Africa, Asia see boom in Catholic priests as numbers fall in Europe – Nicole Winfield

Cardinal Oswald Gracias of MumbaiThe number of Catholic priests in Africa and Asia has shot up over the past decade while decreasing in Europe, mirroring trends in the numbers of Catholic faithful that helped lead to the election of Pope Francis as the first non-European pope in over a millennium.

The Vatican on Monday released statistics on the state of the Catholic Church in the world, showing a 39.5 percent increase in the number of priests in Africa and a 32 percent hike in Asia from 2001 to 2011. The number of priests in Europe fell by 9 percent, while remaining stable in the Americas. Worldwide, priest numbers were up 2.1 percent.

Meanwhile, the number of Catholics overall — or those who have been baptized — rose from 1.196 billion in 2010 to 1.214 billion in 2011. Given the world’s population increase, though, the overall proportion of Catholics remained essentially unchanged at 17.5 percent. 

For years, the Vatican has been battling a drop-off in vocations and baptisms in Europe and North America, while seeing a boom in the developing world. Retired Pope Benedict XVI spent most of his eight-year pontificate trying to revive the Catholic faith in these once-traditionally Christian lands.

Francis was elected the first pope from the Americas in part riding a wave of demands that the Catholic Church hierarchy better reflect the demographics of today’s church, where two-thirds of the world’s Catholics live in the southern hemisphere. Yet while the pope hails from Argentina, most of the Vatican leadership is European, Francis SJthe majority of cardinals who elected him are European and the bulk of the world’s bishops — 70 percent — continue to hail from Europe and the Americas, not Africa or Asia.

One bright growth spot for the Church in Europe and the Americas is the increase in so-called permanent deacons, who can be married men who can preach: Their numbers shot up 43 percent in Europe over the decade, and in the Americas went from 19,100 in 2001 to 26,000 in 2011.

While the number of nuns rose in Africa and Asia over the past decade, their numbers couldn’t offset the steep, 10 percent global drop in sisters of religious orders, with Europe registering a 22 percent decline, Oceania a 21 percent drop and the Americas down 17 percent.The situation of religious sisters in the United States is particularly dramatic: The Vatican in recent years has launched two investigations into their plight, one focusing on their quality of life to determine how to reverse their decline, and one into doctrinal problems in the main umbrella group of women’s religious congregations. – Star Tribune, 13 May 2013

Benedict returns secretly to his Vatican hideout, hoping to avoid arrest in child abuse cases.

Pope Emeritus Benedict returns secretly to his Vatican hideout from the Papal Palace of Castel Gandolfo by air, hoping to avoid arrest in the many pending child abuse cases. Pope Francis, who walks to work in boots, has decided to stay in the Vatican’s guest house and not move into the Apostolic Palace.

One Response

  1. Catholics seem to have got themselves a Marxist pope. It may not bode well for them in the long run especially as Francis has exhibited hard-core fundamentalist inclinations.

    Archbishop of Mumbai Oswald Gracias becoming an advisor to Francis is not in India’s interest. The man is a untruthful dissembler who has no sympathy for Hindus–he is a Goan Catholic after all–and no respect for Hindu Dharma.

    According to the Mumbai Catholic laity, there have been land scams in the Mumbai diocese. And there are the usual sex scandals (which are still kept well hidden in the Indian church).

    Oswald Gracias was involved in producing the New Indian Bible which contained numerous Upanishadic quotations and a drawing of Jesus dancing on the cross. It was subsequently withdrawn and Oswald Gracias also denied knowledge of it though he was allegedly behind its production.

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