New Statistics on Vocations Reveal Priests are Declining but 1 Factor is Key for Encouraging Vocations in the Catholic Church
Newly released statistics on Vocations Reveal Priests in the Catholic Church are Declining but 1 Factor is Key for Encouraging Vocations: when a family member, friend or religious minister asked them to consider it.
This study, conducted by Vocation Ministry, is the fruit of hundreds of hours of work dedicated to understanding the state of vocations to the priesthood in the Catholic Church in the United States today.
The number of Catholic priests is
on a consistent downward trend in
the United States, even in dioceses
that are doing comparatively well.
* Over the past 50 years, both the
Church and culture have experienced many shifts in values, priorities, and family life.
* In 1970, the Church in the United States had more than 59,000
priests, serving just over 18,000
parishes. By 2021, that number had
fallen to 34,923 priests, serving
16,579 parishes.
* Many dioceses, particularly in the
North and Northeast anticipate 50
percent of their priests reaching retirement age in less than a decade.
* Though many priests stay on as
pastors beyond retirement age to
help alleviate this problem, this is
not a long-term solution.
2021 Vocation Data
Dioceses that ordained enough for its
Base Need Ordination Rate.*
33
Dioceses that had no ordinations.
42
Dioceses meeting the Base Need Seminarian Rate.*
17
Average age of men at ordination.
34
Average retirement age.
71
Average number of years a priest serves in active ministry.
37
Replacements each priest needs to inspire over the next
5-10 years.
So, what do all these numbers and statistics really mean
for the Church in America?
The number of ordinations in most
dioceses is on a steady decline.
* In 2021, only 33 of 175 dioceses
ordained at or above the number
of priests needed to maintain status
quo.
* 30 of 175 dioceses have ordained
at or above the number of priests
they need over a five-year average
(2017-2021).
* In healthy dioceses with plenty
of priests, a replacement rate of 1:1
(each priest is replaced by one other
priest) should roughly ensure continuation of sacramental ministry
for the faithful. However, in the
current state of many dioceses, with
imminent high attrition rates due to
Regardless of the factors affecting the priesthood today, 75 percent of newly ordained priests, year over year,
report having heard the call
before 18 years of age. Just based
on this, priests need to become vocation
promoters at their parishes, cultivating
the harvest with boys and young adult
men who are in the pews each week,
by inviting, encouraging, and mentoring them until they are ready to visit
with the diocesan vocation director.
Fact: The main reason young people do not consider the priesthood
or consecrated life is that they have
never been personally asked. Yet
almost ten percent of young adults
have considered priesthood or religious life.
Fact: Men first consider the priesthood because a priest encouraged
them to do so. Year over year,
around 70 percent of those ordained
report that it was a priest who
invited them to consider the priesthood. This fact should not be overlooked. The overall role of priests in
fostering vocations is significant.
Fact: The majority of priests do
not encourage men to consider the
priesthood. Surveys indicate that
only 30 percent of priests actively
invite men to consider the priesthood. If every priest takes seriously
the call to invite more young men
to consider the priesthood, the number of seminarians would increase.
The parish priest has proven over and over
again to be the number one influence on young
men considering the priesthood.
When asked: Were you encouraged to consider
the priesthood by any of these
people? Percentage of all responding
diocesan ordinands
Parish Priest 71%
Friend 48%
Parishioner 47%
Mother 37%
Teacher/Catechist 32%
Father 29%
Grandparent(s) 22%
Other Relative 17%
Youth Minister 21%
Religious Brother/Priest 13%
Campus Minister/School Chaplain 17%
Religious Sister 10%
Bishop 16%
Deacon 13%
Source: file:///C:/Users/weste/Downloads/VM_State-of-Vocations_Final-Med.pdf
https://vocationministry.com/stateofpriestlyvocationsreport/
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