
audiobook
A heartfelt missive opens this work, written by a former parish priest who spent more than seven years serving the Roman‑Catholic communities of the Elphin diocese. He recounts his preaching, baptisms, and the warmth of his parishioners, even noting the modest gift they presented him upon his departure. Now, after a stint on the London press, he asks whether he may return to the people who once called him “the fair‑haired priest.”
In the letter he lays bare the beginnings of his spiritual crisis, tracing it to early doubts about long‑held doctrines. He invokes the legacy of St. Patrick, pointing out the saint’s own modest origins and the absence of later Catholic devotions in his writings. By juxtaposing ancient sources with papal mandates, he challenges the assumptions that have shaped Irish Catholic identity for centuries.
The narrative is both personal and scholarly, offering listeners a glimpse into a man wrestling with conscience, history, and faith. Its plain‑spoken style invites reflection on how tradition and individual belief can clash, making it a compelling listen for anyone interested in religious history or the inner life of a clergyman.
Language
en
Duration
~18 minutes (17K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2021-10-04
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
b. 1854
An Irish Catholic priest and polemical writer, he is best known for Old Paths, a late-19th-century work published in Dublin. His surviving record is sparse, which only adds to the sense of a once-active religious voice now mostly preserved through his books.
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