Catholicism in decline

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I appreciate Phil’s honesty and assessment. I think it needs to be recognized that prior to Vatican II we had been experiencing a healthy growth in just about every area. We need to take a look in the mirror and ask what we have done that the Church is experiencing a decline like this.
According to the Gallup poll, the decline in attendance at Mass started in about 1957-1958 which was well before Vatican 2.
 
No, I do not believe the Catholic faith is true.

What’s wrong with Rome controlling the USA? Nothing more than with Mecca and Medina controlling the USA. Theocracy is just plain scary to people who value the beliefs our country was founded upon.
Your little comparison would work if Rome (Catholicism) and Medina/Mecca (Islam) were morally equivalent, which they are not.
 
…In the Pew surveys, 31.4% of the respondents said that they had been raised as Catholics. Another 2.6% had entered the Church as converts. But again, 10.1% had left the Catholic faith. Thus for every new convert, the Church is losing roughly four cradle Catholics. For everyone who comes in the doors of the Catholic Church, four people leave. No wonder the churches are empty!
This doesn’t make any sense…31.4% raised as Catholics and 2.6% converted…so what about the other 66%? They were neither raised as Catholics nor converted?
 
This doesn’t make any sense…31.4% raised as Catholics and 2.6% converted…so what about the other 66%? They were neither raised as Catholics nor converted?
Correct. These are not the percentages of Catholics, but the percentages of all people living in America. 31.4% of AMERICANS were raised Catholic, 2.6% of AMERICANS converted to Catholicism, and 10% of AMERICANS are former Catholics.

By the way, 2.6% of Americans means that, in raw numbers, the Catholic Church has managed to convert about 7.8 million Americans.
 
Muslim extremists say the same thing! I will pray that God will protect the USA from such attacks.
And Satan is smart, he will use the Muslims to get Christians in this country to further secularize, to further trade the truth of Christ for the new false god of religiously indifferent (i.e. agnostic/athiestic) democracy.

You demonstrate how successful His strategy is. And the faithful should pray and fast and prepare to “hunker down” - it’s gonna get worse before it gets better.

Click below to listen to an MP3 of a great talk that describes the present situation and the meaning behind the Social Reign of Christ the King:

The Kingship of Christ or the Kingship of Satan

Peace in Christ,

DustinsDad
 
America has reason to be anti-Catholic based on opinions I have encountered at this web site. People here have stated that their first loyalty if to the Catholic Church, not to the USA. That’s clearly un-American!

That’s what people were worried about JFK, that he would be controlled by Rome. Many people here are controlled by Rome. That isn’t an American attitude. Rome had nothing at all to do with founding this country. Rome had nothing to do with keeping this country free. Rome has no business being the guiding influence for the direction of the USA. The control of the USA has to remain with the USA, not Rome.
It is not clear what you mean by “loyalty to the Catholic Church, not the USA”.

For example, are we going to bomb Iraq in the name of Catholicism? Or stop illegal immigration for the sake of promoting Catholicism? Or aborting more fetuses to correct the population of non-Catholics in USA? Or are we going to stop paying IRS and divert our taxes to Vatican?
Failing to define the exact issue, any question in this direction can only lead to the ridiculous.
If ever there is one substantive issue, this was answered already 2000 years ago when Christ said “Render unto Caesar…”

With the exception of the above, this question fails in any sensibility test.
 
According to the Gallup poll, the decline in attendance at Mass started in about 1957-1958 which was well before Vatican 2.
The 1957-58 decline did not continue. It dropped, then upticked in 1960, then held steady from '61 to '65. Then the downard trend, which “just happened” to start in 1965 (I wonder what happened then?) continued unabated until 1975 and really even beyond that 'til 1997 with some fluctuations.

Maybe the changes to the Holy Week liturgy didn’t help in the 50’s (I know Evelyn Waugh detested them).

