- Christianity has almost been vanquished in Britain, Cardinal
Cormac Murphy-O,Connor told a gathering of priests yesterday.
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- Christ was being replaced by music, New Age beliefs,
the environmental movement, the occult and the free-market economy, the
Archbishop of Westminster said. In a candid and unscripted passage of his
speech, the Cardinal also spoke of the damage and shame brought to his
church by the scandal of paedophile priests.
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- His analysis of Britain,s spiritual decline echoed the
Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr George Carey, who last year said: "A
tacit atheism prevails. Death is assumed to be the end of life. Our concentration
on the here-and-now renders a thought of eternity irrelevant.
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- But the Cardinal, leader of 4.1 million Roman Catholics
in England and Wales, went much further. The extent to which Christianity
informed modern culture and intellectual life in Britain today had been
hugely diminished, he told the National Conference of Priests in Leeds.
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- "It does seem in our countries in Britain today,
especially in England and Wales, that Christianity, as a sort of backdrop
to people,s lives and moral decisions " and to the Government, the
social life of the country " has now almost been vanquished.
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- Increasing numbers of people now gained their "glimpses
of the transcendant from involvement in music, New Age movements and green
issues. "I could go on about this and talk also about the rise in
New Age and occult practices and the search being made by young people
for something in which, or someone in whom, they can place their complete
trust.
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- People were seeking transient happiness in alcohol, drugs,
pornography and recreational sex, the Cardinal said.
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- "There is indifference to Christian values and to
the Church among many young people and, indeed, not only the young. You
see quite a demoralised society, one where the only good is what I want,
the only rights are my own, and the only life with any meaning or value
is the life I want for myself.
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- In an apparent condemnation of both Thatcherism and "new
Labour, the Cardinal gave warning of the excesses of the free-market economy
and consumerism. "When we live in a culture which says What I have
got is what I am,, we are in big trouble. Whilst I understand that "
to some degree " we are all consumers, this is something we all enjoy
a bit, it,s quite clear that a sole reliance on the market place does in
the end actually prevent people from taking their destiny into their own
hands.
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- "There are many today who think that to believe
in God is to limit one,s freedom.
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- Confronting the problem of priests who have sex with
children, the Cardinal warned the Church against "apathy and "negligence.
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- "All I want to say about this is quite clear and
simple. I do not try to make excuses for the past. Yes, we must recognise
the depth and the extent of the damage done to the Church and its mission
in these cases.
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- He said priests, and especially bishops, had not been
sufficiently aware of the "insidious and "pathological nature
of child abuse and had not treated all allegations with the seriousness
they merited.
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- Copyright 2001 Times Newspapers Ltd.
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