop
a bishop was discovered to be in the similar position
that had a huge impact
now whether those things were
the straw in the wind to tell you
where the country was going to go because in the past
that would never have come to light
the media was on the side of the Catholic
and politics wouldn't have brought it to light either
but with the opening of the door some other influences
the power at this level was beginning to wane
and it almost opened the door for people to see another aspect
of the church that they hadn't looked at before
or the popular community could see
and then it was the unfolding of scandal after scandal after scandal
that had a huge impact
among the very conservative Catholics
who had supported the church
through thick and thin
and who were totally disillusioned
that what they'd prayed for
and paid for and paid too
and loved and revered
had let them down.
And it's almost after that that the whirlwind
sucked up everything else in its vortex
and we're still in the vortex.
And I don't know where
the vortex is going to take us, Alistair. Those were sort of, I think those were sort of, the sort of
indications that we were going to have difficult times with a very national, with a very
Catholic state, and then the influence from without, and then society at large changing from within.
All of those things. I think it was socially driven rather than theological driven, Alistair.
I remember just growing up, we went to an Irish Christian boys school, and many of the students
just in the years above me were called John Paul after the 1979 visit of the Pope.
It was very clearly something that meant an awful lot to people.
There was a huge attendance when he visited.
And it seemed to bring an energy to Catholicism.
in the country and the pride of Irish Catholicism.
It was actually such a big influence,
not just in Ireland,
a very Catholic nation,
but worldwide,
the influence of the Catholic diaspora from Ireland.
That was still very much something that people felt.
But very swiftly,
you can see things changing over the final years I was there.
And the ways in which a certain,
I mean,
there's always been a deep nominalism within that sort of Catholicism, but that normalism
became a lot more cynical and dismissive of the church. And the sort of suspicion with which
the church was viewed was very different for one of my first memories of the approaches
towards the church. You mentioned the Irish constitution, and even in the preamble to that,
there's a very strong statement of the Christian identity of the nation. In the name of the
Holy Trinity, from whom is all authority and to whom, as our final end, all actions both of
men and states must be referred. We the people of error humbly acknowledging all our obligations
to our divine Lord Jesus Christ, who sustained our fathers through centuries of trial,
gratefully remembering their heroic and unremitting struggle to regain the rightful
independence of our nation, etc. There is a deep marriage between Irish identity and the Christian
faith. I think you can go back to the very dawn of Irish Christian story. We can think about
the influence of St. Patrick. They're probably the best known saint worldwide. We have celebrations
of St. Patrick all over the world, wherever there is an Irish diaspora community. And yet,
that marriage between Christianity and Irish identity has always had fraught dimensions to it.
I'll be interested to hear your thoughts on the particular events that gave rise to that sort of marriage of Irish identity and Christianity and then later Catholicism.
It seems to me that you mentioned the rise of Christianity in Ireland.
But the way you describe it, it's not just a rise of Christianity within Ireland.
There's something of a resurrection of the church within the context of Ireland.
and it seems like the end of the world.
It's a period of time when everything seems to be collapsing.
And yet it's within the context of Ireland that many of the seeds of what will come next emerge.
And so Ireland at its very outset is an image, a sense of the death and resurrection of the church.
And maybe there's a seed of hope within that for this period of what seems to be renewed ferment.
Yeah, I think that's an interesting point. Alistair, you know, if you look at the situation in the years after the stack of Roman 410, which is the couple of decades just immediately before the Christian mission in Ireland begins, it's in respects remarkably like the present day where you have, you know, major civilizations seeming to move into some kind of existential moment of self-doubt.
in the case of the early 5th century, that's compounded by the beginnings of civil war in Rome in the empire, the contraction of military power and so forth.
So when those first Christians arrive in Ireland, whenever it is, and when Palladius arrives in the year 431 is their first bishop,
and then when Patrick follows him, some years later we're not exactly sure when, they are, they really truly believe living at the end of the world.
the church has never experienced a crisis like this.
For 100 years, the church has come to depend upon the structures of the Roman Empire.
Since 380, Christianity has been the empire's official religion, or one of them.
And now, you know, less than one generation after 380,
all the benefits that Roman civilization seems to be giving to the church
are being stripped away from it because the empire is in crisis.
It's crumbling.
And, you know, when Patrick jumps in the boat and,
heads back to Ireland a country that he had just escaped from a number of years previously.
He is, he believes, heading to the very edge of the world at the very end of the world.
And, you know, he understands that as a fulfillment of the all of it discourse,
the gospel being preached to all nations, and then the end will come.
And, you know, that's very much how he sees it.
But the remarkable thing is that far from that heralding the end of the world,
actually signals the beginning of something new.
and the Christian church as it begins to institutionalize and as it begins to forge relationships
with various political actors on the island actually serves to consolidate an identity on the island.
In the early 5th century, there's approximately 150 separate kingdoms in Ireland.
And over the next couple of centuries, political power begins to coalesce,
but it coalesces as church power coalesces as well.
and often in the same places.
So that there's a coming together of temporal and ecclesiastical power structures.
