J
JReducation
Guest
JReducation/
I see… but I can’t help but feel a pang of regret at not having you guys as our parish priests, or at least as some sort of spiritual support for the laity.[/qiuote]
I’m deeply humbled by this statement. But I must clarify that I’m not a Carthusian. I’m a Franciscan Brother of Life. I don’t have such a noble and sublime vocation. My call is to live the contemplative life as a mendicant, begging and serving the unborn, the vulnerable. My life to is to preach the Gospel of Life, to do penance for those who do not, and to live in brotherhood as St. Francis did. I don’t have what it takes to be a Carthusian. Those are very special souls.
As to parish priests, it’s a sad state of affairs that dioceses do not have the large enough numbers to staff every parish. The administration of parishes is the proper duty of diocesan priests, not religious men.
There are some communities of religious men that were founded to run parishes, but most of them were founded to run parishes in the mission fields, not in the developed countries. In the past, many religious orders and religious congregations came to America to run parishes. We were a mission country then. As time progressed, it became evident that the religious were doing more harm to themselves than the good that they were doing for the Church.
For that reason, we don’t see many religious congregations and religious orders taking up new parishes. In fact, many religious orders, especially Franciscans, are leaving parishes behind. They are closing them or giving them back to the bishops. What happened during before Vatican II was a disaster. Many people who yearn for the good old days don’t realize the other side of the story. The good old days destroyed many good religious men.
Vatican II tried to save the day and save religious life. It ordered religious to recover their roots and to return to the vision and mission of their founders. Unfortunately, there was a lot of damage done. We lost many good men.
You see, when you take a religious out of his monastery, friary, or priory and put him into a parish you have to make certain concessions. Men in parishes didn’t have the structure of community life. The parish demanded their attention. They had to say mass everyday, be at the office, visit the parishioners, attend meetings, do the administration of the parish and the parish school, do whatever else the bishop required to keep the parish going.
As the number of parishes grew, the religious were asked to take up more of them. This meanst that they were spread out. You no longer had a community of brothers living together. You often had religoius who lived in tiny communities or alone.
What happened? Well, when superiors called these men back to live in religious houses they had problems adapting. They were no longer used to praying the liturgy of the hours around the clock, eating and recreating together, doing housekeeping and laundry, not having a car or their own telephone, asking for permission to step outside the house, asking for clothes and shoes, wearing a habit all the time, being obedient to superiors who were not priests (they had gotten used to parishes where there were only priests in charge). In religious houses your superior can be layman in vows. But we obey him and revere him as we revere Christ. These men came in from parishes and were no longer used to the idea of following a community schedule. They had gotten used to managing their own time, their own money, their prayer life. Now they were subjugated to a rule again. The result was tragic. They left in the thousands. It has taken almost 40 years to bring up those numbers again.
I go to several different churches, so I’ve seen several different priests. I perhaps know or have seen around 8 in recent years. Two of them are brought from Africa. Two others are from the immigrant community (Koreans), serving the ethnic parish community near my house. Only two out of those 8 or so are young. The other six are rather venerable, and one has a failing voice. I don’t need to tell you, this really points towards a severe strain on the priesthood and its failing ability to meet the spiritual needs of the laity, let alone to re-evangelize. Can you blame me for thinking that at this rate, the laity will disintegrate, and the Church will be left without its foundations?