Here is the graph (see the second graph down):

cara.georgetown.edu/AttendPR.pdf
 
America has reason to be anti-Catholic based on opinions I have encountered at this web site. People here have stated that their first loyalty if to the Catholic Church, not to the USA. That’s clearly un-American!
If I were to say that my first commitment is to God, would you also say that that is un-American?
That’s what people were worried about JFK, that he would be controlled by Rome. Many people here are controlled by Rome. That isn’t an American attitude.
Just what is an “American Attitude”
Rome had nothing at all to do with founding this country. Rome had nothing to do with keeping this country free. Rome has no business being the guiding influence for the direction of the USA. The control of the USA has to remain with the USA, not Rome.
And who said it wouldn’t remain with the USA.
The Catholic Church helps to guide it’s memebers just as any other denomination does. Can you tell me that the RCC is the only church/denomination/faith group that is politically active? Of course not.

The RCC preaches morality. It encourages it’s members of act and even vote a certain way. But once a person is in the voting booth, they are on their own to vote their conscience. - And that my friend is the American way.

Peace
James
 
According to the Gallup poll, the decline in attendance at Mass started in about 1957-1958 which was well before Vatican 2.
Which is what I’ve been saying for years. Vatican II could well have been a pre-emptive strike to prevent mass defections from the Church.

Countless outside influences were already at work to undermine faith and the Church.

Smarter people than you or I took on the challenge of leading the Church through turbulent times.
 
A lot of good discussion here:

I hate to be the guy who farts in church (pardon the expression), but I wonder how much of the Catholic diaspora have left over the recent priestly scandals?

I don’t think it’s anything like a majority, I am sure that the largest portion of those who have left have done so due to “market forces” (Brilliant post, btw, DustinsDad), but if only a small fraction of the actual percentage is because of this it can certainly be said to have contributed to the decline.
 
A lot of good discussion here:

I hate to be the guy who farts in church (pardon the expression), but I wonder how much of the Catholic diaspora have left over the recent priestly scandals?

I don’t think it’s anything like a majority, I am sure that the largest portion of those who have left have done so due to “market forces” (Brilliant post, btw, DustinsDad), but if only a small fraction of the actual percentage is because of this it can certainly be said to have contributed to the decline.
I’ll admit that the lawsuits and the scandals were a mitigating factor in my family’s conversion to Orthodoxy…only to find out that the OCA has its own problems as far as that goes, and between that and other issues it wasn’t worth being out of communion with our families and with Rome. So we came back to the Catholic Church. :o
 
A lot of good discussion here:

I hate to be the guy who farts in church (pardon the expression), but I wonder how much of the Catholic diaspora have left over the recent priestly scandals?

I don’t think it’s anything like a majority, I am sure that the largest portion of those who have left have done so due to “market forces” (Brilliant post, btw, DustinsDad), but if only a small fraction of the actual percentage is because of this it can certainly be said to have contributed to the decline.
9 out of 10 times I have found that the folks who claim to be leaving over the scandals (which affected >2% of priests! ) aren’t leaving JUST because of that… A lot of times I even feel that the scandal is just the expedient “flashpoint” that isn’t often the real or main issue.

Anecdotally, one woman I know who went Episcopalian had been decrying the Catholic Church’s teaching on artificial birth control and the ban on women’s ordination for years. There is no possible way to justify going to the Episcopalians (or any other mainline church that is older than a few years!) if really your only motivation is to escape scandal… NEWSFLASH: Everyone has it! Every body of clergy out there suffers at least 2% “scandal factor”. Going Episcopal for her could only have been about finding a community that agrees with her. Otherwise she will be back at square one when she finds out about some scandal or another there.
 
9 out of 10 times I have found that the folks who claim to be leaving over the scandals (which affected >2% of priests! ) aren’t leaving JUST because of that… A lot of times I even feel that the scandal is just the expedient “flashpoint” that isn’t often the real or main issue.

