Why do you think that is? Popularity, money, or what? I have often wondered about this.
I think that there is something to be said about the congregation. It’s not always positive. I know that many religious orders are pulling out of parishes, because their younger members are telling their superiors that they can’t deal with the parishioners.
Oftent they find themselves in situations where the parishioners will misquote, misunderstand, accuse them out of context, charge them with being intolerant. They often find themselves in no win situations, too conservative for some and too liberal for others. When you try to discuss some of these issues from the pulpit, some people accuse you of preaching politics. I know this happened when parishes tried to get signatures to stop FOCA.
As a result, younger religioius are asking their superiors to assign them to ministries that are more in keeping with the vision of the founders of the religious order or religious congregation.
When you miniser in a parish and spend half of your time doing damage control or solving crises, it takes time that your community and the holy rule expect you to spend in silence, solitude, community prayer, community recreation, community chores and duties and study. Mos religious communities were not founded to run parishes. They do this as a favor to the bishops and the laity in a diocese. Now many of them are going back to missions, youth ministry, street ministry, itinerant preaching, cloistered life, work among the poor and other ministries. They are returning the parishes to the bishops. They felt they were in no win situations.
A good example of these are two very popular groups of Franciscans: The Franciscan Friars of the Renewal and the Franciscan Missionaries of the Eternal Word. The original religious men were former parish men. They wanted to go back to live the Franciscan life as Francis has designed it. They found that they could not live Franciscan life in parishes. They asked for permission to branch off into new Franciscan communities that do not serve in parishes.
The laity has to be more patient and more supportive of their parish priests. If there are disparities, it is important to ask questions, but it is equally important to remember that not everyone has the answer. Not having the answer does not make a priest or religious a bad person.
Often, we will have to work together to find the answers.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF
