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Secularism on RTE's "the Frontline" tomorrow

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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,850 ✭✭✭condra


    The Catholic and Muslim parents don’t want their kids mixing, yet join hands to denounce gay marriage.

    What a messed up world we live in. Everyone so intolerant, suspicious, biased, and set in their ways.

    Nobody wants to compromise, except the secularists, who realise how much better life could be if everyone was just a bit more TOLERANT.

    Damn.
    It’s not just religion. People are racist, backwards, control freaks.

    We’re doomed.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,989 ✭✭✭✭recedite


    darjeeling wrote: »
    The UK is less religious than Ireland, but also constitutionally less secular. It has bishops sitting in the House of Lords by virtue of their office, and the head of state as Supreme Governor of an established church.
    The UK is more secular in practice though. Even though it maintains these vestiges of a State Religion, they are largely ceremonial.
    Ireland, as a Republic, has a Constitution which does not endow any particular religion. However, that Constitution strongly favours religion over no religion, and many of values in it were guided by Archbishop McQuaid.

    If religious people are being persuaded that secularism is synonymous with atheism, they are going to oppose it. If instead they can be shown that secularism can actually guarantee the freedoms of religion, they may be more supportive.
    Good point; worth bearing in mind.
    As an aside, it may not be the most helpful thing that 'Atheist Ireland' is campaigning for secularism, as I'm sure most or all of its members would be opposed to living in an atheist state. Maybe 'Atheism Ireland' would be a better name?
    Well, I always read that as Irish Atheist, but now that you mention it, the title could also be read as Irish Atheist State :)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 962 ✭✭✭darjeeling


    recedite wrote: »
    The UK is more secular in practice though. Even though it maintains these vestiges of a State Religion, they are largely ceremonial.
    I would say it's not just ceremonial when 26 C of E bishops enjoy a privileged position in the House of Lords where they get to legislate on all sorts of hot-button social issues.

    Oh, and the monarch can't be a Catholic by law, though they can now marry one. Progress, I'm sure.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,989 ✭✭✭✭recedite


    House of Lords is like our Seanad - just a lot of hot air, most of them don't even attend. The monarch was forced to hand over power to the Parliament back in Cromwell's time, and after Cromwell's Republic fell, the monarch never regained real power again.
    On a practical level; Given that Ireland and UK have something of a shared history, we both started off with all schools and hospitals being run in the 19th Century by a mixture of religious organisations, charities and private philantropists.
    In the 20th C "the State" moved to take over these functions, but more so in the UK than here. The fact that we have only started to wrest control of primary education from the religious in the last decade or two says it all.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,457 ✭✭✭Morbert


    robindch wrote: »
    Pat: "So what do you think about the two gay guys next to you -- they don't have horns".

    Nice one, Pat!

    Though I think she did have a point. I was pleasantly surprised to see that Catholocism in this country is almost entirely notional.

    Latae sententiae for all! Hurrah!


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 131 ✭✭beerbuddy


    Penn wrote: »
    The church-run schools in England which tend to get better results tend to do so due to being able to be more selective with accepting students, such as accepting fewer children from rougher areas etc.

    Catholic or Church of England ?
    Catholics are mostly middle class in England now and church of England are the same so what do you expect.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 131 ✭✭beerbuddy


    Penn wrote: »
    The church-run schools in England which tend to get better results tend to do so due to being able to be more selective with accepting students, such as accepting fewer children from rougher areas etc.

    Catholic or Church of England ?
    Catholics are mostly middle class in England now and church of England are the same .


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 32,865 ✭✭✭✭MagicMarker


    beerbuddy wrote: »
    Catholic or Church of England ?
    Catholics are mostly middle class in England now and church of England are the same .
    Considering 70% in England are Christian, and the vast majority of those are either Catholic or CoE, I'm going to assume you just made this up.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 390 ✭✭sephir0th


    Morbert wrote: »
    Though I think she did have a point.

    She was one of the few who made a valid point!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 962 ✭✭✭darjeeling


    Considering 70% in England are Christian, and the vast majority of those are either Catholic or CoE, I'm going to assume you just made this up.

    I'll use this as an excuse to post up the most recent figures from the UK. :)

    The '72% Christian' figure was from the 2001 UK census, and contrasted with the British Social Attitude survey in the same year (43% Christian, 41% no religion). The BSA put the differences at least partly down to the simplistic census question.

