Kieran Conry

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Right Reverend
Kieran Conry
Bishop of Arundel and Brighton
Province Southwark
See Arundel and Brighton
Appointed 8 May 2001
Installed 9 June 2001
Predecessor Cormac Murphy-O'Connor
Orders
Ordination 19 July 1975
Consecration 9 June 2001
by Cormac Murphy-O'Connor
Personal details
Birth name Kieran Thomas Conry
Born (1951-02-01) 1 February 1951
Coventry, United Kingdom
Nationality English
Denomination Roman Catholic Church
Motto Parate Viam Domini
Coat of arms {{{coat_of_arms_alt}}}
Styles of
Kieran Conry
Reference style The Right Reverend
Spoken style My Lord
Religious style Bishop

Kieran Thomas Conry[1] (born 1 February 1951, Coventry, England) is the Roman Catholic Bishop of Arundel and Brighton.

Early life and ordination

Conry was educated at All Souls Roman Catholic Primary School, Coventry, and Cotton College (Junior Seminary) in North Staffordshire, before moving to the Venerable English College in Rome to study for the priesthood.

He attended the Pontifical Gregorian University, gaining the qualifications PhB and STB. He was ordained in 1975 at All Souls Church in Coventry by Archbishop George Patrick Dwyer of Birmingham.

Professor and monsignor

In 1976, Conry returned to Cotton College to teach English Literature and Religious Education. In 1980 he became the private secretary to the Apostolic Delegate (Pro-Nuncio from 1982), Archbishop Bruno Heim, and then his successor, Archbishop Luigi Barbarito. He was appointed Monsignor in 1984.

Pastoral work

In 1988, Conry returned to the Archdiocese of Birmingham as parish priest in Leek, Staffordshire. He was appointed Administrator of St. Chad's Cathedral in 1990, just before its 150th anniversary the following year.

From 1988 to 1993, Conry was a member of the National Conference of Priests, and its Vice-Chairman from 1992 to 1993. He was also Chairman of the Birmingham City Centre Churches from 1992 to 1993. From 1993 to 2000, he was involved with training counsellors for Catholic Marriage Care.

From the beginning of 1994 to 2001, Conry was Director of the Catholic Media Office in London, the press office of the Bishop's Conference of England & Wales, and also Editor of Briefing, the Bishop's official journal. In January 2001, he returned to the Birmingham Archdiocese as parish priest of St Austin's, Stafford.

Bishop

On 8 May 2001, Conry was named the fourth Bishop of Arundel and Brighton by Pope John Paul II. He received his episcopal consecration on the following 9 June at Arundel Cathedral.

Views

Bishop Conry issues regular pastoral messages in his diocese.

Contemporary society

Bishop Conry has claimed that society has lost its sense of the transcendent and urged Christians to "proclaim the gospel into a void that needs to be filled if we are to find our way again; there is a space in all people that can only be filled by God".[2]

Young people

In an interview with a Catholic newspaper, he was reported to have said that it doesn't make much sense to talk about salvation to young people, unless you speak in their own language.[3]

He has criticised society's "moral confusion": "we preach a liberal attitude to relationships and allow the media and commercial interests to prey on our young people, so that they are turned into little adults long before their time. Then we shake our heads in dismay and shame when we learn that we have the highest teenage pregnancy in the EU, six times higher than Holland." [4]

Confession

Bishop Conry has been critical of going to confession regularly, saying that, in his experience, people would always come back saying the same things week after week, suggesting that no interior conversion or repentance was actually taking place.[5]

In a May 2009 pastoral letter, he urged a more adult approach to the sacrament of reconciliation: "Go to the priest and talk about these things, the way in which your relationship with God might have grown stale. Because sin is ultimately something that damages our relationship with God. It is not just breaking the rules." [6]

In November 2009, he clarified statements in his May pastoral letter, following a complaint to the Holy See. He stated that, by suggesting Catholics speak to their priests about "the biggest obstacle" in their relationship with God, he was not suggesting an alternative to the traditional practice of confessing sins.[7]

Tridentine Mass

He is reported to have stated that Summorum Pontificum does not suggest significant change because the Tridentine Mass caters for a small group of people. He added that he had never refused permission when a group of people asked if they could celebrate it in his diocese.[8]

Date of Easter

Bishop Conry has argued against changing the date of Easter in a sense that would separate it from its Jewish roots of Passover, adding that it would be difficult to get all the different ecclesial communities to agree on a same date.[9]

Civil partnerships

Bishop Conry has stated that the Catholic Church supports civil partnerships, because they can confer to couples, including homosexual couples, legal protection in matters such as inheritance. However, he has questioned the need to apply the term "marriage" to homosexual partnerships, saying that marriage as "the permanent union of a man and a woman" should be protected.[10]

References

Catholic Church titles
Preceded by
Cormac Murphy-O'Connor
Bishop of Arundel and Brighton
2001 present
Incumbent
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.