One of the things that I think about in the book is the way in which the shape of the church
is often determined by the culture in which the church is being expressed or founded or lived out.
And I think you can see that in that period as well.
So, you know, Matthew was just chatting just before we started.
there telling me about someone who had mentioned that the book is more of a history of Ireland
than a history of Christian Ireland. But in a way, in a way, that's the point. Because the,
the Christian religion becomes so intertwined with virtually every significant moment of
historical momentum or movement or change that in a sense it becomes invisible. And yet it's always
there and it comes really to create an atmosphere. And the thing about the thing about atmosphere is it's
kind of invisible. It's something you breathe, you rely upon it, but you can't see it. If you can't
see it as poison gas, you can't, you can't see an atmosphere. But it's everywhere and it, you know,
it really determines what, what anyone can do. And so, you know, we come then to the preamble to
1937 constitution that you read out there, Alistair. And it's, you know, from a theological point of
you, I will go on record and say, I think it's one of the most carefully calibrated
expressions of biblical truth regarding political power. And it's certainly a million times better
than anything beginning, we the people, which locates power in a very different source.
But, you know, the men and women who wrote that constitution understood what they were doing.
we had thought very deeply about what scripture and Christian traditions say about politics
and therefore about how Christian states ought to respond to that.
However, it's also a deeply exclusionary document because it presupposes that the very small Jewish
population that lived on the island at the time had no place or part in the Irish Catholic
nation.
And, you know, you can move from that moment of exclusion to think about other moments of exclusion
So it looks like it's it looks like it's commodious, you know, it looks like it's capacious,
but it's also very artfully designed to be distinctively Catholic.
And so, you know, it's clearly drawing on Catholic social theory by Protestant denominations in the same period,
even though they've been invited to comment upon it.
It's clearly a document shaped by Catholic social theory.
And, you know, in some senses, one Catholic commentator recently suggested, it was a moment of overreach where the church was trying to do more than simply guard and nourish the spiritual lives and the faithful.
It was attempting to shape a nation at large. Can a nation be born in a day? A prophet asks, well, you know, I think that's a haunting question.
me look at the 1937 constitution.
One of the questions that maybe need to get into is that marriage between Irish identity and
the Christian faith, to what extent did the Christian faith get compromised in the process?
To what extent was Ireland really Christianised in terms of folk religion and various practices
that were taken over from the past tradition?
I think of the shaping of a nation, something I've often thought about in the context of the UK,
the way in which the sense of place is defined by churches and minister communities and sites of pilgrimage.
And it's even more so in the case of Ireland in many respects.
The whole sense of place, the sense of national story, the merging of the old pagan myths and the early Christian missionary
work is an interesting example of that, the way in which old places of pagan worship
become sites of new Christian pilgrimage.
And it seems to me that marriage of a deep cultural identity and story and the myths
and the paganism that can come with that was something that never really disappeared in Ireland.
You can still very much see that within the sort of Catholicism, which I grew up with,
very much, you'd know the people who are very devout Catholics would also tell you about the
fairies in the area and things like that. There was a sense of the law of the land and the mythology
that goes with that. And then that was married in an easy way with the Christian faith,
lots of superstitions that are very different from the sort of Catholicism that you'd find
in the UK or in the US, where it's leavened by a very,
different set of concerns that are very much brought from outside by engagement with Protestant faith.
And I'll be curious, particularly from Matthew's perspective of how that marriage of Christian faith
and Irish identity and story and place has been an easy one in which Christianity has not
always been as dominant as it might appear to have been.
I think just going back to something Crawford said earlier about Patrick,
I almost wonder was Patrick the first real evangelist?
Because he seemed to have kept the gospel central.
And Crawford indicates in the book that he was influenced by Augustine's confession.
Now, if Augustine's confession was over here,
I'm sure the city of God was over here as well.
and of course in
the city of God
Augustine outlines
civil and
and Christian
distinction
and you almost think
that
had Patrick been left alone
to get on
with the job of evangelizing
and keep reading Augustine's confession
and the city of God
we mightn have got into the mess we got in
and then the first bishop
is sent and it becomes a political thing
but then
Alistair, as that faith began
to expand throughout the country,
much of the old
pagan
scene centers
were Christianized, and
it's, there's logic
to it.
Because, I mean, if we take
the preamble to the Constitution,
that God is
the ultimate one we're in
authority to, even with
say in places like holy wells
or holy mountains.
There's a sense where you can almost not Christianize them,
but you can put a different perspective on it,
a biblical perspective on it, and marry it.
Now, I don't think that was thought through.
It was just done because it was a means of Christianizing the community
without necessarily changing the heart.
And so that was always the undercurrent.
And it just so happens that this today and yesterday, we're debating a new bank holiday.
And we're debating what we're going to call it because of the pandemic.
And St. Bridget, we're going to give it a St. Bridget's stay.
Because she was a know, before Bridget, there was a woman.
And that's how St. Bridget came into it.
And some folks says, no, we don't want any religious connections with this day.