    The most recent British Social Attitude survey of 2011 reveals 50% of UK citizens are religious.

    Figures are :
    Religion | % of respondents
    Anglican | 20%
    Roman Catholic | 9%
    Other Christian denomination | 6%
    Christian, no denomination | 9%
    All other religions | 6%
    No religion | 50%


    Amongst 18-24 year olds, 64% say they have no religion; only 28% of over 65s have no religion.

    Only 14% of people who are or were raised religious say they attend religious services each week (i.e. 11% of the population as a whole).

    Comparing BSA surveys from different years reveals trends over time. Anglicanism has been the biggest loser, falling from 40% in 1983 to 20% today, while non-belief has gained most, up from 31% to 50% in the same time. Tracking people as they grow older shows they remain roughly as religious as they always were. If this pattern continues, the largely irreligious younger generations will likely remain non-believers, with big implications for UK society in a few years' time.

    .


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  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 24,458 Mod ✭✭✭✭robindch


    darjeeling wrote: »
    If this pattern continues, the largely irreligious younger generations will likely remain non-believers, with big implications for UK society religions in a few years' time.
    FYP :)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 962 ✭✭✭darjeeling


    robindch wrote: »
    FYP :)

    Well, I think the decline of religion will continue to shift debates over faith schooling, sexual equality, euthanasia and more.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 13,016 ✭✭✭✭jank


    Like this twat for example.

    Why should you care if a person who is homosexual can also be a catholic or a devot christian? Many people cant fathom atheism, doesnt mean they are right or wrong.
    The world is not as black and white as lots here would love to proclaim.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 131 ✭✭beerbuddy


    recedite wrote: »
    The UK is more secular in practice though. Even though it maintains these vestiges of a State Religion, they are largely ceremonial.
    Ireland, as a Republic, has a Constitution which does not endow any particular religion. However, that Constitution strongly favours religion over no religion, and many of values in it were guided by Archbishop McQuaid.



    Good point; worth bearing in mind.


    Well, I always read that as Irish Atheist, but now that you mention it, the title could also be read as Irish Atheist State :)

    Sorry i nearly fell off my chair when i read this.

    Firstly Anglican bishops are appointed to house of Lords.
    Queen is the Defender of the faiths or faith cant remember which,
    Also due to the act of succession Tony Blair was not able to become catholic until the end of his office.Cant have a catholic advising the head of the church of england on religious matters.
    No Catholic can marry king ,queen but an Athiest or Muslim can and so forth


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 131 ✭✭beerbuddy


    recedite wrote: »
    House of Lords is like our Seanad - just a lot of hot air, most of them don't even attend. The monarch was forced to hand over power to the Parliament back in Cromwell's time, and after Cromwell's Republic fell, the monarch never regained real power again.
    On a practical level; Given that Ireland and UK have something of a shared history, we both started off with all schools and hospitals being run in the 19th Century by a mixture of religious organisations, charities and private philantropists.
    In the 20th C "the State" moved to take over these functions, but more so in the UK than here. The fact that we have only started to wrest control of primary education from the religious in the last decade or two says it all.

    Sorry but 19th centuary uk institutions were not domoinated by or Ireland as a matter of fact it would have been the workhouse which was state cointrolle

    Please dont look at the past as having a similar state makeup as today.

    The state didnt care even in the 20th centuary and just dumped people in the laundries or workhouse.It had nothing to do with religion.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,427 ✭✭✭Morag


    Bullshít.

    They put people in laundries for breaking the religious moral codes.
    Those codes were preached to the people and they were told they had to enforce them or risk going to hell and they would be ostracised by the community.
    You can not detach what happened from the religious ethos of the country and the power of the church with in the state.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 13,016 ✭✭✭✭jank


    Sharrow wrote: »
    Bullshít.

    They put people in laundries for breaking the religious moral codes.
    Those codes were preached to the people and they were told they had to enforce them or risk going to hell and they would be ostracised by the community.
    You can not detach what happened from the religious ethos of the country and the power of the church with in the state.

    That is a very convenient catch all theory but really doesn't bare resemblance to the pragmatism of the state. The state simply wanted to "hide" or at least ignore the problem of young unmarried girls who are pregnant out of wedlock. Blame the state as much if not more than blaming religion. This happened in other countries other than Ireland as well, so you cant blame it all on the RCC.

