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Imagine no priests to celebrate Mass
Cincinnati Enquirer ^ | May 02, 2004 | Dan Horn and Denise Smith Amos

Posted on 05/02/2004 5:31:38 PM PDT by Investment Biker

For decades, as the number of priests dwindled, Catholics worried about the future of their church.

That future is now.

In Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky, parishes that served generations are closing or merging with others. Catholic school kids are being taught by lay teachers. "Sunday celebrations" without priests are replacing traditional mass. And that's just a start.

As early as this summer, the pace of change will quicken, potentially affecting more than half a million Catholics - one in every five people in the region. The changes represent the most dramatic shifts in the church in 40 years, requiring priests and lay Catholics to rethink their roles.

"For everybody, it will be difficult," says Catherine Ampfer, a member of St. Catherine of Siena parish in Fort Thomas. "It's sad, and what's going to happen is people are going to have to get out of their comfort zone."

The changes are assured because the church no longer has enough priests to serve every parish or to preside at every wedding, funeral or baptism.

In just 30 years, the number of priests in the Archdiocese of Cincinnati has tumbled from 466 to 291, the lowest in at least a half-century. Only 205 priests are active, and the archdiocese predicts that only 100 will be left at decade's end.

In just a few months, the archdiocese will begin to:

• Move more aggressively to close or consolidate parishes that aren't big enough or rich enough to survive in the tough times ahead. The goal is to place the few remaining priests where they can best serve the most people.

• Reduce the number of daily and Sunday Masses to ease the workload on priests who must travel to two or three parishes to say Mass. Priests would be less available to teach religion classes, visit the sick and counsel parishioners.

• Replace some Masses with "Sunday celebrations" that feature a lay minister rather than an ordained priest. A priest would bless the bread and wine but would not conduct the service.

• Rely more heavily on lay ministers or deacons to preside at weddings, baptisms and other occasions where a priest is not required by church law. Some weddings may be moved to weekdays to accommodate priests' busy schedules, and funeral Masses may be replaced by graveside services that don't require a priest.

Although the changes don't tinker with Catholic doctrine or teachings, they represent the greatest challenge to tradition since the Second Vatican Council revised the rules for Catholic life in the 1960s.

"This is not the ideal, by any means," Cincinnati Archbishop Daniel Pilarczyk says. He knows the changes won't be an easy sell to Catholics, especially after two years of demoralizing clergy sex-abuse scandals.

But he says the church has little choice: Priests are retiring and dying three times faster than they can be replaced. The average age of priests in the archdiocese is 61, and no priest is under age 30.

"This is like the Mom and Pop grocery store," Pilarcyzk says. "If you ran out of milk, you sent your kid over with a quarter. Well, there aren't any of those stores any more, and people learned to get their milk another way.

"You can wish you still had a Mom and Pop store, but that way doesn't work any more."

More parishes than priests

The Rev. James Shappelle, 79, doesn't need the archbishop to tell him times have changed. Although he's the oldest pastor in the archdiocese, he's in charge of two parishes, Mother of Christ and St. Bernard in Winton Place.

He expected to be retired by now instead of shuttling daily between the two churches, which are about a mile apart.

"I'm considerably busier now than when I was 24," he says.

Shappelle keeps going partly out of duty and partly out of fear that the archdiocese will close one of his parishes if he leaves. He sometimes jokes that he might stick around until 2020 - when he'd be 95.

"By then," he told parishioners during a recent Mass, "we'll have 70 priests, and I'll be running every parish in the Mill Creek Valley."

The Rev. Richard Klug, pastor of Annunciation in Clifton, shares Shappelle's concerns. He's 77 and continues to work for one reason: He fears the archdiocese will not assign a new pastor to his church if he steps down.

"I'm certainly concerned about what happens when I retire," Klug says. "We were ordained to serve the people, and I don't want to see them without a priest."

The impact of the priest shortage is increasingly obvious to anyone who attends Mass regularly or has a child in Catholic schools.

The archdiocese's 224 parishes now outnumber its 205 active priests. The problem is less severe in the much smaller Diocese of Covington, but it also has lost priests and closed or merged parishes in recent years.

Throughout the region, churches are closing at faster rates, priests are serving at more than one parish and Catholic schools have few clergy or nuns assigned to them.

"I miss how available priests were in the past," says Chris Hurlburt, a lifelong Catholic who attends St. Thomas More Church in Withamsville. "Now it's like the priest makes a cameo every Sunday at Mass, and that's pretty much all he has time for."

Priests like the Rev. Anthony Brausch, 37, do work that once would have been performed by two or three priests.

Brausch is the acting pastor at Our Lady of Visitation. He teaches five religion classes a day at Elder High School, oversees the administration of the parish and says a 5:30 a.m. Mass on weekdays and three Masses on weekends.

He also hears confessions, baptizes children, anoints the sick and presides at funerals.

He rarely gets a day off.

"I don't mind it," Brausch says. "It's not an odious chore if it's something you like."

The pace, however, could be too much for anyone to maintain.