We want it to be a non-religious day.
and the debate was, well, Bridget wasn't religious,
or who she represented was wasn't religious.
And there are some who say it's going back to her pre-Brigid state.
So we're now seeing the picking, the unpicking of all the apparent aspects
of what was perceived as Christian with the wells and the mountains and everything else.
And it's now been picked over.
and the raw non-Christian version is coming very much to the surface,
along with everything else in the country,
which I think is just in keeping with where we are.
We're reverting back.
And it almost begs the question at the very outset.
And as you said it, we can be a state and not Christians.
We can be a religious Catholic state, but not evangelical,
or not believers.
And you almost wonder, you know what,
if Patrick and evangelists were allowed to keep their distinctives at the very start,
the situation may have been completely different.
But we're now seeing even what was apparently Christian been unpicked socially
in the present atmosphere we're in.
And I think any vestige of a so-called quasi-Christian appearance
will go onto the microscope socially,
and I don't know if it's going to stand the test.
but everything is up for everything is up for for criticism presently.
And I don't even know where we're going to end.
Will Cro-Patrick be Cro-Patrick this time next year?
I don't know.
But everything is up for grab at the minute, Alastair.
One of the challenges of talking about Christian Ireland is that there have been many forms of Christianity
that have been expressed within Ireland and competing for the drive.
seat of Irish identity. And it's been connected with fairly brutal history of English
invasion and plantation and other things like that, with apartheid almost situations with the
treatment of Catholics and with a lot of sectarian and other violence. And the challenge of
understanding the role and the place of different denominations and Christian traditions within
the telling of the story of Christian Ireland is perhaps it's one of the most delicate questions
to deal with, but I'll be curious to hear just an outline of some of the key events and
developments that shape some of the tensions that people can see in, for instance, Northern Ireland
or some of the history before, for instance, the history that provides a background for people
like Cromwell or some of the early rebellions, things like the United Irishmen.
Yes, it's an interesting question, Alistair. We tend to think about cultural or ethnic difference
in sectarian terms. We've kind of got used to doing that. And of course, for much of the last
couple of hundred years, that's a very appropriate way to frame the whole issue. But, you know,
the history of Irish Church is a history of invasions as well. So, you know, the eighth, nine,
century, 10th century, you've got waves of Vikings coming in, 11th, 12th century, you've got waves of
Normans coming in, 15th century, you've got waves of Scots coming in, in the 16th century also
in the plantation's waves of English coming in, you know, and so on. So, you know, a lot of these
tensions predate the arrival of denominational difference. I think there's, there's a lot,
there's a lot of difficulty and a lot of violence within the Irish church before there's any
religious difference within it. And I think that, you know, when the Vikings arrived, one of the
reasons why the Vikings make such little impact on Ireland compared to elsewhere is because
they're landing in an island that's already incredibly violent. And the horrors of Viking violence
just, you know, don't really get much of a look in for a while. But the violence that the Vikings
come to witness is a violence between king and king, but also between one king's monastery and another
King's Monastery. So there's a lot of, a lot of bad stuff going on. I mean, certainly by the time
you come to the Reformation, the already tense relationship between the Norman invaders
and the Gaelic majority in the 11th, 12th, 13th, 14th century has begun to wane. But then the
introduction of a new set of settlers in the 16th century and early 17th century to do with the plantation
projects and Lee Shoffley in Munster and eventually up in Ulster as well. You know, they are very
clearly overlaid with sectarian and confessional difference. And, you know, some of the,
some of the propaganda that's produced to justify English or Scottish intervention in Ireland
is very crude by any stretch of the imagination and makes its points in extremely crude ways.
You know, when Cromwell comes for all that we think of Cromwell and his invasion is representing exceptional brutality in the course of Irish history,
in fact, Cromwell was just achieving a goal of English foreign policy that was already 70-odd years old,
which was an attempt to control the land in order to get involved in massive land transfers,
transfers of land ownership. So, you know, for all that we think of him as exceptional, in a way,
he's actually typical of what wanted to be achieved.
You know, by the time we come to the 18th century, as mentioned before, the penal laws, I think,
prize open differences between Protestants. And just as in England in later 17th century,
you've got a persecution of Protestants by Protestants, unparalleled anywhere else in Europe.
So in Ireland, you've got the same Anglican ascendancy representing about 10% of the population.
controlling the opportunities that are provided to the 80% of the population who are Catholics,
or the 10% who are dissenters, almost all of them, Presbyterian.
You know, I think in the middle of all that, there are some really interesting moments of
cultural exchange or generosity that stretches across religious difference, friendships,
opportunities of kindness or service famously during the famine,
when church people from lots of different backgrounds get involved in some
sacrificial service that cost several of them their lives.
Quakers, I think, do a very notable job during that period,
organizing transatlantic relief efforts.
In the same period, Baptists are actively planting churches.
They plant about 40 churches in 40 years,
and all of that comes to a very sudden end at the famine
when Baptists who have been recruiting some of the poorest of the population
find that the Baptist community decimated by famine and by the immigration that follows.
You know, it's just a long and really sad story.
