The Church of Ireland (Irish: Eaglais na hÉireann) is an autonomous province of the Anglican Communion, operating seamlessly across the border between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland. It is the largest Protestant Church in the Republic of Ireland and the second largest Protestant denomination in Northern Ireland.
The church today descends from Ireland's ancient Celtic Christianity. When Henry VIII and the Church of England broke with the Pope, the Catholic Church in Ireland underwent reformation. The Church of Ireland, in its cathedrals and churches and property, retains much of the island's medieval heritage. Although the Catholic Church remained the church of the vast majority of the populace, the Church of Ireland was the state church until 1871.
History
The Church of Ireland traces its history back to the ancient
Celtic Church in
Ireland and
Britain.
A monastically-centred institution, the early Celtic Church of Ireland had a unique calendar and usages, but was a full part of the wider Western Church, retaining a strong focus on pilgrimage to Rome. In 1166, by order of the Pope, Henry II of England came to Ireland and was made "Overlord" of Ireland.
In 1536 Henry VIII had the Irish Parliament declare him head of the Irish Church. When the Church of England travelled in a more Protestant direction under Edward VI so too did the Church of Ireland; unlike in England, however, Catholicism remained the majority denomination in Ireland.
As before the Reformation, some clergymen of the Church of Ireland sat as Lords Spiritual in the Irish House of Lords; under the provisions of the Act of Union 1800, one archbishop and the three bishops chosen by rotation would be Lords Spiritual in the newly united United Kingdom House of Lords in Westminster, joining the two archbishops (Canterbury and York) and the twenty-four bishops from the Church of England.
Though the religion of a minority of Irish people at the time, it remained the official, established religion of Ireland, until its disestablishment by an 1869 Act of Parliament came into effect in 1871. Previously, it had been funded by tithes, taxes that all, whether Anglican or not, were obliged to pay to it. The representation of the Church in the House of Lords also ceased.
To deal with its new situation, it made provision in 1870 for its own government (General Synod) and financial management (Representative Church Body). Like other Irish churches, it did not divide when Ireland was partitioned in 1920, and continues to be governed on an all-island basis, with twelve dioceses organized as two provinces (Armagh and Dublin).
Church today
The contemporary Church of Ireland, despite having a number of
High Church (often described as
Anglo-Catholic) parishes, is generally on the
Protestant end of the spectrum of world
Anglicanism. Historically, it had little of the difference in churchmanship between parishes characteristic of other Anglican Provinces, although a number of more markedly liberal, High Church or
evangelical parishes have developed in recent decades. It was the second province of the Anglican Communion after the
Anglican Church of New Zealand (
1857) to adopt, on its
1871 disestablishment,
synodical government, and was one of the first provinces to ordain women to the priesthood, in
1991.
The church is structured on a model inherited from pre-Reformation times. The Anglican Primate of All Ireland is the Anglican Archbishop of Armagh (Church of Ireland), whose seat is the medieval Saint Patrick's Anglican Cathedral, Armagh.
The Church is organised on diocesan or bishopric lines. The Anglican Archbishop of Dublin, like his Catholic counterpart, is called the Primate of Ireland. The existence of two primates is quite unrelated to the political division of the island, predating this by several centuries; and the boundary between their provinces does not follow the political boundary.
Canon law and church policy are decided by its General Synod, and changes in policy must be passed by both the House of Bishops and the House of Representatives (Clergy and Laity). Important changes, e.g. the decision to ordain female priests, must be passed by two-thirds majorities. While the House of Representatives always votes publicly, often by orders, the House of Bishops has tended to vote in private, coming to a decision before matters reach the floor of the Synod. This practice has been broken only once, when in 1999 the House of Bishops voted unanimously in public to endorse the efforts of the Anglican Archbishop of Armagh, the Anglican Diocese of Armagh and the Standing Committee of the General Synod of the Church of Ireland in their attempts to resolve the crisis at the Church of the Ascension at Drumcree, near Portadown.
The current Anglican Archbishop of Armagh is Archbishop Robin Eames, who is due to retire at the end of 2006. (He is also called Lord Eames, having been appointed to the House of Lords as a life peer). The Anglican Archbishop of Dublin is Archbishop John Neill.
The Church of Ireland experienced major decline during the 20th Century, both in Northern Ireland, where 75% of its members live, and in the Republic of Ireland. However, recent censuses shown an unexpected increase in Church membership, the first in almost a century. This is largely explained by the great number of Anglican immigrants who moved to Ireland, particularly from Africa; but some parishes, especially in middle-class areas of the larger cities, report a number of former Catholics joining. There are a number of clergy originally ordained for the Catholic Church who have now become Church of Ireland clergy.
