Select Page

Healthcare Chaplain (Part Time)

Healthcare Chaplain – Part Time

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Elphin, contracted to provide a Chaplaincy Service for Sligo University Hospital, wishes to appoint an experienced Healthcare Chaplain (part-time, 16 hours per week) to join the Chaplaincy team at the hospital.

JOB DESCRIPTION

Full job description is available here

APPLICATION PROCEDURE 

Interested persons are asked to forward by email: 

  1. A detailed CV tailored to the position.
  2. The names, addresses and contact details of two referees.
  3. A letter to the assessment panel communicating in less than two hundred words why you think you are suited to this post.

These items should be emailed to office@elphindiocese.ie by 5pm on Tuesday 10th February 2026.

Closing date for applications: 5pm on Tuesday 10th February 2026

Job Offer Property Manager

Property Manager – Job Advert

PROPERTY MANAGER – DIOCESES OF ACHONRY AND ELPHIN

The Roman Catholic Dioceses of Achonry and Elphin wish to appoint an experienced Property Manager (part-time) to manage the legal, administrative and maintenance processes relating to the properties owned by the respective Trusts of the two dioceses. 

In addition to an understanding of, and empathy with, the pastoral mission of the dioceses, the successful candidate’s skills will include:

  • Capacity to assess, balance and respond effectively to the concerns of multiple stakeholders
  • Ability to work as part of a team and on own initiative
  • Discretion and an appropriate commitment to confidentiality
  • Proven experience in administrative processes
  • Excellent organisational skills

Professional background could be from any sector; public, private/corporate, not for profit, charity, etc.

This is a part-time role (approximately 20 hours per week, flexible hours)

Download Job Description PROPERTY MANAGER JOB DESCRIPTION

APPLICATION PROCEDURE 

Interested persons are asked to forward by email: 

  1. A detailed CV tailored to the position.
  2. The names, addresses and contact details of two referees.
  3. A letter to the assessment panel communicating in less than two hundred words why you think you are suited to this post.

These items should be emailed to office@achonryelphin.ie by 5pm on Friday 23rd January 2026. Interviews are expected to take place during the week beginning 9th February 2026.

Closing date for applications: 5pm on Friday 23rd January 2026

Book Launch

BOOK LAUNCH

Photos by Michael McCormack

Editor of this publication, Fr Eugene Duffy, offers an overview of the issue at the centre of this collection of essays – the restructuring of Irish Dioceses.


Featured in Irish Times Monday September 26th, 2022

______________________________________________________

The Second Vatican Council expressly requested that “a prudent revision of diocesan boundaries be undertaken as soon as possible”. It went on to say: “This can be done by dividing, distributing or uniting dioceses, changing their boundaries or appointing a more suitable place for the episcopal See, or finally, and especially in those dioceses which comprise large cities, by establishing a new internal organisation.”

Such reorganisation of dioceses has happened in other parts of the world where, for example, many smaller dioceses have been merged, large dioceses have been divided or new dioceses have been established. The question of diocesan mergers is only beginning to surface in Ireland.

Last February, Pope Francis announced that he was appointing the Bishop of Clonfert to be also the bishop of the neighbouring diocese of Galway, on the retirement of the incumbent. The new arrangement has been described as “the union of the two dioceses in the person of the bishop.”

This, then, is the first time that the mandate of Vatican II has been applied in Ireland. There is a general expectation that this is just the beginning of a process of rationalisation of the Irish diocesan landscape, despite the fact that there has been no public discussion initiated by church leadership regarding how this might best be done.

It is opportune that the Irish bishops who have committed the Church in Ireland to a synodal pathway would include this issue of diocesan restructuring as an important item on the agenda. Following the Council, Pope St Paul VI recommended that a wide consultative process be used in determining the reorganisation of dioceses.

A diocese with its bishop is a non-negotiable aspect of ecclesial organisation. It has a primarily pastoral mission. Therefore, it should be of such size that the bishop can know his ministers and his people; have the capacity to give expression to the nature of the church; have the resources of personnel and finances to carry out its mission; and be capable of generating a sense of identity and belonging for its members.

