Popularity of pilgrimages endure despite drop in Mass attendance

Over 300,000 to attend June novenas which have become a major religious event

Some 300,000 people are expected to attend four Redemptorist novenas; at Mount St Alphonsus church in Limerick, at Esker monastery in Athenry, Co Galway, at St Michael’s church in Ballinasloe, and at the Clonard monastery in Belfast. Stock photograph: Christian Hartmann/Reuters
Some 300,000 people are expected to attend four Redemptorist novenas; at Mount St Alphonsus church in Limerick, at Esker monastery in Athenry, Co Galway, at St Michael’s church in Ballinasloe, and at the Clonard monastery in Belfast. Stock photograph: Christian Hartmann/Reuters

A remarkable feature of religious practice in Catholic Ireland today is that, while weekly Mass attendance is dropping, pilgrimages to Knock, Lough Derg, and Croagh Patrick are as popular as ever. So too with smaller summer 'patterns', celebrating local patron saints.

Knock is one of the most visited places in Ireland, attracting upwards of a million pilgrims a year, while between 25,000 and 30,000 people climb Croagh Patrick on the last Sunday of July annually.

More arduous, but still attracting between 18,000 and 20,000 pilgrims annually, is the retreat at Lough Derg, in Donegal.

Into this mix must be added the remarkably successful annual Redemptorist novenas, usually responsible for traffic jams in towns and cities over the ninedays during which they take place.

READ SOME MORE

This month alone as many as 300,000 people are expected to attend four such novenas; at Mount St Alphonsus church in Limerick, at Esker monastery in Athenry, Co Galway, at St Michael's church in Ballinasloe, and at the Clonard monastery in Belfast.

Each will involve a presence of the icon of Our Lady of Perpetual Help. Redemptorists in Ireland have been celebrating the 150th anniversary of veneration to the icon.

In 1865 Blessed Pope Pius IX presented it to the Redemptorists for veneration at their Church of Sant'Alfonso in Rome and gave them a mandate to promote devotion to Our Lady of Perpetual Help. It was April 1866 before the icon was installed at Sant ' Alfonso.

It has been to Ireland’s 26 Catholic cathedrals since April and will now be at all four June Redemptorist novenas.

The first such novenas begins today at Esker monastery and in Ballinalsoe, continuing until June 15th. It begins at Clonard monastery in Belfast on June 15th and at Mount St Alphonsus in Limerick on June 17th.

Fr Seamus Enright, rector of Mount St Alphonsus, commented that the June novenas "have become a major religious event in themselves. We are all aware of the thousands of Irish people who walk the Camino each year – and perhaps not so much about the 300,000 people who attend our four novenas each June."

Patsy McGarry

Patsy McGarry

Patsy McGarry is a contributor to The Irish Times