I'll be interested to hear your thoughts, Matthew, on telling a story of Baptist identity within Ireland,
which is a story that really is complicated by the fact it's not connected with any of the major players in the same way.
and is a story that maybe challenges people to look at things from a different angle than they're used to.
What are some of the points of reference in thinking about Baptist identity in Christian Ireland that help you in articulating your Irish and your Christian identity and how they interact?
before I came to Clomel as the as a minister I worked in another job and it was in the time of the troubles that were very pronounced at that time
there was there was the hunger strike and there was tension in the air all across the country it was it was a very it was a very intimidating place
it was a very fearful place because black flags flew on masks all around the country
and the company I worked with, there was a particular man.
He was very big man physically, and I was not a very big man physically.
And he would talk to me about going on active service.
And by that, that was a euphemism to be involved in some sort of paramilitary or sectarian activity.
And he would say we go, and he would use very expressive language.
we got another black Protestant B.
We shot another one.
And then he'd say, you're one of them.
And I'd say, I'm not.
He says, you're, he says, you're a, he says, you're,
and he drew this very colorful language.
And I would say, I'm nothing of the kind.
I said, I am a Christian.
No, he says, you're a, and he would try to pigeonhole me in this category.
And I said, no, no, no, I'm not that.
I'm a Baptist, I'm a Christian.
Ye Baptists are the same.
And I try to let him think, no, there was a distinction.
We're not, it's not all caught with the same cloth.
And he couldn't quite pigeonhole me.
But I think if he had his way, he might have done something to me anyway.
So there was that very strong tension in the year.
And I think, Alistair, I think historically, and it goes way, way back,
we can go, we can, we can go back as far as Cromwell or go even before him.
You can't, I don't know if you can now separate your culture from your Christianity.
I think someone says Christianity has been found
as has been tried
and found wanting or wanting hasn't been tried
I think we're still in that
I still I think we're still in that dilemma
Christianity hasn't been tried
but a version
of it has been and it's been found wanting
the radical nature of
you know separation
politics now
each of us will take different views on this
but the Baptist would have
taken a very sort of non-participatory activity, we'll say, in state affairs.
It was spiritual.
It was church planting.
It was reaching the lost.
Politics wasn't there.
Wasn't a big concern.
So they got on with the main thing.
And if we had kept the main thing, then I think the situation would have been different.
But we're all children of our culture.
And I don't think we can change that.
And I think Christianity is a loser because of it.
On one occasion, I was at a conference with a lot of Ulster men.
And the discussion of a well-known Ulster man came up.
And I asked the question, naively, maybe not naively.
I said, how come this particular man is the dominant voice for Christianity in Northern Ireland?
The man has now since died.
And everyone in the room said to me, you don't understand.
That's the usual response they give you in the North when they don't like your question.
They say, you don't understand.
You don't understand.
So there was another man in the room who was a very eminent man, who was not an Ulster man,
and he wasn't an Irish man.
He says, well, actually, I agree with this man here.
This particular voice should not have been the voice for evangelicalism.
Why did you men allow this man to be the dominant voice?
And then the room went deathly quiet.
And I think we coalesce behind the culture we embrace.
Christianity in and don't think outside of our cultural heritage. And I think that's more,
I think that's more pronounced Alistair than we're willing to even realize. Yeah. But just to
follow on from Matthew's point there, I mean, I think one of the things that allowed that particular
voice to become so loud was that it wasn't a voice that was restricted to church-based
proclamation. In other words, that the volume of that voice came through political leaders.
leadership. So while, you know, while the Baptist, to talk about the Baptist a little bit more,
while the Baptists were busy preaching within their little tabernacles or churches, other voices
were taken to the streets to engage in other kinds of protests. And they, you know, while the
Baptists were pursuing perhaps more spiritual in the Verticalms or more a spirituality based much more
on certain kinds of piety, others were framing their religious commitment as requiring
them to be very noisy and very vocal and taking part in external events, events external to
the church, which Baptist Brethren and some other people just would have looked ask at. So, I mean,
I think it's very telling that, you know, when we're thinking, Alistair, about how different communities
relate to, like, between religion and nationalism. I think it's very telling that while
Protestants from almost all denominations were arrested for some.
kind of troubles related violence. As far as I know, no Baptist and no Brethren person was ever
involved, or at least was ever arrested and convicted of being involved in terrorist related
violence. I think different kinds of Christians understand their relationship to society in
fundamentally different ways, and that's one very visible outcome of that.
Why do you think that the Reformation didn't succeed in Ireland, in the way that it did,
in the UK and other places?
Well, a little bit, I suppose, like what Matthew was just saying,
it was half-hearted.
It was never tried.
It was half-hearted.
It was initially in the 1530s, up to maybe, I don't know,
the 1570s, 1580s, it was really a political movement
about getting the crown at the head of the Irish church.
It wasn't really interested in theology.
While the Church of Scotland had its Scots confession in 1560,
and the 13th of articles came out when 1563, something like that.
It wasn't until 1615 that the Irish Church had its own statement of faith.
