Interview with
British journalist, author and broadcaster,
Clifford Longley, who is one of the
UK's leading lay
Catholics. He was invited to
Australia by the progressive
Catholic organization,
Catalyst for
Renewal, and he delivered a series of lectures in May this year on the legacy of
Vatican II.
In the interview he focuses on the issues and challenges in developing a mature
Catholic laity in the light of the teachings of the
Council, and the video also features excerpts from the inaugural
Rosemary Goldie Lecture he gave on this topic.
It's fitting that his talk was delivered in this context, as Rosemary Goldie was one of
Australia's leading lay Catholics. She was a theologian and lay activist, and one of the first women to be named an official observer of Vatican II. She died in
Sydney in
2010 at the age of 94.
After the Council for several years she was Under-Secretary of the
Pontifical Council for the Laity, one of the first women and lay people to serve as a bureaucrat in the Curia. In this capacity, in the
1960s and '70s she helped organize a number of major international lay congresses in
Rome.
After this she was appointed a
Professor of
Pastoral Theology at the
Lateran University in Rome. While large in intellect and influence, she was tiny in physical stature, and
Pope John XXIII referred to her affectionately as 'la piccinina' which translates from the
Italian as something like 'a little slip of a thing
.'
Clifford Longley was born in the UK in
1940, and has had a distinguished career mainly as a print journalist. He worked as a general reporter on a number of newspapers before specialising from
1972 onwards in the coverage of British and international religious affairs.
He wrote a weekly column on religion for
The Times from 1972 till
1992, and from 1992 to
2000 for the
Daily Telegraph. This made him the longest continuously appearing columnist in
British national papers, and in
1986 he was honoured with an award for '
Specialist Writer of the Year' in the
British Press Awards.
During this time, as well as his work as a columnist, he was leader writer and religious affairs editor for these newspapers. Since
1994 he has been a columnist, contributing editor and leader writer for the prestigious weekly Catholic journal,
The Tablet.
In more recent times he has also made regular appearances on radio. Since
2002 he's been a contributor to
Thought for the Day, and since 2004 he's been a panelist on
The Moral Maze, both on
BBC Radio 4.
Longley has also been a consultant to the
Catholic Bishops' Conference of
England and Wales, and has been on the advisory council of the
Three Faiths Forum. In
1998 he was made an honorary fellow of
St Mary's College at the
University of Surrey.
As well as his writing for newspapers and journals, his books include 'The Times
Book of Clifford Longley', 'The
Worlock Archive' and '
Chosen People'.
- published: 15 Jun 2012
- views: 824