2018
August
27
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 27, 2018
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

These are trying times for the Catholic Church in Ireland. In 1979, the only previous time a pope visited, half the country – 2.5 million people – flocked to see him in person. More generally, 90 percent of Irish Catholics attended mass weekly.

This week, Pope Francis’s visit has been marked by fallout from abuse scandals, and only 30 percent of Irish Catholics attend mass weekly. The shift is stunning.

In many respects, the Irish Catholic Church is dealing with the same cultural head winds facing all organized religion in the West. Yet there is an added element. The Catholic Church in Ireland long held a position of even greater influence than the government itself. “The priests thought they were more powerful than the police, and they were right,” an Irish man told the Jesuit magazine America earlier this year.

During the past 40 years, Ireland has flourished, and its people’s horizons have broadened. Generations-old abuses and coverups, including the infamous Magdalene laundries, are jarringly out of step with a new optimism. Yet still, the reporter for America magazine noted, faith there resonates deeply – the inspiration of holiday services, the enduring affection for the parish priest.

And thought is stirring about how to build on that good. “We need a church that is relevant more than it is dominant,” the archbishop of Dublin told America magazine. “The Irish church has to change gear. And has to notice that the gear has changed.”

Now, here are our five stories for today, including an unusual look at the power of the people in Russia, the enduring togetherness at some Texas schools after hurricane Harvey, and the legacy of an American senator who stood for something greater than himself.  


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Alexander Zemlianichenko/AP
A woman holds a poster rejecting the rise in the pension ages to 65 for men and 63 for women, during a rally in Moscow on Aug. 21. Russians are protesting government plans to hike the retirement age, in a rare challenge to President Vladimir Putin's leadership.
Mary Knox Merrill/The Christian Science Monitor/File
Sen. John McCain addresses the Republican National Convention at the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul, Minn., Sept. 4, 2008. The longtime Arizona senator ran twice for president.

The Monitor's View

Reuters
In Hanoi on Aug. 27, a Vietnamese war veteran, Pham Minh Chuc, 81, pays respect to Senator John McCain at the U.S. embassy in Vietnam.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

R S Iyer/AP
Cows and calves displaced during floods in the southern state of Kerala, India, are brought back to their keepers on Aug. 27. The once-in-a-century flooding has caused more than $3 billion in damage, washing out roads and buildings and damaging crops. Volunteers have leaped into action, including a team of Sikhs who cleaned out a waterlogged church in time for a Christian community to hold its Sunday mass. A 'message of humanity and communal harmony was given by our volunteers in these testing times,' said one.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you of joining us today. Please come back tomorrow when we dive into the new trade deal struck between the United States and Mexico, which could offer innovative help for workers in both countries.

More issues

2018
August
27
Monday
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