    Some religious orders were of tremendous help to these types of girls who were abandoned by the state but that disappears from view and the narrative.

    *awaits knuckle cracking and furious retorts to my last point*


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,055 ✭✭✭Cossax


    jank wrote: »
    That is a very convenient catch all theory but really doesn't bare resemblance to the pragmatism of the state. The state simply wanted to "hide" or at least ignore the problem of young unmarried girls who are pregnant out of wedlock. Blame the state as much if not more than blaming religion. This happened in other countries other than Ireland as well, so you cant blame it all on the RCC.

    Some religious orders were of tremendous help to these types of girls who were abandoned by the state but that disappears from view and the narrative.

    *awaits knuckle cracking and furious retorts to my last point*

    Nope, the State was in thrall to the RCC and was happy to do whatever they were told.

    What religious orders were particularly helpful, seeing as you brought it up?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 131 ✭✭beerbuddy


    Sharrow wrote: »
    Bullshít.

    They put people in laundries for breaking the religious moral codes.
    Those codes were preached to the people and they were told they had to enforce them or risk going to hell and they would be ostracised by the community.
    You can not detach what happened from the religious ethos of the country and the power of the church with in the state.

    So whaty about the poor ???
    Workhouses obviously didmt exist.The first laundry opened in Ireland was from the church of England .I dont think that before 1922 the RC would have had that much of a privilaged position seeing as we were occupied.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 131 ✭✭beerbuddy


    Considering 70% in England are Christian, and the vast majority of those are either Catholic or CoE, I'm going to assume you just made this up.

    I meant pracicing Catholics and COE.


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  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 13,016 ✭✭✭✭jank


    Cossax wrote: »
    Nope, the State was in thrall to the RCC and was happy to do whatever they were told.

    What religious orders were particularly helpful, seeing as you brought it up?

    Again, that is a convenient narrative to have but it is not really that true. Did the RCC have influence over Irish society. Yes, of course. But how much influence is the key question here. To say that the Irish population bowed down like slaves at every whim of the RCC is factually wrong and can be proved by Dev standing up to the RCC by not making Catholicism the official and natural religion of the republic. He did of course recognise the special position of the RCC. So by that fact alone you are wrong with above statement.

    Amazing where evidence and facts are such a core vaule of atheists you would do well to actually adhere to them.

    Bessborough in Cork. Not sure what "order" of nuns but from what I hear and from my own personal experience they were decent, loving and caring without the dogma. The place is run now I think by the HSE.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,055 ✭✭✭Cossax


    jank wrote: »
    Again, that is a convenient narrative to have but it is not really that true. Did the RCC have influence over Irish society. Yes, of course. But how much influence is the key question here. To say that the Irish population bowed down like slaves at every whim of the RCC is factually wrong and can be proved by Dev standing up to the RCC by not making Catholicism the official and natural religion of the republic. He did of course recognise the special position of the RCC. So by that fact alone you are wrong with above statement.

    Amazing where evidence and facts are such a core vaule of atheists you would do well to actually adhere to them.

    Bessborough in Cork. Not sure what "order" of nuns but from what I hear and from my own personal experience they were decent, loving and caring without the dogma. The place is run now I think by the HSE.

    It's not like the RCC campaigned to have divorce banned (allowed under the initial FS constitution). Cough

    It's not like any government was brought down by the RCC in Ireland. Cough.

    Or that the then Taoiseach admitted to being a Catholic first and Irish second and that he accepted all Church teachings without qualification. Cough.

    Sure there wasn't a bad on contraception in Ireland at all either. Cough.

    And that's off the top of my head. I'm sure others could point out similar interjections from the RCC.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 131 ✭✭beerbuddy


    Cossax wrote: »
    It's not like the RCC campaigned to have divorce banned (allowed under the initial FS constitution). Cough

    It's not like any government was brought down by the RCC in Ireland. Cough.

    Or that the then Taoiseach admitted to being a Catholic first and Irish second and that he accepted all Church teachings without qualification. Cough.

    Sure there wasn't a bad on contraception in Ireland at all either. Cough.

    And that's off the top of my head. I'm sure others could point out similar interjections from the RCC.

