Well, there’s the little problem of priestly celibacy. It all keeps coming back to this. Those Protestant missionaries are with their spouses, their children and other Protestant missionaries. One big happy family with lots of emotional, as well as financial support.
Sooner or later, Rome is going to have to address this. It sounds as if it’s just about ‘sex’. But it isn’t. It’s about support from loved ones and community and having a family. Men, in particular, need the structure of marriage and family. A number of sociological studies of happiness and general functioning, have shown that among the 4 groups, men/women, married/single, the single women are at the top and the single men are at the bottom. (The order usually goes fromt op to bottom, single women, married men, married women, single men).
And it will take a long time to catch up, if Rome changes its mind. You don’t produce good priests overnight.
BTW, another source for how to create community and support in Catholic churches can be found in the Quakers. They don’t have any ministers. Everything is run by their members. It’s lots of work and lots of time but that’s the way they operate.
Protestant churches create a mini-world of their own. Something for everyone. Beautiful service, flowers, music, choirs, stirring sermon–lots of emphasis on learning how to preach. It made you want to go to services. Sunday school at all levels, all-age day care, NO worrying about fretting babies (mentioned on this forum), NO worrying about how to get to Mass (ditto), SAY THE WORD and the driver will be at your door. Groups for men, women, teens, summer camps, full-sized gymnasiums with a full schedule of discounted classes, you name it. I lived in Atlanta for many years and COULDN’T BELIEVE the size, wealth and amenities of the Protestant churches, built on tithing, I suspect.
In its current condition, the RCC cannot match this, and I think that building community is essential to attracting and retaining parishioners, regardless of doctrine.