Church must adapt to changing times: Archbishop Coleridge

14 Apr 2022

By Contributor

ACBC President Mark Coleridge has said the task of the Church is to ask how to adapt to a changing environment in which a more counter-cultural Church cannot claim the privileges it once took for granted. Photo: Archdiocese of Brisbane.

By The Southern Cross

As the number of sporting events and other activities on Good Friday increases, Australian Catholic Bishops Conference, President and Brisbane Archbishop Mark Coleridge has said the Church needs to celebrate Easter in a way that “attracts people and speaks to their heart”.

Archbishop Coleridge said for some years the “erosion of Good Friday has been evident as the religious character of the day fades and it becomes part of the Easter holiday break”.

“This is largely because the social location of Christianity has been changing, with the Church no longer the dominant presence it was,” he said.

“This may not be a good thing but it is a fact and, as late American psychologist Carl Rogers once said, the facts are always friendly, though not always in the way we would want.”

A Stations of the Cross service at St Mary’s Cathedral in 2016. Australian Catholic Bishops Conference President Archbishop Mark Coleridge said for some years the “erosion of Good Friday has been evident as the religious character of the day fades and it becomes part of the Easter holiday break”. Photo: Ron Tan.

This year there will be two AFL football matches played on Good Friday in Melbourne, two rugby league matches scheduled for Sydney, horse racing in Victoria and Western Australia and five South Australian National Football League games in Adelaide.

In many cities across Australia, pubs are bars are now also able to open.

Archbishop Coleridge said the task of the Church was “not to lament the change or resist the tide but to ask how to adapt to a changing environment in which a more counter-cultural Church cannot claim the privileges it once took for granted”.

“There are now many more religious voices in the culture, plus the ‘nones’ who are the fastest-growing group,” he said.

“It is also worth keeping in mind that in many Catholic countries, including Italy, Good Friday is a working day.

Former St Mary’s Cathedral Dean, Mgr Michael Keating carries the cross during the Good Friday Passion of the Cross Service in 2016. ACBC President Archbishop Mark Coleridge has said the Church needs to celebrate Easter in a way that “attracts people and speaks to their heart”. Photo: Ron Tan.

“This was one of the things that surprised me when I went to Rome to study.”

His comments come as latest research by National Church Life Survey (NCLS) reveals that three in ten Australians do not believe in the resurrection of Jesus.

The Australian Community Survey found that 44 per cent of Australians believed in the resurrection in some way but more than a quarter did not know what they believed about it.

Based on the survey results, NCLS Research said only half of all Australians believe Jesus of Nazareth to be a historical figure.

This was in contrast to wide acceptance amongst historians and academics that Jesus Christ was a real person who lived in first century Palestine.

Of those surveyed, 56 per cent revealed they are familiar with the Christian faith. Of this cohort, more than 20 per cent claimed to have a strong understanding of Christianity’s teachings and values.

In an earlier survey, NCLS found that the majority of Australians believe there is a connection between spirituality and wellbeing, and that using spiritual practices during tough times is important.

Nearly seven in ten Australians thought spiritual practices were important during the COVID crisis and the devastating bushfires, according to the survey.

The scene of the Crucifixation of Christ in Israel. Latest research by National Church Life Survey (NCLS) reveals that three in ten Australians do not believe in the resurrection of Jesus. Photo: Jamie O’Brien

The three most appealing spiritual practices from a suggested list of options were spending time in nature or outdoors; listening to uplifting music; and expressions of prayer, meditation or mindfulness.

The survey compares the attitudes of church attenders and the wider community on a range of social issues, tracks religiosity, and evaluates how the Australian community views churches in society.