Warning on church finances

ECONOMIC CHALLENGES facing Dublin's Catholic archdiocese were "quite dramatic" due to the current turmoil in finances worldwide…

ECONOMIC CHALLENGES facing Dublin's Catholic archdiocese were "quite dramatic" due to the current turmoil in finances worldwide and the crash of Ireland's property market, Archbishop Diarmuid Martin has said.

Expressing a hope that there would not have to be cutbacks in services provided by the church, he said "disposable income is limited, and we have no idea where the money is coming from for church activities".

He said "services to the poor cost more, as do food shelters, but when we need to provide them the money must be found to do so".

The archdiocese was "facing the same challenges as everyone else".

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Archbishop Martin was speaking at a press conference in Maynooth yesterday as the Irish Episcopal Conference continued its three-day winter meeting, which ends today.

He was accompanied at the press conference by the newly ordained Bishop of Down and Connor, Most Rev Noel Traenor.

The archbishop said less than 5 per cent of the Dublin archdiocese's income came from investments, but "indications are this will be non-existent next year".

Church collections were responsible for 70 per cent of the annual income in Dublin, while the remainder in recent years had been from the sale of assets, mainly property. "This has probably dried up completely."

It had "produced money for various uses, and not just for compensation ". This resource was "also used for projects in parishes".

"We will now have to put a clear stop to a number of important projects. But we still need new churches and older ones need maintenance. The Pro-Cathedral needs serious investment."

Yet advice from the archdiocese's financial advisers was "pretty dramatic where the future is concerned and the unknowns there".

Responding to a question on the upheaval in finance worldwide, Bishop Traenor said "certainly there has been much irresponsibility, which points to a need for the reform of financial institutions and their modus operandi".

Patsy McGarry

Patsy McGarry

Patsy McGarry is a contributor to The Irish Times