What could be done to most improve Sunday Mass attendance?

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It seems like when it comes to certain things, a lot more is often possible in the Protestant world. So often they get so much more done.
I think we can certainly look at successful Protestant communities to glean what wisdom and best practices we can, but it’s not always the case that the grass is greener on their side of the fence. There are plenty of Protestant churches that struggle and plenty of Catholic parishes that are thriving.
 
The time is coming in America where a volunteer will not be able to do anything, for any organization, without having to jump through hoops.
There is a lot of truth to this. I’m a retiree, and its a lot easier to get paid work than it is to get volunteer opportunities.
 
At our parish, the new Associate Pastor obtained a CDC and then used our School Buss to go get folks from Retirement Homes and other’s who are not able to travel. He also then goes out to get some of the Teens that come to the 6 PM Sunday Evening Mass dedicated to youth. Just the fact that he engages often in this and other ways has made a great difference. Our Pastor who is one year from official retirement encourages him and others to do the same.
That’s AWESOME!

Sounds like you have an associate pastor that LEADS FROM THE FRONT!

May God bless him!
 
I think we can certainly look at successful Protestant communities to glean what wisdom and best practices we can
The problem is we often do not, simply because they are Protestant – or at least that’s the excuse. I think in reality the excellence in leadership and just plain hard work that’s common in many non-mainline Protestant parishes is just too much for typical Catholic parishes to even contemplate.

It’s far easier to excuse the good they do.
 
You really have an issue with the Catholic Church, don’t you?

Is your parish, or any parish you know of, doing anything right?

I will say it again- Protestant Churches are usually small and autonomous.
They don’t have the deep pockets (or the perception thereof) that the Catholic Church has.
Something goes wrong, the Church closes up shop and starts over somewhere else.
 
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I would love to find a way to get more people to attend Mass. Sadly, all of the items you note do nothing to the 75%+ of Catholics who don’t attend, or are CE’s (Christmas and Easter).

We have been supporting, for years, the program which goes generally under the name of Catholics Returning Home. And we have had some success; but I ahve yet to be involved in one that has even 6 or more people attending. It is ones and twos mostly, with an occasional 4 or 5.

And as to adult catechesis, we offer it, but most of the attendees are over 50.

The question might be more appropriately: how do we reach out to those who are not attending.
 
Sadly, all of the items you note do nothing to the 75%+ of Catholics who don’t attend, or are CE’s (Christmas and Easter).
You really don’t know that. I know C&E Catholics personally who would attend Sunday Mass each week, were it not for the condition of the local parishes. They “gut it out” for C&E and some other feasts, but that’s about it. If conditions (particularly liturgical conditions) in the parish were improved, their attendance would increase.
We have been supporting, for years, the program which goes generally under the name of Catholics Returning Home. And we have had some success; but I ahve yet to be involved in one that has even 6 or more people attending. It is ones and twos mostly, with an occasional 4 or 5.

And as to adult catechesis, we offer it, but most of the attendees are over 50.
Presentations and “programs” tend to flop in my parish as well, and there is considerable hand-wringing over it. Yet it’s clear why in most cases if one takes a step back and simply observes with an open mind. Programs tend to flop in my parish due to the lay “coordinators” in charge of them. Sometimes it’s due to incompetence. More often it’s due to the fact that the coordinator simply isn’t liked by most people in the parish – a product of their own behavior over the years.
 
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I will say it again- Protestant Churches are usually small and autonomous.
Some Protestant churches are small/autonomous. Others are quite large and wealthy, and/or connected with bishops and/or presbyteries. I don’t think you can make a blanket statement on this.
 
Ultimately it’s not about the frillings. If people find mass terrible but they believe it’s a must, they would still go
This is correct. Mass attendance has nothing to do with “boring mass” and everything to do with lack of belief. Low attendance simply just matches the dwindling number of practicing Catholics.
 