So the church moves from theological ambiguity for most of its first century
to ultimately and very, very suddenly embrace a very, very rigid Calvinistic theology
in the Irish Articles produced in 1615.
But there's still no Bible translated into the national language.
So while the German Reformation advanced on, to use that cliche, the open Bible, the Irish Reformation had no Bible. And, you know, the people who were promoting it were very obviously doing so for political or even colonial reasons. We were talking there about William Bedell. Matthew, do you want to tell us that story about Bedell and his translation and how the rebels of 1641
so valorized him even in his death.
Well, yes, and he was quite a brilliant man.
He was an Anglican from the established church,
but he didn't conform to the established church.
And he had a desire that the Bible should be
in the language of the native.
It was an extraordinary late.
I mean, this is, that's the 17th century.
This is even been talked about.
So it's very, very late.
But at least it's now been talked about,
but none of it was it talked about,
He did it.
And it was printed 40 years after his death.
And in Galway, where he worked and labored, he was, when he died, he was revered by the
entire community.
Now, there was something about Bedell that broke the mold, mold by comparison with the majority
of the established church.
He went outside the pale in more ways than one.
And he saw himself, my priority must be, I got to bring Christ to the people.
and the scriptures, that extraordinary thing,
we should get that in the language of the common man.
So that was his, I think that's his lasting achievement.
And that was the first time as far as I know
that the Bible was translated into Irish by Bidel.
So that was a significant thing.
I think even if we look at the Puritans,
and I know some people are going to shake in their cheers now,
and I start talking about the Puritans,
but I think they failed in Ireland.
I think they failed badly.
I think when Cromwell came over with his with his Sam singing soldiers,
he brought over some of his ministers.
And they were within the pale,
which was the sort of the Westminster of Ireland.
They landed, the private, the beautiful, the wealthy.
And everyone outside the pale was in a different category.
And they worked and lived within that little hermetically single,
sealed unit and their
concern for the wider country
wasn't there.
Even when John Owen goes back to
Westminster and says, do your
utmost for the gospel in
Ireland, he was primarily
thinking about those within the pale.
He wasn't thinking of those outside the pale,
which was a shock when I realized
a man that I'd read a lot
about and admired enormously,
but he had a blind spot
regarding the wider community.
But Bidel did not.
And then there are others of that sort of elk who had a heart beyond the establishment tradition and tried to reach the native Irish.
Who would be some of the other names that if people are wanting to read some great works, for instance, of Irish theology, to get a sense of the flavour of different voices of Christianity in Ireland, what would be some of the work?
or the names that you would point towards for both of you.
Well, I suppose we could start with Patrick, Matthew, couldn't we?
We could recommend Patrick.
You can.
And his confession is a really extraordinary document, I think, a really wonderful document,
which describes his life.
Patrick, of course, is an ex-slave.
He's a former slave.
He writes about being a slave.
And he writes about being a slave, being captured and taken beyond the bounds of the Roman Empire.
and being a slave among barbarians and yet realizing that God has called him to go and serve them
in the service of Jesus Christ. You could talk about Colomba, some lovely poetry by Columba. It's widely
anthologised in the Oxford Book of Irish Verse, for example. Where would you go from there, Matthew?
Well, I thought your previous book on Usher and the Irish Puritan Crawford had some very salient and helpful suggestions in that,
and it's a much more, it's a much slimmer volume than more presently discussion.
I think that's an interesting volume.
I think some of the old Presbyterian history have got some very extraordinary men who worked hard in the Republic.
I think the Wesley's and the Methodists, they did some extraordinary work.
Gideon Usley, Thomas Walsh,
there were a number of those sort of men who had a huge impact in their day.
I think Thomas Koch, for me, who was an Englishman,
but he was the coordinator of the Methodist movement.
I think Coke was an extraordinary man.
He was an extraordinary man.
He had Herculane energy,
and he had extraordinary organizational skill and passion and capability.
And he loved the Irish conference when the Methodist would come.
He wanted the church to grow.
He wanted the country to be reached.
Not only that, this man goes across the Atlantic more times than Whitfield crosses the Atlantic to see Methodism and preaching go there.
And then in his mid-60s, he wants to go to one of the southern Isles.
And no one was willing to go.
And he says, well, I'll go.
And he puts his own money forward and then he dies en route.
But he had a huge, for me, I thought he was an extraordinary man in the, in the Irish context,
that he wanted this, these men supported and sustained to do what they were doing.
So that's one that stands out for me, I think, as an extraordinary man, Patrick particularly.
But there's a big gap between Patrick and the Methodist.
There's a thousand-year gap there.
We've got to fill in the gap, boys.
Crawford, you're going to have to give us some more details there, Crawford.
If Matthew gets to mention the Methodist, I get to mention John Nelson Darby, who is undoubtedly the greatest product of the Church of Ireland and certainly the most influential.
A Wicklow curate becomes a priest who leaves the Church of Ireland over exactly some of the issues we've been talking about today, the relationship with the state, which he feels is completely the litigious.
and he sets up these informal Bible studies, which eventually become the movement known as the Plymouth Brethren.