"It's going to get worse," says Mary Gautier, a senior research associate at the Center for Applied Research on the Apostolate, a Catholic research group. "How far can we stretch these people? A priest can only do so many Masses before he conks out."

Tough years ahead

To find out how much worse things might get, Pilarczyk created the Futures Committee three years ago to study the problem and recommend change.

"We looked at the numbers and said, 'My God, by 2010 we might have 100 priests in this diocese,'" recalls the Rev. Thomas Shearer, who led the committee of 10 priests.

The worst-case scenario projected only 60 priests by 2010.

The national numbers are just as daunting. The priest population is almost unchanged from what it was in 1950 - roughly 44,000. But the Catholic population has climbed from 28.6 million to 66.4 million over the same period.

"These trends are not going to be reversed," says Dean Hoge, a professor at Catholic University of America and author of the book, Evolving Visions of the Priesthood.

Hoge's pessimism is based on the belief that the forces responsible for the priest shortage will continue. They include:

• An American society that increasingly glorifies wealth and sex, a trend that works against recruitment efforts based on vows of poverty and celibacy.

• The transformation of Catholic families from mostly poor and blue collar to some of the wealthiest and best educated in America. With more options, they now are more likely to send their boys to college than to seminary.

• A loss of prestige for a priesthood racked by years of clergy sex-abuse scandals.

Catholics disagree on how to fix the problem. Liberals say the solution is opening the priesthood to women and married men, while conservatives say a return to more orthodox teachings is the answer.

There are limits, however, to how much change can happen without approval from the Vatican. The reforms planned for the archdiocese - fewer churches, fewer Masses, weddings without priests - are practical, structural changes that do not challenge church doctrine or longstanding rules from Rome.

But ending the celibacy rule or allowing women to become priests would require an edict from the Vatican, and that kind of fundamental change is unlikely any time soon.

As the philosophical debates rage, church leaders say they must act now. The Futures Committee sent its ideas to the archbishop last year and will start making changes as early as this summer.

"There will be some things," Shearer says, "that priests will simply not have the time to do."

Change will be wrenching

Leaders of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee reached the same conclusion a few years ago and started making the same changes now under consideration here.

Once, while the church was in the process of closing 40 parishes, protesters carried placards and swarmed church leaders as they walked into a planning meeting.

"There are still some bruised feelings," says Rev. Robert Stiefvater of Milwaukee. "It's a very close connection that people have to the place of their baptism or wedding."

More parishes will close in Cincinnati, too, but that won't be the only source of controversy. Assigning deacons to preside at some weddings or baptisms, and the absence of a formal funeral Mass, would upset many Catholics.

"If a priest is not available, it doesn't sit well with Catholics," Hoge says. "People don't like it. They want a priest."

Unlike other Christian denominations, the Catholic Church is based on a hierarchy in which the priest is the undisputed leader of the parish.

But he's more than just the boss. Only a priest can consecrate the Eucharist - the celebration of the Last Supper - that is shared at every Mass and is considered the center of Catholic existence.

"For Catholics, the Mass is everything," says Sister Christine Schenk of FutureChurch, a Cleveland-based reform group. "It's who we are. It's how we connect with the deep meanings of life."

Some say a drop in Mass attendance since 1960, from about 350,000 to 195,000, suggests Catholics in Greater Cincinnati already feel less connected to their priests and their church.

"The linchpin position in baseball is the pitcher. Here, it's the priest," says Lawrence Young, co-author of the 1985 book Full Pews, Empty Altars, which predicted the priest shortage. "If you don't have a pitcher, you can still throw the ball around.

"But you're not really playing baseball any more."

'It really hurts'

The game has certainly changed in Fayetteville, where parishioners got a preview of the archdiocese's future in July when three churches merged to create St. Angela Merici.

Even before the merger, parishioners struggled to adjust to just two priests assigned to three churches. And after the merger, they were dealt another blow when the new pastor was suspended because of a sexual-abuse allegation.

"It really hurts," says Judy Iles, a lifelong member of St. Patrick Church, one of the three involved in the merger. "We had to give up what we had."

Pilarczyk says the troubles at St. Angela Merici taught church officials some valuable lessons about how to handle the changes to come.

"We have to deal with it as gently as we can," he says.

Iles isn't sure that's possible. But as she talks about what happened at her church, she becomes more hopeful. She says some parishioners who swore they'd never return have, over time, come back.

They may not like the changes, she says. But they would rather adapt to them than abandon their faith altogether.

"I don't know what it is about the Catholic religion," she says. "It's just in you and it always will be."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; US: Indiana; US: Kentucky; US: Ohio
KEYWORDS: priesthood
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205 priests today 100 by the end of the decade, 225 current parishes.
1 posted on 05/02/2004 5:31:39 PM PDT by Investment Biker
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To: Investment Biker
Maybe this diocese has too many parishes. And / or maybe there is something about it that is failing to attract young men in the numbers seen joining some orthodox / traditional orders.
2 posted on 05/02/2004 5:40:23 PM PDT by Stingray51
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To: Investment Biker
Let priests marry, lose the incense and candles, kick out the queers. People in the millions will return, I'll betchya dollars to donuts. Shoot, I might drop by fer a good sermon myself.
3 posted on 05/02/2004 5:40:24 PM PDT by ColoradoSlim (Shoot first, ask questions later.)
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To: Investment Biker; sinkspur; Coleus
Yep... Got the sermon today that stated the above.

