Who knew an Irish seminary could be so much like a prison?

IRELAND
National Catholic Reporter

by Eugene Cullen Kennedy on Jan. 19, 2012 Bulletins from the Human Side

In a story likely to be unsurpassed as what psychologists term an “unobtrusive measure” of what is wrong with the Catholic church in Ireland, its venerable national seminary at Maynooth has decided, according to The Irish Catholic, to “separate the seminary environment from the wider university community.”

Perhaps it is modeled on the new television series “Alcatraz,” in which ghostly former inmates return to the famous prison that is now a cold and empty symbol of the golden age of isolating big-time gangsters like Al Capone from the world they might harm. It was called “the Rock,” a nickname given to many seminaries that flourished in a roughly parallel golden age of isolating small-fry seminarians from the world that might harm them.

That was the pre-Vatican II world in which seminarians were prepared for working among men and women by such spurn-the-world spiritual ideals as the famous one from the Imitation of Christ: “As often as I have been among men, I have returned less a man.”

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