Anecdotally, one woman I know who went Episcopalian had been decrying the Catholic Church’s teaching on artificial birth control and the ban on women’s ordination for years. There is no possible way to justify going to the Episcopalians (or any other mainline church that is older than a few years!) if really your only motivation is to escape scandal… NEWSFLASH: Everyone has it! Every body of clergy out there suffers at least 2% “scandal factor”. Going Episcopal for her could only have been about finding a community that agrees with her. Otherwise she will be back at square one when she finds out about some scandal or another there.
I agree with what you’ve said. I’ve noticed that in people, myself. Now, the actual victims would be different. If some of them have ceased to be Catholic, I wouldn’t be able to blame them, really.

As for the OP… I don’t know if there’s anything that we can DO about it except continue on course and try to not be discouraged. I think the numbers of people ceasing to call themselves Catholic are likely to increase at a faster and faster rate. I also think, “They’ll be back.” The Church will still be there for them when they realize they want the Truth.
 
I agree with what you’ve said. I’ve noticed that in people, myself. Now, the actual victims would be different. If some of them have ceased to be Catholic, I wouldn’t be able to blame them, really.

As for the OP… I don’t know if there’s anything that we can DO about it except continue on course and try to not be discouraged. I think the numbers of people ceasing to call themselves Catholic are likely to increase at a faster and faster rate. I also think, “They’ll be back.” The Church will still be there for them when they realize they want the Truth.
I mostly agree with you. The only thing I would change is I do think there is a small but effective action we can take. Making greater efforts to really have Catholic education and encouraging our priests to use their ten min of sermon time to cover a basic of the faith once a week could have a tremendous effect if even 15% of Catholic parishes nationwide (not already doing so) did so.

The number of people who fall through the cracks and don’t really understand or can’t explain the faith are “ripe for the pickens” when it comes to either just dropping out of practicing any faith, or being talked into joinging an Evangelical community which takes advantage of the Catholic being mostly ignorant about a lot of their Catholic faith, but in fact actually have enough basic formation (believe in God, knows Bible is God’s word, believes in Jesus) to be “sold” by folks who come with teachings that sound cogent and ask tough questions that these poorly formed Catholics can’t answer, and then assume that all Catholics don’t have the answers!

Everytime some hapless co-worker wants to harp on me for being “all Catholic” (and I don’t talk much about it at work, they only know I take Sunday mornings off for church)… Well everytime they say something pedantic like “Yea I was raised all Catholic in a real Catholic family, and I don’t believe in any of that %#%#!!”…

I ask: “You were raised ‘real catholic’ eh?”

Them: “Yea.”

ME: “Can you name the sacraments of initiation? The three levels of holy orders?”

NO, none of them ever can. And it never occurs to them that going to Mass every sunday may still have left them not knowing much about their faith.
 
The 1957-58 decline did not continue. It dropped, then upticked in 1960, then held steady from '61 to '65. Then the downard trend, which “just happened” to start in 1965 (I wonder what happened then?) continued unabated until 1975 and really even beyond that 'til 1997 with some fluctuations.

Maybe the changes to the Holy Week liturgy didn’t help in the 50’s (I know Evelyn Waugh detested them).

Here is the graph (see the second graph down):

cara.georgetown.edu/AttendPR.pdf
If you were in math class and said the decline began in 1966 or 67, you would get the answer wrong. The correct answer would be 1958.

There was a gradual decline from 1958-1966, a sharper decline from 1966-1971, and then a return to another gradual decline from 1972-1984 or so. You could blame the 1966-1971 on Vatican II or you could blame it on massive social upheaval (think '68 Democratic convention, woodstock, free love, marijuana, etc.) - there was juuuuust a bit of rebelliousness going on with the millions of baby boomers ages 16-30.
 
If you were in math class and said the decline began in 1966 or 67, you would get the answer wrong. The correct answer would be 1958.

There was a gradual decline from 1958-1966, a sharper decline from 1966-1971, and then a return to another gradual decline from 1972-1984 or so. You could blame the 1966-1971 on Vatican II or you could blame it on massive social upheaval (think '68 Democratic convention, woodstock, free love, marijuana, etc.) - there was juuuuust a bit of rebelliousness going on with the millions of baby boomers ages 16-30.
:tiphat:
 
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