About
Shop
Contact Us

Person-centred education was Bishop Flynn’s passion

By Sarah Mac Donald - 07 June, 2015

Funeral of Bishop Thomas FLynnFamily, friends, bishops and priests attending the funeral Mass of Bishop Thomas Flynn on Saturday heard his successor pay tribute to his commitment to catholic education and adult faith development.

In his homily at the Cathedral of the Annunciation and Saint Nathy in Ballaghaderreen, Co Roscommon, Bishop Brendan Kelly told the congregation that “Person-centred education, the hallmark always of the Catholic system, was a passion for Bishop Tom. On this he was very clear.”

The Mass was attended by Bishop Flynn’s nieces and nephews and their families, as well as Cardinal Seán Brady, Commandant Kieran Carey, ADC to An Taoiseach Enda Kenny and other public representatives, bishops, priests and priest classmates his – Fr Michael Goaley, Fr Newell and Fr Laten.

“Bishop Tom was a much loved man of this parish, and a Roscommon man”, Bishop Kelly acknowledged. Apart from the first six years of his priesthood in Tubbercurry, he spent his entire life in his native Ballaghaderreen parish.

“From the beginning he was a teacher, and a very good one by all accounts. The word most often used by people was kind. Quiet in disposition, and very discreet, a man of few words.”

As president of Saint Nathy’s, Bishop Kelly said his predecessor was a reformer and moderniser, a process advanced in firm co-operation with Fr Andy Johnston, who succeeded him as president and who passed away on the very same day as Bishop Flynn (last Tuesday).

“At a time when school amalgamations were seen as the way to go, for wider curriculum and choice purposes, Bishop Tom and Fr Andy insisted that the voluntary and Catholic status of the united Saint Nathy’s here in Ballaghaderreen was the way forward,” said Bishop Kelly.

He added, “Person-centred education, the hallmark always of the Catholic system, was a passion for Bishop Tom. On this he was very clear.”

He recalled that nationally, Bishop Flynn was at the helm for many years in educational matters as chairman of the Bishops’ Council for Education, including at the time of the negotiations around what became the Education Act of 1998.

“Visiting the schools in the diocese and staying in touch with the young was a priority for him, something he instilled by example in the priests of the diocese too,” he said.

CG1Plg8W0AAhUcZBishop Flynn was also a member for many years also of the Bishops’ Council for the Laity.

“Leading the diocese in the immediate aftermath of the Second Vatican Council, he worked determinedly in the area of adult faith development too.”

He established the pastoral centre at Charlestown, and also the centre at Banada; he encouraged the development of the Father Peyton Centre at Attymass and was particularly involved in his latter years with the Sisters of Mercy in the development of the Hope House Centre for addiction treatment in Foxford.

Bishop Kelly also noted that it was thanks to Bishop Flynn that the “finest history” of the diocese of Achonry was produced in Fr Liam Swords’ four volumes.

“A deeply spiritual and wise pastor, Bishop Tom instinctively understood that there can be no healthy growth or nourishment in the present if we do not know or are attentive to our roots … and this rings true whether as a people or as a Church.”

Bishop Flynn was born on 8 July 1931 and baptised in the Cathedral of the Annunciation and Saint Nathy in Ballaghaderreen four days later on 12 July 1931.

Ordained a priest of the diocese on 17 June 1956, he was ordained a bishop twenty-one years later on 20 February 1977, at the age of forty-six.

Though he retired officially on 20 November 2007, he continued to administer the diocese until Bishop Brendan Kelly was ordained on 27 January 2008.

He was “chief shepherd” of his diocese for thirty years and eleven months.

Follow us on Twitter @CINetNews

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,