J
jack63
Guest
First, my experiences with priests from Africa and elsewhere have been positive. In the US it is hard not to run into them sometimes, and I have no complaints and only positive things to say with my individual interactions with them and their homilies. However, this article raised some issues from the larger view that I think are worth discussing.
Basically, the point of the article is that, except for some stand-out regions in Africa, there are not enough priests in Africa and most of Africa is not evangelized. The article was written from a European perspective, but the same ideas could be applied to the United States. Why strip good African priests from Africa where they are needed when you could use Viri Probati (older married men) as priests in Western countries?
I’d be interested in people’s thoughts and comments either negative or positive…
Objectively, the figures do not lie. It is a fact that the numbers of young men joining the seminary and being ordained presbyters are not keeping pace with the overall increase in the numbers of baptized Catholics. Nowhere. Not even in Africa, where some people would have us believe the situation is not so dire. And where they believe that the “vocations-rich” African Church will become the protagonist of some new, “reverse evangelization” of the now greatly secularized, established Churches of Europe and the developed world. They are very wrong.
The latest Vatican-published Statistical Yearbook of the Church shows that in Africa there are currently just over 5,000 Catholics for every priest. It’s even worse throughout Latin America where the ratio is upwards of 7,000 to one. Compare that to the Churches in Europe, North America and Oceania where the figure hovers around 2,000 Catholics for every priest.
There are a number of possible steps that could be taken to shorten this widening gap. But the most likely to be accepted at this time, also for historical and practical reasons, would be to change the criteria for admission to Holy Orders by expanding the pool of candidates to include married men of proven virtue – the so-called viri probati. Unfortunately, most of the world’s episcopal conferences have been reluctant or stubbornly opposed to exploring this option even despite gentle encouragement to do so by both Paul VI and Pope Francis. Instead, the bishops have opted for an easier and safer way forward – import priests from countries where, continuing the myth, they believe there is an abundance of vocations.
There is, again, a more objective reason why it is not a bonafide solution for a long established Church in the West to import foreign priests – especially from the younger churches of Africa where, despite rapid growth, they are still living in largely un-evangelized mission territory.