Monasticism and the Early Irish Church
By: Omnium Sanctorum Hiberniae
In a most useful and stimulating paper,
Prof. Liam Tracey, OSM, offers a critique of the 'Celtic Church' as it
is popularly understood by modern enthusiasts for 'Celtic Christianity'.
In passing, he also mentions the view that more recent scholarship has
advanced of the part played by monasticism in the early Irish Church:
In the era of
early Christianity,
monastic settlements in Ireland
began to slowly
disappear,
unlike their counterparts in Europe.
The ‘Celtic’ Church: what was it like?
In the past, great emphasis was placed on the monastic organisation and
nature of the early Irish Church. The theory is that the earlier Roman
organisation based around the figure of the bishop and some kind of what
today would be called ‘diocesan’ structure was replaced in the sixth
century by powerful abbots and abbesses. This monastic structure was
also tied to the then political structure. This view has been
considerably modified in the last number of years.[ix] While abbots may
have set the agenda, bishops seem to have still held the power.[x] The
pastoral care of the people seems to have been very much under the
direction of the bishop assisted by his clergy.[xi] Monasticism was an
important dimension to the life of the early Irish Church but it was not
the global phenomenon that has sometime been presented. Indeed,
monasticism was growing right across the Christian world, as
Christianity was being introduced into Ireland. Patrick himself valued
consecrated life and tells us so in his Confessions. But this
monasticism was not the structured monasticism of later ages, largely
based on the Rule of Saint Benedict. There was discipline in these
monasteries and we have evidence of different kinds of monastic rules,
but the abbot seems to have been free to mix and adapt these monastic
ordinances for his own particular house.
monastic settlements in Ireland
began to slowly disappear,
unlike their counterparts in Europe.
Skelligs Island, Historic Monastic settlement in Ireland
Clontuskert Abbey |
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