G
gilliam
Guest
NEW ORLEANS A “seismic shift in demographics” in both society and the U.S. Catholic Church in the coming decades will create a church that is far less white, Fr. Bryan Massingale told a New Orleans audience Friday.
The church will be unprepared to deal with that reality, he continued, unless it addresses “the ongoing struggle for racial equality.”
Massingale made the comments in an address to priests, seminarians and other officials of the New Orleans Archdiocese.
The author of “Racial Justice and the Catholic Church” and professor of ethics and theology at Marquette University in Milwaukee, the priest said the church must become “a proactive agent for racial justice” if it is to “remain viable and relevant in the 21st century.”
He said the issues of racism and racial justice are not spoken of frequently by priests because the topics are so sensitive.
ncronline.org/news/people/church-demographics-shift-catholics-urged-address-sin-racism#.VkO676JyYhM.twitter
The church will be unprepared to deal with that reality, he continued, unless it addresses “the ongoing struggle for racial equality.”
Massingale made the comments in an address to priests, seminarians and other officials of the New Orleans Archdiocese.
The author of “Racial Justice and the Catholic Church” and professor of ethics and theology at Marquette University in Milwaukee, the priest said the church must become “a proactive agent for racial justice” if it is to “remain viable and relevant in the 21st century.”
He said the issues of racism and racial justice are not spoken of frequently by priests because the topics are so sensitive.
ncronline.org/news/people/church-demographics-shift-catholics-urged-address-sin-racism#.VkO676JyYhM.twitter