N
Norseman82
Guest
I don’t know if it’s so much that we aren’t wanted (I’m sure if I left my envelopes would be missed!), I think it’s more that the people in charge of most singles and young adult ministry programs are clueless to the fact or don’t take seriously enough that most single people who are eligible to be married want to get married and single Catholics who take their faith similarly want to marry other single Catholics who take their faith seriously. Instead, we have “single vocation” and “alternate lifegiving” shoved down our throats. Other singles ministries are more geared to the divorced/widowed set, like one singles conference I went to last year where one panel discussion was 80% divorced females, one especially bitter and telling us “at your ages all that you can expect are women with children”.Dating today as a practicing Catholic is next to impossible, since sex is assumed at a certain point in the relationship…anytime from before two people become a couple to a few weeks into the relationship.
This is a very cynical view, but as a fellow single Catholic, I agree. Single people aren’t wanted in most parishes.
One shining light, though, was the National Catholic Singles Conference held here in late April (there is supposed be one in San Diego too). The people running that seem to “get it”.