A team leader on the editorial staff of the Catholic Times, in the  Desk Column, writes of  her trip to Ireland. Beginning with a brief  history of the country, she then tells us that thanks to the  Columban missionary priests, who have  worked in Korea for many years,  she felt very much at home in Ireland.  It was like visiting  an old  friend.
She  recounts the work of the monks in the monasteries as they painstakingly  copied manuscripts. Ireland was a leader in producing works of the mind  during those early  centuries of Christianity. But dark times were soon  to follow. In the 12th century, the  invasion of the Normans brought difficult changes to the country, and in  the 17th  century the  English made Ireland a colony, plundering and oppressing the common  people.   With the English Reformation, there was a long period of religious wars  and persecution. And 160 years ago, over a million died of starvation,  and  over a million left for other countries.
At the time  of Henry the VIII and Queen Elizabeth, the Church suffered much.   There were few bishops, and the courageous clergy enabled the Church to  put down roots during these difficult times.  Following this, we had the Easter  Uprising and the civil war.  Catholic Ireland and the  citizens left  their individual piety and became conscious of their own common  identity.  
Nowadays, the  strength of the once powerful  Irish Church, once called the Irish Tiger, has been severely weakened by the sudden economic growth  of the country and the  secularization of the culture. The clerical sexual  scandals have also  diminished the authority of the clergy and the  Church. And few young people are seen in Church, the press estimating that only  about 5 percent are attending Mass, and in certain areas it is as low as 2  percent.
A  high-ranking  cleric in the Church of Dublin  said he can't refrain from being concerned about the  effects of  the culture and  economics on  the country, which have brought about the  secularization,  alienating  many of the young  from Catholicism.  But others see the  problem as the failure of Catholics to examine what it means to be a  true Christan.
Next year Ireland will host the 50th  Eucharistic  Congress; its theme will be: "The Eucharist: Communion with Christ and  With  One Another." It will be a time to hope for the renewal of Catholicism  in the country, the catalyst necessary for a new journey, with a new  atmosphere, that  will challenge everyone to a new faith life. 
  
The columnist compares Korea with Ireland, which has had a Catholic history of over 1000 years.  Ireland has dramatically shown what can happen in the encounter with  secularization.  She can't help but wonder how the Korean Church  will fare in handling this same encounter as it intensifies in our own secularizing society. She hopes that what happened in  Ireland will be a teaching example of what not to do.                                        
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