01 May 2014, The Tablet

Liverpool's McMahon calls for a missionary Church to 'wake up'



The new Archbishop of Liverpool has urged his diocese to break with old structures and become a Church that is focused on evangelisation and serving the poor.

In his installation homily this afternoon Archbishop Malcolm McMahon told his congregation to be ready to “break with convention, and do things differently”.

He said: “Taking risks to proclaim the good news of salvation is the task before us as much in the Archdiocese of Liverpool as elsewhere. Breaking with structures and conventions that give us comfort, that feed our complacency and dull our sensitivity to the demands of being a Christian, is what it means to be a missionary disciple.”

He told the congregation to "wake up" when telling them that every lay Catholic must play a part in the Church's mission.

The archbishop was installed today at Liverpool’s Metropolitan Cathedral on the Feast of St Joseph the Worker, a day when the Church highlights its ministry to workers.

Taking St Joseph as a theme, the archbishop said that the Church and society must be “mindful of the obligations of social justice” and that Catholics should find “fulfilment in our God-given gifts of creativity and service, not giving in to pastimes and leisure activities, chasing the false gods of materialism and self-satisfaction.”

The cathedral was packed with civic dignitaries along with leaders of other Christian churches.

In an interview following news of his appointment, the archbishop told The Tablet that the Church’s social mission would be one of his priorities in Liverpool.

The Archdiocese of Liverpool is grappling with a general decline in population, a changing demographic among Catholics and an ageing clergy.

This week a retreat centre run by the Jesuits – Loyola Hall, at Rainhill – closed its doors after more than 90 years.

According to its most recent annual report, for the year ended 2012, the archdiocese is served by 156 priests but by next year only 100 will be under the age of 75 with average weekly Mass attendance standing at 54,000.

Under former Archbishop Patrick Kelly the diocese started a restructuring and renewal programme called “Leaving Safe Harbours”. This has led to the creation of 23 pastoral areas with the expectation of one priest for every 5,000 parishioners. The programme has also led to priests working more closely together. The archdiocese is currently pioneering a new catechesis programme where parents are formed to prepare their children for the sacraments. Fr Philip Inch, who has responsibility for evangelisation in the diocese, said it had led to an increase in Catholics practising their faith.

Archbishop McMahon praised the Leaving Safe Harbours programme in his homily and called for all Catholics to be involved in the spreading of the Gospel.

Above: Archbishop McMahon. Photo: Christopher Lamb


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