There may be a temptation to look at diocesan reorganisation in terms of managerial efficiencies, which might suggest bigger dioceses with streamlined organisational structures and offices. This could compromise the pastoral nature of the episcopal ministry and any sense of the diocese being a people who share a common life.

Although a diocese does not always have to be defined by a geographical territory, this remains normally the case. Two issues then come into play, population and geographical space. The Irish situation is challenging in both these respects.

There are huge imbalances among the 26 Irish dioceses, territorially and demographically. The population of the Dublin diocese exceeds the combined populations of the 13 smallest dioceses. Several Irish dioceses are very small by international standards, some with populations of fewer than 40,000 people.

The current diocesan boundaries were set down in the 12th century and have remained largely unchanged. Even then, the fixing of boundaries was challenging pastorally, politically and economically.

Now the attachment to these boundaries is more on the part of the clergy than on the part of the lay faithful, but even these clerical loyalties are waning. Furthermore, the Irish diocesan boundaries no longer coincide with any other civil administrative or political units on the island, whereas the 12th century boundaries were also of political significance.

Dioceses should normally generate, or at least be based on, a sense of place and a sense of identity. Thus, they often rely on existing spaces that yield the possibility of forming a sense of belonging. In the current Irish context, the existing county boundaries may offer such a possibility since these are already units for local government and are used by several social and sporting organisations to foster senses of identity, loyalty and belonging.

The Catholic Church in Ireland can learn much from the experiences of the Church of Ireland, which has merged most of the dioceses on the western seaboard, from other dioceses abroad and from many religious orders who have extensive experience of merging their provinces.

The Second Vatican Council showed that merging or dividing dioceses are not the only ways to address restructuring. It allows for other possibilities, for example, the deployment of episcopal vicars to oversee specific regions of a large diocese; and the better use of the metropolitan/provincial structure, whereby various responsibilities might be centred in the provincial offices and then smaller dioceses could attend to their more immediate pastoral demands.

Indeed, a genuine collegial approach by bishops, willing to share resources and facilities across diocesan boundaries, could also address some of the difficulties faced by smaller or less populous dioceses.

Merging neighbouring dioceses as individual bishops retire is not the best solution in the long term. Ultimately, the solution demands inclusion for consideration in the synodal processes currently under way. Indeed, it is unthinkable that an Irish synodal process would not engage with the question of restructuring dioceses when there is such an urgent need to do so.

_____________________________________________

Rev Dr Eugene Duffy is vicar for pastoral renewal and development in Achonry diocese. His book The Restructuring of Irish Dioceses was launched in St Nathy’s College, Ballaghaderreen, on Friday September 30th

THE RESTRUCTURING OF IRISIH DIOCESES

Published by Dominican Publications

Book Launch

BOOK LAUNCH

Photos by Michael McCormack

The Second Vatican Council expressly requested that “a prudent revision of diocesan boundaries be undertaken as soon as possible”. It went on to say: “This can be done by dividing, distributing or uniting dioceses, changing their boundaries or appointing a more suitable place for the episcopal See, or finally, and especially in those dioceses which comprise large cities, by establishing a new internal organisation.”

Such reorganisation of dioceses has happened in other parts of the world where, for example, many smaller dioceses have been merged, large dioceses have been divided or new dioceses have been established. The question of diocesan mergers is only beginning to surface in Ireland.

Last February, Pope Francis announced that he was appointing the Bishop of Clonfert to be also the bishop of the neighbouring diocese of Galway, on the retirement of the incumbent. The new arrangement has been described as “the union of the two dioceses in the person of the bishop.”

This, then, is the first time that the mandate of Vatican II has been applied in Ireland. There is a general expectation that this is just the beginning of a process of rationalisation of the Irish diocesan landscape, despite the fact that there has been no public discussion initiated by church leadership regarding how this might best be done.

It is opportune that the Irish bishops who have committed the Church in Ireland to a synodal pathway would include this issue of diocesan restructuring as an important item on the agenda. Following the Council, Pope St Paul VI recommended that a wide consultative process be used in determining the reorganisation of dioceses.

A diocese with its bishop is a non-negotiable aspect of ecclesial organisation. It has a primarily pastoral mission. Therefore, it should be of such size that the bishop can know his ministers and his people; have the capacity to give expression to the nature of the church; have the resources of personnel and finances to carry out its mission; and be capable of generating a sense of identity and belonging for its members.