The Baptist, Alice, I'm sorry to cut across, to run on that theme.
I was struck by the fact that Crawford said that the Baptist were seeing a church come into existence for a year, for nearly 40 years.
and then post-famine, the presence of the Baptist in the Republic has completely gone.
I mean, pre-fammon, there was a Bible college in Balana, and there was a Bible college in Dublin run by the Baptists.
Post-famine, there's very little left of a Baptist presence, and it's staggering how that, almost that movement was wiped out nearly after the famine.
and I just can't understand that Crawford.
I think it's just because so many of the converts were agricultural workers,
you know, the rural poor who were being educated in the Irish language schools
at the Baptist missionary organization set up.
And they were the people who were most vulnerable to the pressures that the famine revealed,
either in terms of starvation, disease, or emigration.
You know, I think that's the only way to.
understand it. But I think it's very striking that Baptists grew in the southern counties of
Ireland in the early 19th century when they couldn't get into the north because it was so
dominated by Presbyterianism and a Presbyterianism that was really, really hostile towards
any other forms of evangelical churchmanship. Of course, after 1859, that great evangelical revival,
all of that changes and the Baptist do begin to get a foothold. But, you know, the, the,
1859 revival, both sees a huge number of conversions, maybe as many as 100,000 that's
estimated, and at the same time begins to erode what churchmanship really means. One of the
great effects of that revival is to cut away at what ecclesiology, whether ecclesiology really
matters or not. You know, on 150 years later now, we, in this part of the world, you know,
very much remember the 1859 revival, we find ourselves very much swimming in an atmosphere
that is dominated by that kind of spirituality, revivalistic spirituality, but an atmosphere
or a culture in which churchmanship is basically absent, that all of these denominations,
and yet hardly any of them, of any kind of functioning ecclesiology, and that's absolutely
a consequence of the revival movements in the middle 19th century. But then we also find
ourselves in a culture which is dominated by that kind of evangelicalism, even though there's a
declining number of evangelicals in it. And I think that's something that's really interesting
when we talk about the history of Christianity in Ireland, that you can have a Christian culture
in which Christians are a minority. So that the culture can be shaped by these norms, either because
Christians are successfully projecting them and normalizing them, or because they were once held by a much
larger proportion of people than they are now, but still the kind of hangover of that continues,
gradually erodes, gradually changes. I think that's pretty much where we see ourselves at the minute.
Irish history has been profoundly shaped by suffering, danger, violence, persecution, oppression,
and all these sorts of negative forces. How has Christian faith been shaped?
by the context within which it has developed in Ireland.
And how has Christian faith been a source of something that sustained the people
through all of those forms of suffering and difficulty?
I think if you take Christian in its broadest sense, first, Alastair,
the Catholic faith sustained Catholic people through very difficult times.
Simple people were loyal to the church, look to them for hope and succour,
and got it in some shape or form.
But I would say that within that constituency,
there were genuine believers.
There were genuine people who were a simple faith in Christ himself.
And I mean, when the unpicking of the Catholic Church happened 20 years ago,
I remember when I would knock on doors and talk to elderly Catholics
and talk about the gospel,
they were completely disillusioned
with their own faith,
but they wouldn't say it to me.
They respected it too much,
but they were lost.
You could see they were lost.
You could see that something had happened
in their lives
that had a profound impact on them,
and they were disillusioned,
but they didn't want to deny the faith,
but something very tragic had happened to them.
So when we would come,
and when the people,
now would begin to share the true Jesus
or Christ with them,
I think that they had been
anesthetized against anything else.
I think they thought they had
one genuine thing because that's what they were always
taught. We were the one true Holy Catholic faith.
And so us boys who just knew on the block, as it were,
historically, we didn't cut muster with them.
But in the 70s,
there was charismatic renewal.
And right across the country,
right across the country in small towns,
there was a work of the spirit
and little groups of people came to faith.
And that impact was really, really profound.
And the Catholic Church got so concerned about it
that they tried to bring it under the umbrella of the Catholic Church
so that they could regularize it or snuff it out.
as may have been the case.
But before they could do that,
it already reached out
and people across the country
had come to faith.
And you can go into churches now,
down through the country,
and ask some of the older people there,
when did they come to faith?
And they will,
are you surprised to hear
that some will say
it was through the charismatic,
well,
you will,
back in the 70s.
So there was,
there was an outbreak
of a small work of the spirit
in the 70s.
And these people are still there today,
And I think as they look back, as they look where we are today,
they'd be staggered, Alastair, because when they came to faith,
they may have been the only few in their town.
Now every major city and every major town has at least one evangelical church.
I mean, there's so many churches in the capital, in the larger cities now,
that you have the pick of them.
And even in the more rural areas, counties, there are churches there,
which when these people came to faith in the 70s weren't there.
So Christianity has been growing at a very small but constant rate since the 70s.
And it is really, really exciting that people are now in churches and churches are growing
and more and more people are learning about the Lord Jesus and more churches are coming into existence.
It's an exciting time to be in Ireland.