Some Protestant churches are small/autonomous. Others are quite large and wealthy, and/or connected with bishops and/or presbyteries. I don’t think you can make a blanket statement on this.
That’s true. Most of the mainline Protestant Churches are hardly “autonomous.” Most Protestant churches of all kinds aren’t small around here either. The smallest churches in town are Eastern Catholic and Eastern Orthodox which are also not “autonomous.”
 
Low attendance simply just matches the dwindling number of practicing Catholics.
Naw. There are plenty of “practicing Catholics” that simply don’t practice each week.

About 2,500 people regularly attend Sunday Mass at my parish. During Christmas and Easter (when my small city loses far more travelers then it gains), that number tops 10,000. That’s a very alarming number and I’m quite sure it’s not uncommon either. It’s the sort of number that should be studied and acted upon.
 
The smallest churches in town are Eastern Catholic and Eastern Orthodox
The thing with the Eastern Catholics is that they were just a tiny number to start with- yet many were well concentrated in milling and mining communities where they had the numbers to build and support their own churches.

After the mills and mines closed down, or the children of the miners decided they wanted to do something else other than dig coal or went and married non-eastern catholic men, they dispersed. Leaving behind a shrinking legacy. And there you are. I think the days are numbered for Eastern Catholics in America.
 
The thing with the Eastern Catholics is that they were just a tiny number to start with- yet many were well concentrated in milling and mining communities where they had the numbers to build and support their own churches.
They were also divided along the 23 sui juris churches which resulted in truly tiny parishes. The EC church where I live has possibly 75 (at most) adult members. I read a blog years ago about the large number of EC parishes that have been closed throughout Pennsylvania. Now they are owned by various Protestant groups. Terribly sad that the ECers didn’t begin to evangelize back when things were still good.

I can’t speak about EC churches back East, but out here in the West, they are often their own worst enemies. Next to no outreach and self-imposed hard separation from the Latin Rite which is often justified by concerns of “Latinizations” that have never been part of EC history here in the West.
 
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Well, considering that I have been involved in Catholics Returning Home for about 20 years or so, I would say that I am not without some experience with those not attending.

Not once in all of the people I have met through the program have I ever had anyone state they were not attending Mass because of any of the 5 issues listed in the opening post. And that includes being involved in the program in two parishes for awhile.

Issues repeated: 2nd “marriage” after a divorce, without a decree of nullity. Someone who made them royally mad - relative, pastor, nun, parish personnel; it’s amazing how someone who feels seriously hurt by another will take it out on the Church. Going off to college has been another source - away from home, partying, sexual activity, and off they go. Poor catechesis: they never really learned of “got” what it is all about; they saw it as simply a bunch of rules with no integration into their life.

Am I an expert? Nope. But I read a lot, talk with a lot of people, and observe a lot. And it is still my firm opinion that anyone who walks away from the Church over what they say is bland or irreverent Masses has something else at play beneath all of that, if for no other reason than that they are walking away from the Eucharist. In short, there is form over substance. And sorry, I don’t buy that one.

And having been around for 71 years, I know plenty of my relatives, as well as prior classmates who do not attend regularly. Again, not a single one.

One of the causes I have seen repeatedly is what we used to call mixed marriages; coupled with the Catholic who was properly catechized - but they had head knowledge, not a whole-hearted acceptance of what the head knowledge taught. Or, to put it in what used to be a Protestant comment, they did not have a personal relationship with Jesus.

To that we can add secularism, and in particular, the sexual “revolution”. Shacking up with a girlfriend or boyfriend does have a tendency to put a damper on one’s religious fervor.

Presentations and programs have not been flopping out here. The issue is more of how to get younger people to commit to a multi-week program when they have young children.
 
I can’t speak about EC churches back East, but out here in the West, they are often their own worst enemies. Next to no outreach and self-imposed hard separation from the Latin Rite which is often justified by concerns of “Latinizations” that have never been part of EC history here in the West.
Here in Pittsburgh, we have many EC churches. Andy Warhol’s old EC church in the Four Mile Run area used to be full of Rusyn steel workers. The mill is long gone, much of the rest of the neighborhood was razed for I 376, and most of the faithful, like Mr. Warhol left town entirely to pursue their lives outside the steel industry. I don’t know how many faithful they have in 2017, but it can’t be many. I saw a newspaper story of another EC church on the south side, they showed the church women preparing pirohy, the youngest was 57. The mills are closed over there, too, and yuppies are filling that area, few are eastern Catholics.
 
