M
Madaglan
Guest
There are few times during the Church’s history in which there were not problems with the clergy and the lay people. However, it seems that today there are new types of problems little experienced in the Church’s past. These problems are only getting worse, and there seems little plan of action to speed the recovery of the Church.
The following are several topics I hope we might be able to discuss. Perhaps we can come to some conclusions as to why these are presently large problems in the Church.
The following are several topics I hope we might be able to discuss. Perhaps we can come to some conclusions as to why these are presently large problems in the Church.
- Mass attendance - Especially in many European countries, but also in the Americas, mass attendance–especially daily mass–is hitting a low. Is secular culture to blame?
- Dressing down at mass - I’m 21; but I remember just about 10 years ago that most of the male adults in the church would wear sportscoats (or some other fine clothing) to Sunday masses. Women, likewise, would wear dresses. Nowadays I go to mass and people are there with jeans, tee shirts, sneakers, etc. What’s with this?
- Decrease of Vocations to Priesthood - Seminaries across the country are being consolidated due to a shortage of vocations to the priesthood. In some countries in Europe priests are becoming in charge of more and more people, and they no longer are able to know their parishoners personally. What to do about this shortage? Will the shortage end?
- Misconduct in the Priesthood - Although the priests accused constitute a minority of the priesthood, and although many accused are most likely innocent, how well are preventions to misconduct being addressed in the Church?
- Shorter Confession Lines - The lines are getting shorter at many churches. Are people placing less efficacy in the sacrament of confession? Are evangelical beliefs an influence? Secular culture?
- Poor Instruction of the Faith - Maybe I’m just alone, but I had an horrible formal education of the faith. I was not a troublesome student, but I did not realize some major articles of the faith until just a few years back. For one, I didn’t understand that Christ was supposed to come back. Silly me. How was your CCD or Catholic education? Should the Church place greater emphasis on the need for parents to individually teach their children about the Church, about what the Bible tells us, etc? My parents never did that for me, and I feel that I would have been a better Catholic early on had my parents read me the Bible rather than Tom Sawyer (which comes down hard on religion).
- Liturgical Abuses - Deacons taking over the roles of priests, improper disposal of leftovers, etc.
- Globalization/Ecumenism - In today’s world one can just as easily be a Buddhist as an Orthodox Christian. Although it may not be explicit, there is a great tendency in many peoples’ minds towards what might be termed natural religion. Buddhists, Zoroastrians, Jains, Orthodox Jews, Catholic Christians, Evangelicals–it matters less what or whom they place their faith in than in what the people actually do. At least that’s the growing consensus (which I disagree with). However, I know many of my friends and family who switch churches in the belief that God doesn’t care so much about what you believe in so much as if you’re a good person. It seems right to many people, but is not the only way to the Father through the Son? And can one only enter heaven if one is a member of the one holy, catholic and apostolic Church–Christ’s Church?