New ordinations give reason for hope

WASHINGTON—It’s ordination sea­son and Catholics have reason to be pleased with the numbers of priests who will serve the Church well into the future.

In recent years, the numbers of priestly ordinations have given Catholic Church observ­ers reason to believe there is not a global vocations crisis, but they acknowledge there is still a need for more.

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CNS photo/Chaz Muth: A seminarian from St. John’s Seminary in Brighton, Mass., holds a rosary as he prepares to participate in a “Grill the Seminarians” discussion April 3 with members of a youth group from St. Patrick Church in Providence, R.I.

“The good news is that the global number of priests stopped declining about five years ago,” said Father Paul Sullins, associate professor of sociology at The Catholic University of America in Wash­ington.

Since 2012, the total has been stable at about 415,000 priests worldwide, a number that is the net of new ordinations and retirements or deaths, Father Sullins told Catholic News Service.

“The Church now has about the same number of priests that it had in 1970,” he said. “The bad news, though it is not really bad news, is that the global population of Catholics has grown dramatically since then, so today we have far fewer priests per Catholic.”

Though the global numbers are currently strong and voca­tions are plentiful in some regions of the world, such as African and Asia, the quantity of priests are not as abundant in other continents, such as in parts of North America, Father Sullins said.

“We are importing priests from areas of the world where young vocations are boom­ing, or at least more prevalent than in the U.S.,” he said. “In 2014, almost a third of priests ordained in the U.S. were foreign-born and that does not count foreign-ordained priests who serve in the U.S. on assignment.”

Many dioceses in the United States also are faced with a disparity in the number of new priests being ordained and the number who are retiring or leaving ministry, said Father Carl B. Fisette, director of vocations for the Diocese of Providence, R.I.

“We have 18 men in forma­tion at this time (and) over the years when they would be pro­jected to be ordained, we will probably have about 54 priests who will be over the retire­ment age,” Father Fisette told CNS. “So there will be quite a net decrease in the number of priests in active ministry over the next six to eight years.”

These kinds of vocations trends are not unique to the New England states, said Providence Bishop Thomas J. Tobin, who said many of his fellow bishops throughout the country are faced with similar circumstances.

“It becomes a real challenge to ensure our parishes have enough priests to serve the peo­ple,” Bishop Tobin told CNS.

Shrinking numbers of priests also coincide with fewer num­bers of Catholics attending Mass, Father Fisette said.

Though he called that fact unfortunate, Father Fisette said it did make it easier to spread the wealth in terms of priests serving Catholics.

“Mass attendance rates na­tionwide are down,” he said. “If you have fewer people going to Mass, you don’t need to have as many Masses in each parish.”

This allows the diocese to assign priests to multiple par­ishes, Father Fisette said.

The Church also has more than 18,000 permanent deacons today who perform many func­tions, like homilies, baptisms and marriages, that were reserved to priests in the 1960s, when the church did not have a permanent diaconate in place, said Father Sullins, author of “Empty Pews and Empty Al­tars: A Reconsideration of the Catholic Priest Shortage.”

Though growing secularization and parish closings have allowed dioceses to dispense their shrinking numbers of priests with greater ease, Father Sullins argued those cul­tural trends show there actually is a need for more priests to evangelize through their presence in society.

In its report “The Class of 2016: Survey of Ordinands to the Priest­hood,” the Georgetown University-based Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate found that 51 percent of the respondents indicated that they were discouraged from considering the priesthood.

The laity can be an invaluable resource in increasing vocations simply by encouraging their sons to consider the priesthood, Father Sul­lins said.

“Many priests, including Pope Francis, relate that they first felt a call to priesthood from the example, devotion and encouragement of their mother and father,” he said. “A mother can consecrate her son to God’s service, which doesn’t neces­sarily compel him, but has a power­ful influence on his choice of voca­tion and state of life.”

Regardless of the numbers, it’s still important to increase vocations, Father Sullins said.

“We need more priests, not because we are in some numeric crisis, but because God is always renewing his church through call­ing faithful young men to serve as priests,” he said. “To pray and work to (strengthen) new priestly vocations is the work of evangeliza­tion, in which all of us can contrib­ute to the renewal and proclama­tion of the faith.”

In South Carolina

Andrew-Fryml-web

 

 

Seminarian An­drew Fryml will be ordained to the transitional diaconate for the Diocese of Charleston on June 3 at 6 p.m. at Blessed Sac­rament Church in Charleston.

 

 

 

Chaz Muth | Catholic News Service

 

Top photo: CNS/Chaz Muth: Seminarians pray with their rector April 4 at Our Lady of Providence Seminary in Providence, R.I.