There may be a temptation to look at diocesan reorganisation in terms of managerial efficiencies, which might suggest bigger dioceses with streamlined organisational structures and offices. This could compromise the pastoral nature of the episcopal ministry and any sense of the diocese being a people who share a common life.

Although a diocese does not always have to be defined by a geographical territory, this remains normally the case. Two issues then come into play, population and geographical space. The Irish situation is challenging in both these respects.

There are huge imbalances among the 26 Irish dioceses, territorially and demographically. The population of the Dublin diocese exceeds the combined populations of the 13 smallest dioceses. Several Irish dioceses are very small by international standards, some with populations of fewer than 40,000 people.

The current diocesan boundaries were set down in the 12th century and have remained largely unchanged. Even then, the fixing of boundaries was challenging pastorally, politically and economically.

Now the attachment to these boundaries is more on the part of the clergy than on the part of the lay faithful, but even these clerical loyalties are waning. Furthermore, the Irish diocesan boundaries no longer coincide with any other civil administrative or political units on the island, whereas the 12th century boundaries were also of political significance.

Dioceses should normally generate, or at least be based on, a sense of place and a sense of identity. Thus, they often rely on existing spaces that yield the possibility of forming a sense of belonging. In the current Irish context, the existing county boundaries may offer such a possibility since these are already units for local government and are used by several social and sporting organisations to foster senses of identity, loyalty and belonging.

The Catholic Church in Ireland can learn much from the experiences of the Church of Ireland, which has merged most of the dioceses on the western seaboard, from other dioceses abroad and from many religious orders who have extensive experience of merging their provinces.

The Second Vatican Council showed that merging or dividing dioceses are not the only ways to address restructuring. It allows for other possibilities, for example, the deployment of episcopal vicars to oversee specific regions of a large diocese; and the better use of the metropolitan/provincial structure, whereby various responsibilities might be centred in the provincial offices and then smaller dioceses could attend to their more immediate pastoral demands.

Indeed, a genuine collegial approach by bishops, willing to share resources and facilities across diocesan boundaries, could also address some of the difficulties faced by smaller or less populous dioceses.

Merging neighbouring dioceses as individual bishops retire is not the best solution in the long term. Ultimately, the solution demands inclusion for consideration in the synodal processes currently under way. Indeed, it is unthinkable that an Irish synodal process would not engage with the question of restructuring dioceses when there is such an urgent need to do so.

_____________________________________________

Rev Dr Eugene Duffy is vicar for pastoral renewal and development in Achonry diocese. His book The Restructuring of Irish Dioceses was launched in St Nathy’s College, Ballaghaderreen, on Friday September 30th

THE RESTRUCTURING OF IRISIH DIOCESES

Published by Dominican Publications

Listening

LISTENING

Dear friends,

As part of our engagement with the Synodal Pathway, initiated by Pope Francis, I am holding a number of facilitated listening events in four venues across the diocese over the next few weeks. These meetings will be an opportunity for all of us together to reflect on our Church, to look at what is helping us to grow as communities of faith and to see where we can better support one another in our faith journey. Many parishioners have already returned their responses to the questionnaire I sent out last month, and I am grateful for those, which have surfaced many issues on which we will all need to reflect. The forthcoming meetings provide a further opportunity for us to hear one another in an even more open way. The meetings are open to all who wish to share their views on the Church, and I would welcome especially those who may feel alienated or who have felt let down by the Church in the past. It is by listening to one another and being in conversation that we can best discover where God is leading us at this time. Feel free to come to the venue which is most convenient for you.

The arrangements for our meetings:

Fr Peyton Cluster:  Tuesday, April 26th Attymass – the Father Peyton Centre at 8.00 pm

St Attracta’s Cluster: Wednesday, April 27th, Tubbercurry – An Chroi South Sligo Enterprise Centre (adjacent to Basta premises) at 8.00

St Joseph’s  Cluster:  Tuesday, May 3rd, Swinford, the Gateway Hotel, at 8.00 pm

Tubbercurry Cluster: Wednesday, May 4th, Ballisodare, the Parish Hall at 8.00 pm

With kind regards,

+Paul.