The church has two cathedrals in Dublin: within the walls of the old city is Christ Church Cathedral, the seat of the Archbishop, and just outside the old walls is St. Patrick's Cathedral, the church's National Cathedral of Ireland.
Current bishops
Archbishops:
- The Most Rev. Robin Eames, Archbishop of Armagh, Primate of All Ireland
- The Most Rev. John Neill, Archbishop of Dublin, Bishop of Glendalough, Primate of Ireland
Bishops:
- The Most Rev. Richard Clarke, Meath and Kildare
- The Right Rev. Michael Geoffrey St Aubyn Jackson, Clogher
- The Right Rev. Paul Colton, Cork, Cloyne and Ross
- The Right Rev. Ken Good, Derry and Raphoe
- The Right Rev. Harold Miller, Down and Dromore
- The Right Rev. Alan Harper, Connor
- The Right Rev. Ken Clarke, Kilmore, Elphin and Ardagh
- The Right Rev. Michael Mayes, Limerick, Ardfert, Aghadoe, Killaloe, Kilmacduagh and Emly
- The Right Rev. Richard Henderson, Tuam, Killala and Achonry
- The Right Rev. Michael Burrows, has been ordained bishop, but has yet to be enthroned as Bishop of Cashel, Waterford, Lismore, Ossory, Ferns and Leighlin.
Irish Anglicans
Members of the Church of Ireland include or have included:
- John Millar Andrews (Prime Minister of Northern Ireland)
- Samuel Beckett, playwright and Nobel Prize laureate
- Heidi Bedell, Irish Green Party councillor. Married to Trevor Sargent and first cousin of U2 bassist, Adam Clayton
- William Bedell Stanford, former member of the Irish Senate (1948), Regius Professor of Greek in TCD from 1940-1980, and Chancellor of the University of Dublin from 1982-1984.
- George Berkeley, philosopher
- Jack Boothman, the first member of the Church of Ireland to have been elected president of the GAA
- Bono - Lead singer of U2.
- Sir Basil Brooke (Prime Minister of Northern Ireland)
- Phyllis Browne, author of "Thanks for the Tea, Mrs Browne", published by New Island Books. Married to the late Noel Browne, the Minister for Health famously remembered for the Mother and Child showdown of 1951
- Edmund Burke, statesman and philosopher
- Robert Malachy Burke, contested Dail elections in Galway for the Irish Labour Party from 1933-1948 when he was elected to the Upper House. Donated Toghermore House to the State, originally as a rehabilitation centre for TB patients.
- Ernest Blythe, Minister for Finance in W.T. Cosgrave's pro-Treaty government. Served as managing director of the Abbey Theatre 1941-67
- Edward Carson, Dublin-born Unionist - political leader and lawyer
- Roger Casement, Irish republican leader
- Erskine Hamilton Childers, fourth President of Ireland
- Hazel Blair, mother to the British Prime Minister, Tony Blair. She was born in ancient coastal town of Ballyshannon, Donegal, in 1923 (two years after partition kept it in the South)
- Countess of Wicklow, Irish Labour Party Senator (1948-52) and member of the Irish delegation which helped to draft the statute of the Council of Europe. Although very critical about the partition of Ireland, she was one of the founders and first chairman of the Glencree Reconciliation Centre and she joined hands with the Peace Movement in NI in the mid-1970s.
- James Craig, (Prime Minister of Northern Ireland)
- Susan Denham, the second most senior Supreme Court judge in Ireland (in terms of years served)
- Robert Dowds, Irish Labour Party county councillor
- Myles Dungan, RTE broadcaster and convert to the Church of Ireland
- Robert Emmet, Irish republican leader
- George Fitzmaurice, writer
- Arlene Foster, Democratic Unionist politician in Northern Ireland
- Roy Foster, Professor of Irish history at Oxford University
- Johnny Fox, Former TD - father of Mildred Fox, currently an Independent TD for Wicklow
- Douglas Gageby, Former editor of the Irish Times
- Alan Gillis, former president of the Irish Farmers' Association and former Fine Gael MEP. Among one of the very few MEPs to have spent time in prison, as a result of his involvement in the farmers' rights struggle of 1966.
