O
otjm
Guest
Some people react to the issue of boys serving as if it were the cause of their vocation. Not you; but I have certainly come across them. CARA noted the issue in one of their reports (in fact, if I recall, they were discussing the correlation of vocations and adoration) and their comment is that participation in Adoration is far likelier due to an attitude of religiosity.I’m lost, ot. What is the difference between the correlation of alter boys and priests, as we all agree is behind the Vatican’s directive, and “causation” which you say is an error? Causation of what?
What I am disagreeing with is that girls are displacing boys.I don’t think you are you are denying that an increase in alter boys (i.e., less alter girls who displace boys) increases the chances of more priests.
Let’s go back to it once more: in 1965 there were about the same number of parishes (17,000+) and 994 vocations, and if you average 20 boys serving per parish, that works out to something less than one boy for every 125 who serve, who are ordained. At that time, about 50% of Catholics attended Mass weekly.
Currently, with about the same number of parishes, but with a little less than half of the number of Catholics attending Mass (now about 23%) and with altar girls serving, we are getting about half as many priests (494). However, the age group which would have children, those 30 to 43, whose attendance rate is 23%, are fewer in number than in 1965 because family size has been reducing over those 49 years; so the actual ration of altar boys to vocations actually appears to be slightly better.
Thus the problem is not girls serving it is families not attending Mass. Anotehr way of saying is is that in 1965, with 50% family attendance we had 994 vocations; with now 23% attendance we have 494 ordained. The rate of boys serving to those being ordained is about the same from the 1965 year and 2014. If, as alleged, girsl were "replacing’ boys, one would expect a drop off, but there is none; in fact it would appear there are marginally a few more vocations.
What people are saying is that if we got rid of girls, more boys would become priests. A) there is no showing that girls are actually “replacing” boys. If we have half as many families attending Mass weekly as we did 49 years ago, there are simply fewer boys attending Mass. And it should be less than half as many boys, because families are smaller than they were 49 years ago.Believe me, ot, I may be dense, but I am not making any argument, straw man or otherwise. I am not even disagreeing with you; I can’t because I don’t understand what the argument, if any, is about.![]()
B) there is a correlation between serving and vocation; and that correlation seems to remain the same in spite of girls serving; we seem to be getting the same or slightly better ration of vocations for families attending Mass on a regular basis. Additionally, CARA research showed 29% of young women making permanent professions had served; so there is a positive correlation for vocations there too. The comment about girls not becoming priests is simply a red herring.
A far greater problem in the future is not girls serving; it is the downhill slope of fewer and fewer baptisms each year. This has noting to do with girls serving; it has to do with the fact that fewer people are getting married; those that are getting married are doing so later and later, and more people are refusing to have children; coupled with this is the fall-off of Mass attendance.