https://www.ucobserver.org/interviews/2018/05/leaving_catholic_church/
After a lifetime devoted to Catholicism, a Nova Scotia teacheris settling in with the United Church of Canada. Here, she explains why.
By Angela Mombourquette
INTERVIEWS
May 2018
At 62 years old, Maryanne McNeil decided that it was finally time
she left the Roman Catholic Church. The Bridgetown, N.S., h
igh school teacher penned an editorial about her
longtime disillusionment with the Church in
Halifax’s Chronicle Herald. “
Appalled by what Catholic Church has become,
I am walking away,” was published on April 7, 2018,
and prompted a “tremendous reaction” from readers.
The Observer spoke with McNeil about hope,
Pope Francis, and what finally pushed her to leave.
Q: Tell us a little about yourself as a Roman Catholic.
Where would you place yourself on a “devoutness scale?”
A: I would probably put myself at an eight out of 10,
because I attended mass every single Sunday.
Sacraments always meant a lot to me; i
t was very important that my children
be baptized and confirmed in the Church.
I taught Sunday school; I was a lector; for a while, I was a
Eucharistic minister.
Q: In your editorial, you write about leaving the church.
What brought you to that decision?
A: When the sexual abuse scandal started breaking in Canada, with
Mount Cashel and then all the other incidences,
I began to have very serious doubts about whether a good person —
I won’t even say “a Christian” — but whether a person
who was really trying to be a good person should support this organization.
It wasn’t as much the fact that the abuse happened,
as the fact there was a cover-up.
The abuse was heartbreaking, but the cover-up was soul-breaking.
It just really made me doubt that there was a
desire for goodness at the heart of the management of the church.
It seemed so far removed from the teachings of Christ.
Q: You also wrote that the election of Pope Francis awakened hope for you.
Why is that?
A: Because he dared to make some controversial statements.
He would delve into crowds, and seek out the weak and vulnerable.
He just had a demeanor of humility that was the most
refreshing thing to witness. He appeared to be a priest of Christ,
and not just of the organization that is the church.
I felt that in his core beliefs, there was a commonality with what
I was struggling with.
But I also knew that it would be very difficult for him to bring
about change in the church. The first year or so of his papacy
showed that he was going to have the courage to speak out,
and I took great heart from that.
Maryanne McNeil.
Q: What changed in your eyes?
A: The Catholic Church is a massive corporation with many levels of
management, and it seems to have become very insular.
The more there is to lose, the more structure
there has to be to protect that — and
I think the church has, in those upper levels at the
Vatican, lost sight of what it is supposed to be about.
It’s my impression — I don’t have any solid evidence —
that Pope Francis has muted his more controversial opinions…
I don’t feel that he is currently on a path to making any
substantive change.
And then there was his statement. When Pope Francis said he
“could not” at this time apologize for the [Catholic Church’s
role in Canada’s]
residential schools after our government asked him to
(I believe those were his words — “could not;” not
“would not,”) that was kind of the catalyst for me
to submit my editorial to the Chronicle Herald.
Q: What was the “last straw” that led you to leave the church?
A: I can’t pinpoint one thing in my decision, except that
it was when I stopped feeling anger and only felt sadness.
Q: What does the future hold for you in terms of your own faith?
A: I have recently been going to the United Church, which —
now get this — meets in the Catholic Church building!
It’s a little tricky.
Q: Given the depth of your faith, and the place the
Roman Catholic Church once held in your life, how has
it made you feel to step away?
A: It makes me feel shaky. I feel sad. I feel a sense of loss and regret.
But I want to be clear that there was nothing about my little congregation
that made me step away. It’s the policies and the doctrine of the
Roman Catholic Church at a high level that I had to
walk away from. I’m really sad that I had to leave the local
parish to do that.
This interview has been edited and condensed.
Our church, our equality and the Kin-dom of God were stolen from us by factors unrelated to Christ’s breathing of the Holy Spirit into us. We were robbed of the intended heritage and future promised by Jesus. My hope is that I am working with the Holy Spirit by promoting and fostering equality and a truly caste-less Christianity in any way that I possibly can. I do not want to work against the Holy Spirit by being silent while there remains stifling, unjust, and damaging hierarchies and caste systems in the Body of Christ and in the world. It is time that the Church given to us by the Holy Spirit is taken back by us, the disciples of Jesus Christ.
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