As a student, Philbin was the editor of Leabhar Nuidheacht, published at Maynooth, and later, as professor, he was the joint editor of the Irish Theological Quarterly.
Bishop of Clonfert
On 22 December 1953, Pope Pius XII appointed him 50th Bishop of Clonfert. He was consecrated Bishop in St Brendan's Cathedral, Loughrea, in March 1954. At the time he was seen as a daring, young, theologically engaged bishop and was invited to address many organisations and published several important lectures.[3] In 1962 he wrote how economic growth, so vital to his poor Western diocese, would be stimulated by Ireland joining the EEC.[4]
He attended all four sessions of the Second Vatican Council, both as Bishop of Clonfert and later still as Bishop of Down and Connor.
Bishop Philbin was often on the media and spoke forcefully to the BBC when one his priests, Fr. Hugh Mullan, was shot dead as part of the Ballymurphy massacre in August 1971.[5]
During his tenure he had a long-running dispute with Mullan's friend Fr. Des Wilson. Wilson reported that when he resigned his parish duties in protest against church policies he deemed inadequate or indifferent to needs of his working-class and republican community, Philbin accused Wilson of threatening to destroy the Church, denied him the pension to which he believed he was entitled, and never spoke to him again.[6][7] When the dispute became public, Sinn Féin, characterised Philbin as being "completely in line" with the anti-republican War-of-Independence hierarchy, while praising Wilson for speaking out on "armed struggle, divorce, the papacy and education".[8]
As a priest Wilson was not alone in his criticism. Fr Denis Faul concluded that in failing to "understand the suffering of his own people", Philbin conceded leadership by default to the Provisionals by default (described by the bishop as being "of the devil").[9] Fr Pat Buckley suggested that if the bishop had "led two hundred thousand people up the Falls Road demanding civil rights, the Provos might not have been necessary".[10]
Despite the civil conflict, often presented as a war between Christians, Philbin was rigidly opposed to Catholic support for any form of integrated education and there was a long-running row with parents in his diocese over provision of the sacrament of Confirmation to children who did not attend Catholic schools.[11][12]
It was believed that Philbin acted without broader Vatican support for his position, or even the support of his brother bishops in the rest of Ireland.[13][14]
^Berman, David; Lalor, Stephen; Torode, Brian (1983). "The Theology of the IRA". Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review. 72 (286): (137–144), 138. ISSN0039-3495.
^Gallagher, Eric; Worrall, Stanley (1982). Christian in Ulster 1968-1980. Oxford University Press. p. 95. ISBN0192132377.
^Dillon, Martin (1997). God and the Gun: The Church and Irish Terrorism. London: Orion. pp. 93–94, 115. ISBN9780752810379.