It's a very exciting time.
Now, ask me at a few minutes about where we are as a country.
That's another question.
But it's still an exciting time to be alive and to be a member of the church presently in the Republic, I think.
The history of Ireland, I think, particularly when you compare it to the history of England,
you can see, for instance, I'm trying to remember the figures.
I think it was before the famine, the population of the whole Ireland was 8 million.
and then in England at the same time about 12 million.
And now it's about 50 million in England.
And it's only just getting up to the pre-famine levels in Ireland again.
And so many of those people went overseas.
The history of Irish Christianity is a history not just of what happens within the shores of Ireland,
but also the history of a diaspora community.
What are some of the ways in which the Christian Christian people,
that left Ireland have left their mark in the countries that they went to?
Well, certainly in terms of the Catholic Church, Alistair, you know, from much of the 19th century,
a vast proportion of Catholic clergy and religious worldwide were Irish or of Irish extraction.
You know, it's very significant, for example, in New York that the first Catholic,
well, the Catholic Cathedral in New York is called St. Patrick's.
You know, it's very much part and parcel of an extended global Irish Catholic church and experience.
But I think in addition to personnel and staffing, it's also, I think, important to think about the way in which ideas developed within the Irish Church have travelled around the world.
I mentioned earlier on John Nelson Darby, and you both smiled as the founder of the Plymouth Brethren movement.
but he was also a biblical theologian who developed a way of reading scripture that became known as dispensationalism.
Now, dispensationalism and the Plymouth Brethren movement from which it emerged were deeply, deeply shaped by the experience of the Anglo-Irish elite in the 1820s and 30s,
who's very privileged lives, Darby came from that background, but their very privileged lives absolutely were coming to an end.
a whole world was coming to an end in 1820s and 1830s.
And, you know, Darby is quite open about that in his letters.
You know, he writes very personally, very movingly,
about what it was like as he puts it to be a Protestant in Ireland
when everything was being shaken.
And he sees that as the context in which this new way of reading scripture
that we call dispensationalism begins to emerge.
But dispensationalism is in some ways a theology that really,
expresses what it meant to be Protestant in Ireland at that point. It's very dark. It's very
foreboding. Well, I'm using pejorative words, don't need to do that. But it has a sense of
imminent crisis and the hope for imminent rescue. And that's really, I think, marked by that
experience. What would you add, Matthew? I think not only was it in the case of Darby,
when the founding of the state in the 1920s, 1916 is happening,
it's a similar religious model that they're thinking.
You know, Patrick Pierce's poetry, I see his blood upon the rose,
the schools he influences, the ministries he's in discussions with.
There's a new dispensation, if I can use that word,
there's a new dispensation been perceived for Ireland.
as a Catholic, you know, entity, we're now a new thing.
So, yeah, I think there are parallels between Derby, what he was thinking,
and the remaining Anglo-Irish who were there because Yates and Maudgone,
and some of these other people were instrumental in that sort of Renaissance,
parallel with nationalism on the rise.
And Pierce is fascinating, isn't he?
Because in addition to writing all of that verse,
which is really devotional in its lyricism of his love for Ireland
and also for the sacrifices that he and others are prepared to make.
He also has this idea in some of the speeches and letters
that Ireland will become a kind of millennial state,
that it will become the great fountainhead of global Christianity.
And he really, I know he's a very eccentric individual in lots of ways,
but he really does seem to have this idea that the blood sacriarcher,
that they're prepared to make, it is not just political. It is actually for the renewal of the
church, for the renewal of Christianity itself, perhaps not fully taken into account that only
one instance of blood sacrifice is ever going to do that. But that influence of Irish Christianity
beyond its shores is very much from the outset of Irish Christianity. The importance of
Irish missionaries going to various parts of the world, the protection of the Christian heritage,
even as Christianity as society is collapsing elsewhere, this redoubt of Christianity being
established on the island of Ireland. One thing I'd be curious to hear Matthew's thoughts on
particularly as we conclude, you've mentioned some of the positive sense of the possibilities
for the church as a voice within society, within the current context, where even as society
is leaving behind a sense of its Christian identity, there is a place that's increasing
for the voice of a committed group of faithful Christians who are very self-conscious in their
faith. It's not a nominal thing. It's something that is very considered and resolved. It seems to me
that the shape and the face of Irish Christianity has changed a lot in the last few decades.
One of the things that we've mentioned is the influence of the Irish diaspora.
One of the things we're seeing now is the importance of immigrants coming to Ireland
and their influence within particularly evangelical churches.
Could you say more about some of the ways that you see the church changing in these times
and some of the possibilities and exciting potential that you see for the future.
I think as a country, Alice, there's something has happened at the core of government.
The church now doesn't get a voice.
And if there's a voice, it's because a lot of people are making a lot of noise to get the attention of the government.
During the lockdown, the church wanted to know if they could gather.
And it was almost as if it's almost the last group in the room.
to be invited to the government to discuss it were the church.
The drive by this is my perception, and it may not be accurate,
but appearances do convey something.
