Posted on 12/20/2015 2:13:33 PM PST by marshmallow
Thank you! It’s something many people could do, if they only knew of the opportunity. The formation of a Sister in India was only about $45 a month, iirc.
**There is a dearth of American born men who wish to become a priest.**
Not really.
Do you have a Serra Club in your area? Perhaps you can start one.
Pray for vocations to the priesthood and religious life.
These are Goans or Mangaloreans (going by their surnames) - so the last ancestors who were Hindus were probably back in the 15th century. Their families have been Christian for 500 years.
it would be like asking you why you would devote yourself to the Christian faith as opposed to the Druidic or Greek/Irish/Roman/etc. faith of your ancestors
Also, Buddhism, while it spread heavily in the period from 300 BC to about 100 AD, died out after losing state sponsorship and most of India became Brahminical Hindu or various other "Indic religions" (remember that Hinduism is not a religion but more an umbrella term).
in South-Western India, the peoples were Brahminical Hindus, with Mangaloreans being more of Brahman background and Goans of other castes
Further south, in Kerala you have a large number of St. Thomas Christians -- these are descendents of those who St. Thomas the apostle converted in the 1st century, so 2000 years of Christianity. These may very well have been of Jewish origin - as Judeans have been in Kerala since the Babylonian persecution (600 BC) and even some Israelites from earlier (750 BC)
Hinduism is not a "faith" in the same sense as Christianity or Buddhism or Islam. It has no central book, tenets of belief etc. - it include athiests (Arya Samaj), various primary gods (shiva, vishnu, etc.) - it is analogous to calling the various "religions" of pre-Christian Europe as "Eureopan religions"
Buddhism does put a lot of importance on good deeds, community services
What has this article got to do with America? These are Christian priests for India -- India has 40 million professed Christians (and probably many more hidden)
Also, India has about 353 different languages (2 national level languages: English and Hindi and 25 official languages used in the various countries that make up the federation of India and in many places the two official languages are not known, so the priests are better off learning the local languages
Actually, not “most” — about 40% are syro-malabar or Syro-Malankara and the rest are Latin rite - whether Goan or Mangalorean or Tamil or Punjabi or other nationalities.
Thanks for the stats.
Those are just statistics — you are doing the really important and relevant thing of supporting new priests.
There’s so much to be done!
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