To return the thread to the original post…
Madaglan:
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.
Well, not really… you want to see some fun times in the Church? Ever hear the saying “Athanasius against the world?” Back in the days of Sts. Augustine, Athanasius and Ambrose (the “A” crowd!

) there were heresies up the whazoo!! Granted many of the specific problems you cite are “modernist” problems, but they all go back to the root issues of poor catechesis, self-absorbment, disregard of authority, and hedonistic nihilism – all of which have been problems since the Fall itself.
As for these specific problems, I would suggest that they are all a result, as others have said, of the error of modernism. If you look back at the classic Catholic writings of the last two centuries, you will realize that many of the writers were concerned about modernism – the Popes in particular, but also with more readable and contemporary authors like GK Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc. (I would highly suggest that everyone read Chesterton’s “Orthodoxy!” Now that was a man ahead of his time…)
Our Church is now reaping the same modernist harvest that the rest of humanity is reaping – as the Church is still in the world, even if it is not of the world.
However – there is always hope. In certain areas, whether vast areas like Africa and Asia, or small areas like my own parish, things are improving, and things are getting better. In my parish, daily Mass attendance is going up, confession lines are getting longer, liturgical abuses are being corrected, and catecheis and evangelization efforts are gaining momentum. In our Archdiocese as a whole, the numbers of seminarians are increasing each year (this year we will have 15 new priests ordained for the Archdiocese!), we have more Adoration chapels (35+) than almost any other diocese in the world, and our Archbishop has done a very good job in dealing with the whole “priest abuse scandal”, beginning long before the big “breaking news” events of 2002. Things are not all bad.
Take heart, God is with us! O Come, o come Emmanuel (“God-with-us”)
+veritas+