Prayers for more vocations (Conservative Catholics only please! :-)
4 posted on 05/02/2004 5:44:36 PM PDT by Incorrigible (immanentizing the eschaton)
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To: ColoradoSlim
Why would people return if all of those events would happen? That's completly changing the Church and going against thousands of years of tradition. I agree with the later, but other than that, the Catholic church (even though I disagree with some individuals in it), won't become another social club in America (I'm talking about as a whole, not individual parishes) - even if I become the last member in the Church.

Follow Jesus' model in celebacy and guiding sheep.
5 posted on 05/02/2004 5:50:41 PM PDT by PRSOrlando
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To: Investment Biker
Goodbye good men.
6 posted on 05/02/2004 5:54:27 PM PDT by Meldrim
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To: ColoradoSlim
See http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1128460/posts
7 posted on 05/02/2004 5:57:00 PM PDT by Investment Biker
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To: PRSOrlando
Follow Jesus' model in celebacy and guiding sheep.

You mean the same model the apostles followed?  Oh, wait.  They didn't.
8 posted on 05/02/2004 6:02:15 PM PDT by gcruse (http://gcruse.typepad.com/)
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To: ColoradoSlim
Shoot, I might drop by fer a good sermon myself.

How big of ya...

A_R

9 posted on 05/02/2004 6:04:37 PM PDT by arkady_renko
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To: Incorrigible
Heard a similar message in my home town (in NE Ohio), 30 years ago 1 priest for every 2000 people, today 1 priest for every 700, not enough priests for the parishioners, message was "...hope more would want to come into the priesthood".
10 posted on 05/02/2004 6:05:10 PM PDT by Las Vegas Dave ("Let's roll" in 2004 ----- Vote GOP!)
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To: ColoradoSlim
<>

I like the incense and candles.
11 posted on 05/02/2004 6:09:31 PM PDT by StolarStorm
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To: Investment Biker
The Apostles were married and had families. The idea of celibacy should be applied to priests who are not married. Priest should not fornicate. When they do marry, they should practice fidelity. Priests should stay married until "death do they part." By priests doing these things, they would serve as better role models for how we should live our lives as well as being "married" to the Church for all of our lives.

The Catholic Church is finding itself out of step with its true role in the community when it uses a model that may have served well in medieval times, but has no functional purpose in this global high tech age.
12 posted on 05/02/2004 6:10:38 PM PDT by jonrick46 (jonrick46)
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Comment #13 Removed by Moderator

Comment #14 Removed by Moderator

To: Investment Biker
205 priests today 100 by the end of the decade, 225 current parishes.

If the Catholic church would throw out its heretics who claim to be Catholics, there wouldn't be a problem.

Less priests could handle less parishioners. - Tom

15 posted on 05/02/2004 6:17:44 PM PDT by Capt. Tom (Don't confuse the Bushies with the dumb republicans. - Capt. Tom)
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Comment #16 Removed by Moderator

To: Incorrigible
Yes. Pray for vocations.

And pray for discernment for those who guide the Church.

17 posted on 05/02/2004 6:22:59 PM PDT by sinkspur (Adopt a dog or a cat from an animal shelter! It will save one life, and may save two.)
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To: ColoradoSlim; Investment Biker
You don't need married priests. Simply make the priesthood back into what it once was - highly orthodox, devoutly Catholic, and earnestly dedicated. Conservative diocese - where the lavendar mafia cannot set up shop - are not having nearly the same trouble as those which are so "inclusive".
18 posted on 05/02/2004 6:25:52 PM PDT by MortMan (Complacency is an enemy sniper)
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To: Investment Biker; ninenot; BlackElk; Canticle_of_Deborah
In Cincinati, a big problem is its Archbishop is one of the more liberal bishops in the US, a throwback to the 70s, and in diocese' and Archdiocese' such as this, there have been vocational issues for years. It is also sad because Cincinati if it had a solidly orthodox Bishop would probably be booming with vocations.

In any event, the crisis is not in all areas of the church, traditional Catholics are not in danger of seeing too few priests with the FSSP and Institute of Christ the King Seminaries filled beyond capacity.
19 posted on 05/02/2004 6:28:37 PM PDT by RFT1
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To: PRSOrlando
Friend my people broke with the Catholic church in mid 1500's and my Puritan ancestors broke with King James I in the 1630's and came over to America. So we ain't going to agree on church dogma. Today I'm just a sensible god fearing pretty dang conservative Presbyterian. I don't want to see the Catholic church turned into some sort of Unitarian tinkerbell parade social club, I want to see all denominations of Christianity including the Catholic church revived and strengthened. We will all need to come together in Christ in our own defense. In case you hadn't heard, Islam has declared a holy war against the West, it was in all the papers.
20 posted on 05/02/2004 6:28:41 PM PDT by ColoradoSlim (Shoot first, ask questions later.)
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