    I think you are going completely of the point.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,989 ✭✭✭✭recedite


    beerbuddy wrote: »
    due to the act of succession Tony Blair was not able to become catholic until the end of his office.Cant have a catholic advising the head of the church of england on religious matters.
    No, there is no law specifying the religion of the PM, because the post of PM evolved subsequent to the monarchy and its archaic restrictions. The timing of Blair's conversion was a personal decision.
    beerbuddy wrote: »
    So whaty about the poor ???
    Workhouses obviously didmt exist.The first laundry opened in Ireland was from the church of England
    CoE never operated in Ireland.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 131 ✭✭beerbuddy


    recedite wrote: »
    No, there is no law specifying the religion of the PM, because the post of PM evolved subsequent to the monarchy and its archaic restrictions. The timing of Blair's conversion was a personal decision.


    CoE never operated in Ireland.

    It was a personal decision because it would be really awkward constitutionally due to the PM's role in advising the Queen in making ecclesiastical appointments. Also, there are laws forbidding Catholics from advising the crown on religious matters. So, those two together would make it constitutionally hard for the PM to be Catholic.To make matters worse the uk has no written constitution

    as for your second point you are indeed correct


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,989 ✭✭✭✭recedite


    beerbuddy wrote: »
    there are laws forbidding Catholics from advising the crown on religious matters.
    Well, I haven't heard about these.. what laws are they?
    You are speculating about something that has never come up yet in the UK.
    Sooner or later it probably will come up, and they would just repeal any laws that get in the way of a catholic PM, because that's how it works over there, with a flexible "unwritten" constitution.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 37,179 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    recedite wrote: »
    On a practical level; Given that Ireland and UK have something of a shared history, we both started off with all schools and hospitals being run in the 19th Century by a mixture of religious organisations, charities and private philantropists.

    Actually we didn't - the National School system was set up in the 19th century with the intention of being something akin to ET today - religious instruction was available but optional, and children of different religions were supposed to be educated alongside each other.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanley_Letter

    Then the churches kicked up and eventually ended up getting their way - think of all the bitterness and bloodshed on this island that might have been avoided if they hadn't?

    I'm partial to your abracadabra,

    I'm raptured by the joy of it all.



  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 13,016 ✭✭✭✭jank


    Cossax wrote: »
    It's not like the RCC campaigned to have divorce banned (allowed under the initial FS constitution). Cough

    It's not like any government was brought down by the RCC in Ireland. Cough.

    Or that the then Taoiseach admitted to being a Catholic first and Irish second and that he accepted all Church teachings without qualification. Cough.

    Sure there wasn't a bad on contraception in Ireland at all either. Cough.

    And that's off the top of my head. I'm sure others could point out similar interjections from the RCC.

    Yes, but what is your point. The fact that the church had to campaign in its fight against divorce totally counter acts your point that the state were slaves to the RCC and to quote you "...was in thrall to the RCC and was happy to do whatever they were told.." Hmmm, so why did the have to campaign against it? Surely in your world, the church, if it were that influential would never have even allowed the referendum to take place. Thats how a real theocracy would work.

    So, yet again you are wrong.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 131 ✭✭beerbuddy


    recedite wrote: »
    Well, I haven't heard about these.. what laws are they?
    You are speculating about something that has never come up yet in the UK.
    Sooner or later it probably will come up, and they would just repeal any laws that get in the way of a catholic PM, because that's how it works over there, with a flexible "unwritten" constitution.

    Read the whole Act of Settlement it is quite amusing to read it as an outsider.
    And yes it has come up my point is tony blair had to mind where he stood when he was prime minister as he could infringe on his constitutional duty to advise the queen.The main problem is to determine what is constitutional law and what is not. They cannot repeal the act of succession as it will mean a total redefinition of the state and what it stands for for also it is illegal for MPS to challange the role of the monarch so who will start the debate.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,055 ✭✭✭Cossax


    jank wrote: »
    Yes, but what is your point. The fact that the church had to campaign in its fight against divorce totally counter acts your point that the state were slaves to the RCC and to quote you "...was in thrall to the RCC and was happy to do whatever they were told.." Hmmm, so why did the have to campaign against it? Surely in your world, the church, if it were that influential would never have even allowed the referendum to take place. Thats how a real theocracy would work.

    So, yet again you are wrong.

    What referendum? You're just making assumptions now.

    The RCC didn't want divorce to be legal in the Free State (which it was), so they got the government to make it illegal in the mid 20s and then enshrine its illegality in the 37 constitution.


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