- Henry Grattan, defender of Irish parliamentary independence
- Alice Stopford Green, historian
- Arthur Guinness, (Brewer)
- Bono (real name Paul Hewson), lead singer of Irish Rock Band U2
- TC Hammond, evangelist, later Principal Moore Theological College, Sydney
- Rainsford Hendy, Fine Gael county councillor
- Mary Henry, Senator for the University of Dublin
- Alison Hewson, Bono's Wife
- Maurice Hewson, former judge and former District Commissioner and member of the Colonial Administration of the Gold Coast, West Africa . Distant relative of Bono and son of Gilbert Hewson, the Independent TD who represented Limerick in the 5th Dail.
- Rev Stephen Hilliard, Irish Times journalist and alleged IRA member, killed by intruder in Rathdrum rectory
- Douglas Hyde, first President of Ireland
- Lady Valerie Goulding, Fianna Fáil Senator and founder of the Dublin Remedial Clinic, which provided physiotherapy for children who had been disabled by polio. Converted to Catholicism in 1962
- Jennifer Johnston, Award-Winning Novelist
- Sean Lester, Director of Publicity at the Department of External Affairs (1924), Diplomat at the League of Nations, serving as its last secretary-general
- C.S. Lewis Belfast-born scholar and author of The Chronicles of Narnia
- Proinsias Mac Aonghusa, former vice-chairman of the Irish Labour Party. Broadcaster for Radio Eireann (1952), and for RTE, UTV and the BBC (1960s). Chairman of Bord na Gaeilge and was president of Conradh naGaeilge between 1989 and 1994
- Louis MacNeice, Poet
- Catherine McGuinness, a former independent senator who came to the Bar in middle age. Served as a judge of the Circuit Court (1994) and High Court (1996) before being appointed to the Supreme Court in 2000. Dublin & Glendalough Diocesan Chancellor of the Church of Ireland
- Sam Maguire Irish Republican and Gaelic Footballer
- Martin Mansergh, Fianna Fáil Senator
- Van Morrison, Belfast born singer
- James Molyneaux leader of the Ulster Unionist Party (1979-95) and now sits in the House of Lords as Baron Molyneaux of Killead.
- Joe Neville, Fianna Fáil county councillor and Peace Commissioner
- David Norris, Senator and gay rights campaigner
- Graham Norton, comedian
- Ivan Yates, Owner of Celtic Bookmakers and former Fine Gael cabinet member
- Sean O'Casey, playwright
- Terence O'Neill (Prime Minister of Northern Ireland)
- Jan O'Sullivan, Irish Labour Party TD and daughter of the late Ted Gale, (the well-known Limerick Leader journalist, and former treasurer of the National Union of Journalists)
- Charles Stewart Parnell, Irish nationalist leader
- Howard Robinson, a successful businessman and banker, he created the City of Dublin Bank (commonly known today as the Anglo-Irish Bank), Father-in-law to Mary Robinson, former President of Ireland
- Trevor Sargent, leader of the Irish Green Party
- William Sheldon, had the distinction of being the Independent TD on whom Eamon de Valera depended for an overall majority during the minority Fianna Fáil government of 1951-1954.
- Richard Brinsley Sheridan, playwright
- Bram Stoker, creator of Dracula
- Jonathan Swift, writer (who served as Dean of Saint Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin)
- Julie Parsons, novelist and former RTE producer. Married to John Caden, a lifetime producer of the Gay Byrne radio show.
- George Plant, Tipperary IRA man who was given a state execution in controversial circumstances, in 1942
- Theobald Wolfe Tone, eighteenth century revolutionary
- Canon George Townsend, Church of Ireland clergyman who became the first Irish convert to the Bahá'í Faith in 1917
- Hilda Tweedy, founding member of the Irish Housewives' Association, an influential pressure group that spoke out about injustices and the needs of Irish women, inside and outside the home. Held high office in the IHA and the CSW (now the Women's National Council of Ireland). In 1975, International Women's Year, she led the Irish delegation to the UN meeting in Mexico and was a board member of the International Alliance of Women.
- Thekla Beere, first woman secretary of the newly established Department of Transport and Power (1959) and chairwoman of the new Commission on the Status of Women (1979)
- James Ussher, scholar, Archbishop of Armagh
- Oscar Wilde, writer, but converted to Roman Catholicism on his deathbed.
- William Butler Yeats, poet and Nobel Prize laureate
See also
External links
Anglican churches | Religion in Ireland | Religion in Northern Ireland
Church of Ireland (anglikanisch) | Eaglais na hÉireann | Church of Ireland | アイルランド聖公会 | 愛爾蘭聖公會