J
JReducation
Guest
Ed, you’re right about the immigrant Catholic population. I stand corrected that score.Catholics were never an insignificant minority in the US. The problem is, going to Church and actually living like Catholics has decreased as more and more Catholics, for a number of reasons, are Catholic in name only.
I don’t think saying most Catholics are middle class is true. At one time, there were many middle class Catholics, but, especially recently, the middle class has shrunk. Immigrants from other countries like Mexico have shored up Catholic numbers in the United States.
My parents were immigrants with little education, but both found work, bought a house and raised a family.
God bless,
Ed
I was thinking more of the older Catholic population of Germans, Irish and Italians. But you are very correct in reminding me of the Latin American Catholics who now live in the USA.
As to your first point regarding practicing Catholics, the same phenomenon is true of almost all ecclesial communities in the USA. Jews are a very large number, but few are practicing. The Reformation communities are going through the same process.
The Pentecostal communities and the Catholics seem to be the ones that have the larger numbers of people attending services.
In my parish we have seven masses every weekend and they are full. We have confessions every Saturday and they go for an hour or more. We have something happening in our religious ed centre every night and in our chapel too.
We have a very ecclectic community. The age range is from 7 - 100. The language groups include: English, Spanish and Creole. Plus we have a very large number of senior citizens. Now we have a larger number of people with disabilities because two of our friars have disabilities. One is in a wheel chair and the other walks with canes. What is most interesting is that those of us who belong to the parish no longer notice the disabilities. When you first arrive you do, but then everything blends in. It’s beautiful. I believe this is what people with disabilities find attractive about the parish, besides the fact that the buildings are very accessible to all kinds of disabilities. We even have talking elevators for the visually impaired.
To me this is a living church.
JR