S
santaro75
Guest
I found this article on Catholic.org which talks about a study of Australian Catholics who are not attending mass. It was very interesting and i believe a lot of the points are relevant in the US as well.
catholic.org/international/international_story.php?id=22192
excerpt:
The three most commonly mentioned and “the factors that had the most powerful impact” on Mass attendance, according to the study summary report, were:
catholic.org/international/international_story.php?id=22192
excerpt:
The three most commonly mentioned and “the factors that had the most powerful impact” on Mass attendance, according to the study summary report, were:
- **Misuse of power and authority at all levels of the Catholic Church. **
- Irrelevance of the church to life today, as an institution “out of touch with Australian society.” “In their eyes the church had lost its ability to connect with the day-to-day lives of ordinary people and as a result they no longer regarded it as having the authority to guide them in living an authentic life.”
- Lack of intellectual stimulation, with several noting that the **sermons delivered in their parishes “were of poor quality, being ill-prepared, theologically unsound, badly delivered and irrelevant.” **
Other institutional-related reasons noted included: problems with the parish priest; structural problems, including clergy changes affecting the parish, parish mergers and Communion services without a priest; poor parish community life; and the feeling of exclusion by church rules, such as affecting those who remarried without an annulment of a previous marriage and those who have a gay family member.