Posted on 10/26/2005 6:26:56 AM PDT by NYer
Today, Catholic priests are in short supply throughout the entire world.
However, with the nations highest ratio of priests to Catholics, the Diocese of Lincoln has managed to avoid this problem.
According to the Official Catholic Directory of 2005, the authoritative guide to the Catholic Church in the U.S., there are 121 active diocesan priests in Lincoln and 89,236 Catholics.
Those numbers indicate there is one priest for every 737 Catholics, which is far greater than the total national statistic of one priest for every 4,723 Catholics. The New York Times reported Oct. 7 that in 2003, there was nationally one priest for every 2,677 Catholics, meaning the U.S. priest shortage has nearly doubled in the last two years.
In Omaha, with one priest for every 1,755 Catholics, the diocese is slightly behind Lincoln but still far above the national average.
The directory also shows that some of the lowest ratios of active priests to Catholics tend to occur in larger dioceses.
The Diocese of Los Angeles has only one priest for every 12,217 Catholics, and the Diocese of El Paso, Texas, has one priest for every 11, 927 Catholics.
The Rev. John Folda, rector for Saint Gregory the Great Seminary in Seward, said the Lincoln diocese does nothing magical or unique in terms of recruitment that would contribute to the high number of priests.
Folda said the proximity of the seminary to Lincoln helped ease some of the initial worries possible candidates might face when training for priesthood.
Its helpful that these young men dont have to go across the country, Folda said, just to figure out if this whole thing is for them.
The Rev. Robert Matya, pastor at the St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic Church/Newman Center near the University of Nebraska-Lincoln City Campus, said typically the diocese has anywhere from eight to 12 men who join the seminary in Seward annually. Last year, nine students entered and have begun taking classes in theology.
The Lincoln diocese long has been considered one of the most conservative in the country.
Though many dioceses throughout the country have allowed women to become altar servers or administer the sacrament of communion, Matya said the Lincoln diocese continues to prohibit such practices.
In 1996, the Most Rev. Fabian Bruskewitz, bishop of Lincoln, ordered all parishioners to dissolve any affiliations with a number of reform groups, including Catholics for a Free Choice and the lay organization Planned Parenthood, or face potential excommunication.
The Vatican in Rome upheld the order by Bruskewitz, saying the groups were in discord with Catholic doctrine.
Matya attributes the abundance of candidates for the Lincoln diocese to a number of factors, but said the traditional orthodox makeup of the diocese plays little role in influencing possible candidates.
Its not that we try to be overly conservative, Matya said. But as a diocese, we do try to act how God wants us to be, and I think that is very appealing to a lot of these young men.
Matya, who also teaches a religion class at Lincoln Pius X High School, said that as a whole, the only advertising the diocese does is to send out a brochure every year to all Catholics encouraging vocations.
He said the brochure probably had little effect in comparison to the communitys parochial school system, though.
Our Catholic schools have always been terrific here, Matya said. We have also really been blessed with lots of young, enthusiastic priests and I believe its easier for these kids coming out of high school to connect with that enthusiasm.
According to the New York Times article, a recent synod a global meeting of bishops took place in Rome at the beginning of October, and some surprising issues were brought up.
In terms of national recruitment, possible changes could take place in the future.
The bishops discussed how they would try to increase the number of priests worldwide. Although far from becoming a reality, initial debates addressed the issue of lifting celibacy requirements and allowing married men to enter the priesthood.
The Vatican also is soon expected to release a document that will exclude gays and lesbians even those who remain celibate from entering the priesthood, which could result in further national shortages.
At a local level, Matya said recruitment would not change because of the recent discussions. Individual dioceses are not involved in the process of making or altering global dogma, he said, and the possible changes remain speculative.
As priest shortages continue to have an adverse effect on the global Catholic population, Folda said the Lincoln diocese is humbled and grateful by the commitment local men are continuing to make for their faith.
Ultimately, it is Gods gift to us, Falda said. I dont know why He chose to bless us this way, but well continue trying to make the best of it.
The answer is quite clear ....