Well, considering that I have been involved in Catholics Returning Home for about 20 years or so, I would say that I am not without some experience with those not attending.

Not once in all of the people I have met through the program have I ever had anyone state they were not attending Mass because of any of the 5 issues listed in the opening post. And that includes being involved in the program in two parishes for awhile.
I still disagree with your premise.
And it is still my firm opinion that anyone who walks away from the Church over what they say is bland or irreverent Masses
I mentioned a great deal more than that:
  1. Celebrate ALL Masses in a highly reverent manner.
  2. Spend the resources to craft and support the Masses – good music and capable musicians, carefully selected and well-trained ministers, etc.
  3. If the parish is large enough, “tune” Masses to their audiences, e.g. Family Mass, Solemn Mass, Teen/College Mass, etc.
  4. Ongoing adult catechesis focused on the liturgy. (I would recommend 5 minute or less lessons that effectively complete homilies.)
  5. Fellowship hour following each Mass.
One thing is for certain. The Church as a whole has a very poor record over the past 50+ years of identifying what would improve Sunday Mass attendance and then taking action. I truly think that just plain old apathy is the #1 stumbling block – NO action is taken at all.
 
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I think interacting with the community by doing good works in the immediate neighborhood of the church could bring in more people like me, who maybe be curious and already have a positive view of good works, but do not have many friends who are practicing Catholics.
That isn’t that different from what a new (non-Catholic) church did where I live. They went around and did random acts of kindness type activties, small scale like giving someone a compliment or large scale like yard work for someone who wasn’t able. It worked. They continue to be the fastest growing church in my area.
s a relatively younger person in my church… websites, social media, and technology would keep me feeling more welcome to organizations and more connected to my community. I like receiving texts, reading blogs about updates / positive things, and being able to explore well-designed websites. People my age get FOMO (fear of missing out!) which is frequently leveraged by the most tech/social media savvy people. Churches should take advantage of these aspects of my generation to drive up attendance.
This is another thing this church does. The church has a interesting name and it got my attention so I looked into them and they really knew how to use social media and technology to reach out and make ministries accessible. Many churches now do the same thing but these guys have continued to improve on what they already had.

The church is technically Baptist (not Southern Baptist ) and cater to the unchurched or people who don’t like regular churches. I listened to a few of their homilies and they take a dim view of liturgical churches.
 
Here in Pittsburgh, we have many EC churches. Andy Warhol’s old EC church in the Four Mile Run area used to be full of Rusyn steel workers. The mill is long gone, much of the rest of the neighborhood was razed for I 376, and most of the faithful, like Mr. Warhol left town entirely to pursue their lives outside the steel industry. I don’t know how many faithful they have in 2017, but it can’t be many. I saw a newspaper story of another EC church on the south side, they showed the church women preparing pirohy, the youngest was 57. The mills are closed over there, too, and yuppies are filling that area, few are eastern Catholics.
So why aren’t these parishes evangelizing? Why aren’t they inviting these “yuppies” into their churches? They should be! It’s a good bet if they fail and their properties are purchased by Protestant fellowships that THEY will be very inviting to the people who physically live around these parishes.
 
Well, you certainly welcome to disagree. I bring evidence, you bring opinions. Start working with those who do not attend regularly, and then we can compare notes.
 
Well, you certainly welcome to disagree. I bring evidence, you bring opinions.
What “evidence”? Your opinions? One thing I am certain of is that MANY, MANY things could be done to improve Sunday Mass attendance. The problem I see in the Church is that many of them take strong leadership and hard work.

This is actually a very worthwhile thread. It shows a number of great ideas from several different individuals. It also shows the strong “no can do” attitude from some and a great many other things.
 
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