As opposed to virtually 0% of those many more taking their vows before the 70’s?
Just sayin…
Well of course; 50, 60, 70 years ago society was exactly like it is now, right? Sexual morality was at an all time low; secularism was rampant in the US, radical feminism was at its height and glory…
Not.
So I guess you would say that given society as it is today, with 55,000+ abortions, teaching near teens and teens methods of birth control, and with only 21% of 18 to 30 year old adults attending Mass on a weekly basis, we should cut out any girls serving Mass, because, after all, 29% of those making final professions did so.
Oh, and let’s add that in 1966, there were 181,421 sisters, and now they are 49,883, or a 72.5% drop off; so I guess you would be comfortable stopping something that is correlated to young women making that commitment.
“Just sayin’”? Or just throwing in non sequiturs?
There are currently more women professed over the age of 90 (11%) than there are under the age of 60 (under 40:1%; 40 - 49 2%; 50 - 59 6%, or a total 9%).
What we are seeing is the near total collapse of professed women religious in the US.
Also interesting is the countries in the world, where between 2002 and 2012 (a short ten year period) there has been growth in the number of professed women religious: Tanzania, the Philippines, Vietnam, and India, all countries which have a more focused and more active sense of faith, and none of which have the issues which Europe and North America have - materialism, secularism, hedonism to name a few significant ones.
But then, again, why would we want to do anything which might result in encouraging women to enter the professed religious life?
I don’t see anyone in this thread who doesn’t want to see an increase in vocations. Too many comments in this thread appear to be along the lines of “Rome said it, I believe it, that ends it”, which is closely parallel to “Don’t confuse me with the facts; I already have my mind made up”.
Encouraging children to serve Mass is but one of a multitude of things parishes need to be doing to foster vocations. I have no problem with boys having a priority to serve, but until it is shown that boys are losing places to serve to girls, doing away with girls serving is a non-starter. And the idea that boys are quitting en masse when they reach the age of not liking girls lacks any statistics anywhere, and is simply urban myth; and for those boys who choose to quit, that is a matter of parenting. Boys are no of such fragile psyches that having to serve with a girl is going to be a life changing event. There are ample activities which boys of that age group may participate in where there are no girls.
I would submit that there may be more damage to a possible vocation from a priest, parent, or family member who is negative about vocations than there ever will be for boys having to serve Mass with girls.
We need mentors; prayer groups; retreats; Adoration; more and better religious education; and a host of other means of encouraging vocations both to the priesthood and the professed religious life.
And we need more parents going to Mass (the age group of 31 to 43 is hardly better than the younger group). If the parents are not taking the family to weekly Mass, how are children going to be raised with a strong faith?
John Paul 2 started the emphasis on new evangelization, and Benedict 16 and Francis have continued that. And neither of them have suggested that is only something the priests are to do.