The instruments of the state now, I think, are marginalizing the church to the periphery of society.
Even with Ireland been a Catholic state, they are dismantling all of that.
And so you have a large number of Catholics who are,
were Catholic at heart, who have no voice now, who have no representation in this state,
they're not, the government doesn't speak to them or speak for them. It's almost as if they're not
there. It's, it's, and I almost think it's government policy to be intolerant towards the
religious presently. They will play the political card when they come to occasions of national
remembrance. But as an entity, Alistair, even with the, even with the flag been blessed by the Catholic
Church when the state was founded, there'd been none of that now. They're almost running as far
and as fast as they can from any religious connection in the state. Now, that's fine. That's
fine. If you want a secular state, but you have a huge number of citizens who are deeply religious.
you have a huge number of citizens who are Christian.
And you're saying to these citizens, you have no voice in the state.
In other words, you're a non-entity.
And I think that vibe has been picked up all the time, Alistair.
And the diaspora played a role in the last two major referendum or referendai.
That's on the same-sex marriage and on the abortion referendum.
them, a large number of the diaspora were contacted by pressure groups, lobbying groups,
to campaign and to come home and vote in a particular way.
And I think by sheer resources of funding and voice and media, that's how it happened.
And I think, and I can understand why if you've been raised in the Catholic country,
you'll be hostile to the Catholic faith.
But as the governing class, you're to govern the whole of the state.
And I don't think the government are doing that for the religious.
Now, so what that's going to look for us in the future?
The way the wind is blowing internationally, it doesn't look very encouraging.
I think church will be marginalized.
I think its message will be silent, not silenced, but
reduced, its impact will be reduced.
And I think the church is going to have to become creative
and not fear it, but go back to what Augustine was saying.
We're running parallel with the state,
where the citizens of another kingdom in a state,
where the best citizens of that state,
but our priority and a primary concern is a greater kingdom.
And I think we're going to have to learn that in a fresh way
and have been learning it in the last few years,
But as a state, as a government, I think the, anyone who's got a religious conscience in Ireland
at the moment, I think they're not been represented by the state.
While Christianity as related to the state seems to be really marginalized, what are some
of the positive signs that you see within the church's life itself?
some of the trends that you see within evangelicalism and other forms of Christian denomination and tradition within Ireland.
In the Republic, in the Republic, I think, Alastair, it is, I have to say, even though the winds of adversity are blowing all around us, I think we are still excited.
it. I think of towns like Sligo now would have 10 evangelical churches in it. When I was growing up, there was one. I think of Cork, the county. I think of the large number of Christians in the county of Cork. You could almost call it the Bible Belt of Ireland now. I think of the largest church in Ireland is Romanian in Dublin. And the Chinese churches growing. The Nigerian, I mean, there's Nigerian churches would become a very, very international country.
And that, I think, is another facet of the decline of the Catholic faith, because it was one country for a particular people, a Catholic faith, a Catholic country for a Catholic people.
Now, that model is completely blown out of the water by the sheer scale of those who are coming into our shores and bringing new ideas.
Now, I love that because it opens up the door to other Christians and other influences in this.
state. And right across the country, I think the Baptists in the Republic are growing. The
Presbyterians are holding their own and growing. I think the church that was there in the 18th century
as the established church, it's in decline, numerical and otherwise, although they are
significant personalities, but it's still in decline. It's not seeing growth by way of conversions.
So I'm more excited, Alice, because I've been a believer in Ireland for nearly 45 years now.
And the landscape has completely changed from what it was when I was starting out.
We could take a train journey from my home to Dublin.
And we would know any Christian between the three counties.
Now, not anymore.
Not anymore.
So there's huge growth.
And the country is, it's still small, but it's very small.
but it's very, very exciting because it wasn't there 30 years ago.
Crawford, is that a fair assessment?
Yeah, I think probably the situation in Northern Ireland is quite different.
I think here it's maybe more about managing decline than seeing decline reversed.
And I think here that evangelicals generally struggle to differentiate who they are as a Christian
from what they do in the polling booth.
I still think that's,
there's a lot of untangling still to be done there.
Thank you both so much for joining me.
I thoroughly enjoyed your book Crawford
and I highly recommend that anyone listening to this
get the book.
There's just so much covered within it.
It's a rich and dense book
and whether or not you have any connections with Ireland,
you'll find a lot within it to make you think,
a lot within it that will enrich your understanding,
not just of Ireland, but also of the Christian faith, its relationship with society and to,
I think you'll find it a very worthwhile read. It's published by Oxford University Press,
The Rise and Fall of Christian Ireland. I'll give a link within the show notes.
Matthew, it's been wonderful to have you on the podcast. I owe you a very peculiar debt because
you have been one of the most important Christian influences in my life, and I would not be doing
this were it not for you. So thank you very much. And hopefully have you back at some point.
Thank you, Alistair. Thank you, Alistair. Just on the book again, I think there are,
I think there are indications that other countries who are going through the secular phase
will find Crawford's book salient for them to be reading as well.
Thank you very much for listening. God bless.
