M
Mike_from_NJ
Guest
This is a follow-up to a question I asked in the Ask An Apologist section this morning.
The Annuarium Statisticum Ecclesiae is also referred to as the Statistical Yearbook of the Church. One thing it does is give a total of how many Catholics it believes there are during that year. As most people here on CAF are likely aware the Church believes that once you are baptized that there is an indelible mark on the person’s soul making them forever a Catholic. As Father Grondin noted in his answer the Church takes that stance not only from a metaphysical standpoint but also from a membership standpoint.
The reason why I questioned whether such a stance took hold from a membership standpoint is because how someone who doesn’t necessarily believe or even know that the Church believes this way would interpret statements made about Church membership. I do not possess a copy of the Statistical Yearbook, so I don’t know if when it discusses its membership rolls if it makes clear that it is including those that have left the Catholic faith but have been baptized. I do know that going through various Catholic media reporting on the 2013 Yearbook that so far I have found no article that made that distinction.
For example:
National Catholic Register
Vatican Information Service
AsiaNews.IT
Because these articles are read by non-Catholics as well as Catholics, it is easy to see how membership claims could be read as counting actual members as opposed to members plus those who have since gone on to other churches, faiths, or no faith.
One of the main reasons I posted here in the Non-Catholic Faiths section was to see if other churches do the same thing. As far as I know they don’t.
Regarding Father Grondin’s note about the small number of people who prior to Omnium in mentem had formally defected, I have a few things on that:
Hello,
How does the Catholic Church determine the number of Catholics in both the United States as well as the world? Does Omnium in mentem, which removes the process by which one can formally defect from the Church mean that the totals given in the Annuarium Statisticum Ecclesiae include those who are practicing a non-Catholic Christian faith, a non-Christian faith, or no faith at all?
The Annuarium gives the total number of Catholics in the world by region. Anyone baptized Catholic is considered a Catholic. They are counted as Catholic even if they are not going to Mass or are attending a non-Catholic community. This is the same as counting a blood relative as a member of your family even if they “disown” their family, once a member of the family you are always a member of the family.
First I want to thank Fr. Charles Grondin for his answer, which was both thorough and concise. I do have some issues with what this answer means.Given how few people actually followed the process to formally defect prior to Omnium in mentem it wouldn’t appear that the change would have much of an impact on the overall numbers.
The Annuarium Statisticum Ecclesiae is also referred to as the Statistical Yearbook of the Church. One thing it does is give a total of how many Catholics it believes there are during that year. As most people here on CAF are likely aware the Church believes that once you are baptized that there is an indelible mark on the person’s soul making them forever a Catholic. As Father Grondin noted in his answer the Church takes that stance not only from a metaphysical standpoint but also from a membership standpoint.
The reason why I questioned whether such a stance took hold from a membership standpoint is because how someone who doesn’t necessarily believe or even know that the Church believes this way would interpret statements made about Church membership. I do not possess a copy of the Statistical Yearbook, so I don’t know if when it discusses its membership rolls if it makes clear that it is including those that have left the Catholic faith but have been baptized. I do know that going through various Catholic media reporting on the 2013 Yearbook that so far I have found no article that made that distinction.
For example:
National Catholic Register
Vatican Information Service
AsiaNews.IT
Because these articles are read by non-Catholics as well as Catholics, it is easy to see how membership claims could be read as counting actual members as opposed to members plus those who have since gone on to other churches, faiths, or no faith.
One of the main reasons I posted here in the Non-Catholic Faiths section was to see if other churches do the same thing. As far as I know they don’t.
Regarding Father Grondin’s note about the small number of people who prior to Omnium in mentem had formally defected, I have a few things on that:
- The average Catholic at the time may not have been aware of the concept that they would be considered Catholics even if they later moved away from Catholicism.
- Even those that were aware of that concept may have thought that when the Church announced its membership totals that it was using a rubric more in line with what other Churches (and in fact businesses and organizations use) as opposed to the metaphysical one.
- There were groups such as countmeout.ie which provided assistance to those wishing to know how one formally defects. They asserted that tens of thousands of forms were downloaded prior to Omnium in mentem (which is not an insignificant number in Ireland).
- Even if the amount of formal defectors is small, I feel it’s important that one should provide accurate information whenever possible. Again, I do NOT have a copy of the Statistical Yearbook so I don’t know if it specifically states how it comes to its numbers. I can only hope that it does. If it does then the fault lies with those members of the media who are passing on such information without stating its counting process.