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PetraG
Guest
One thing you can guarantee about the current generation is that they have a lot of different perspectives, lol. Yes, things will change. The way they will change is hard to predict. If I were to predict it, though, I’d predict it based on those who are in seminary, and there are definitely more of them on the end that values the old way of doing things. (Or, as I like to point out to my progressive friends who bemoan all this: I suspect there are more seminarians on the conservative end because conservatives dream of their sons becoming priests whereas far too many progressives only dream of their daughters becoming priests.)I know. I was trying not to do that. (BTW, I’m more “old geezer” than “young whipper-snapper”, myself.) . Nevertheless, that’s what happens each time a new generation succeeds a previous generation, and if we refuse to admit it, then we’re just sticking our heads in the sand. We succeeded our elders, and in the process, we dropped some things that were important to them and added others. If we think succeeding generations won’t do the same – or that they have different perspectives than we – then we’re just fooling ourselves.
Having said that, I’ve heard enough vocations stories from priests to conclude that you never can tell who will become a priest or how different he might be when he becomes one.
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