Most Rev. Fabian Bruskewitz bump!
Those numbers indicate there is one priest for every 737 Catholics, which is far greater than the total national statistic of one priest for every 4,723 Catholics. The New York Times reported Oct. 7 that in 2003, there was nationally one priest for every 2,677 Catholics, meaning the U.S. priest shortage has nearly doubled in the last two years.
It seems doubtful to me that the priest shortage has doubled in two years. More likely, one of the data points is wrong. I would bet on it being that of the Times.
In Omaha, with one priest for every 1,755 Catholics, the diocese is slightly behind Lincoln but still far above the national average. The directory also shows that some of the lowest ratios of active priests to Catholics tend to occur in larger dioceses. The Diocese of Los Angeles has only one priest for every 12,217 Catholics, and the Diocese of El Paso, Texas, has one priest for every 11, 927 Catholics.
Second, my guess would be that over time, Priests are allocated where they are needed. If you have 80,000 Catholics in Lincoln, 60,000 of which go to church, that is a lot different than say the Bridgeport, CT area where because of the large Italian population there are a huge number of Catholics, yet a small percentage of them go to Church. My guess would be that in general people in the midwest go to Church more than people in the big cities. So the crucial number is not the number of priests to Catholics, but rather the number of priests to Catholics who actually go to church.
All that being said, I am sure that part of the reason why the % of Catholics who go to church is higher in the midwest than in the cities is because of the quality of the more traditional Bishops.
One of the best priests I have ever encountered was kicked out of seminary in PA for being too rigid. Very, very orthodox. Great priest. He visted our parish for Mission Week last January. Every night that week attendance was greater than at Midnight Mass at Christmas.
I think the real message here is that if a bishop wants vocations, there is a blueprint on how to get them. Some bishops are choosing not to have vocations.
So that is what the building south of town was! Kind of funny, as there is a good LCMS college in Seward also. Used to live in Lincoln, and the priest that did our pre Cana stuff was great. Funny story though. When my no wife went to her priest to talk about our relationship, he told her that "The local Lutherans are very consecrative, so try not to shock him".
where in PA was this?
I suspect that this report only accounts for diocesan priests.
"Those numbers indicate there is one priest for every 737 Catholics, which is far greater than the total national statistic of one priest for every 4,723 Catholics. The New York Times reported Oct. 7 that in 2003, there was nationally one priest for every 2,677 Catholics, meaning the U.S. priest shortage has nearly doubled in the last two years."
Yet, there are over 46,000 Catholic priests in the US, for about 65 million Catholics. That's closer to one priest for every 1,400 Catholics.
sitetest
I agree completely. The liberal "experts" seem to have some idea that the Catholic Church can't find enough faithful Catholic priestly candidates and will HAVE to turn to homosexuals and married men to fill the seminaries. A good way to prove their theory would be to have them all demand orthodoxy and sexual purity from all candidates for the next ten years, and see what happens to the numbers.
Nonsense! There will always be those bishops (like mine) who only admit homosexuals into their seminaries while complaining about the lack of candidates. Those 'orthodox' young men in this diocese who feel called to the priesthood, have to take 'unorthodox' routes by applying through religious societies or other dioceses. They don't want to be walled up with the gay seminarians.
Like mine. Worse than failing; losing members to the Evangelical Churches.
We have a new Parochial Vicar. At first he seemed decent. Wrong. Very activist..... in a bad way.
Our last Parochial Vicar was a Presbytarian convert, an absolute hard-liner. His people skills needed sharpening.
His underlying themes were:
-I'm a sinner but given salvation through Christ.
-Just because society says it's okay, doesn't mean God agrees.
-Go and sin no more means just that.
-Yes, our church was founded by a man. Jesus Christ, the son of God was the man!
I miss him.
Bingo.
Is there a Bishop Bruskewitz fan club out there yet? Like the Cardinal Ratzinger (and now Pope Benedict XVI) fan clubs?
. . . and lesbians . . . AND LESBIANS . . .!?!?!?
Does this paper have an editor? Good Grief!!!
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