Religion
Related: About this forumClosing Catholic parishes is painful - but somebody has to do it
In case anyone was wondering, the Roman Catholic Church in the United States is having a big, big problem. And that problem isn't just limited to the USA, either. People are leaving the church. For what? I don't know, but they are leaving. It's starting to look like something that can't be turned around, actually. The article below lays out some of the numbers (in boldface) for the US Northeast and Midwest. Take a look and ponder this dilemma the RCC is facing. Maybe its time is just flat running out.
https://www.americamagazine.org/faith/2018/05/18/closing-parishes-painful-theres-better-way-do-it
Like many Catholics across the Northeast and Midwest, parishioners in Pittsburgh are adjusting to a difficult new reality. On April 28 Bishop David A. Zubik announced plans to reduce the dioceses 188 parishes to 57 by 2023. The parish closings follow years of falling Mass attendancethe diocese reports it is down by more than 40 percent since 2000and decreased participation in the sacraments. The number of priests in the diocese is also expected to fall from 200 today to 112 in 2025.
This situation is not unique to Pittsburgh. The Archdiocese of Hartford is in the process of merging dozens of parishes and expects its 212 parishes to be consolidated into 85 over the next decade. Last year, the Archdiocese of Chicago, where an estimated 240 priests will be available to serve as pastors in 2030, launched Renew My Church, a major consolidation and renewal initiative for its 351 parishes.
Parish closures and mergers are painful, as anyone knows who has seen the doors close on the church where they were married or were baptized as a child. Parishioners feel they have lost their spiritual homes. But too often, coverage of these plans fails to recognize the severe constraints dioceses confront. Many of these churches were built at a time when seminaries were full or when it made sense to have clusters of ethnic parishes serving waves of new immigrants. Today, the church does not have the personnel to staff these parishes or the resources to maintain their properties. According to the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate at Georgetown University, in 1965 there were 1,289 parishioners per priest; that ratio is now 2,600 to 1; 20 percent of parishes lack a resident pastor, compared with 5 percent 50 years ago.
RKP5637
(67,112 posts)MineralMan
(147,606 posts)to their lives. I suspect the latter is more common.
RKP5637
(67,112 posts)The Velveteen Ocelot
(120,940 posts)Other denominations (maybe most of them) built a lot of churches years ago, and for many of the same reasons cited in the article. But now the buildings, built in the late 19th or early 20th century, are deteriorating and have become expensive to maintain, while their members have either stopped attending church altogether or are going to the big, fancy non-denominational mega-churches that have popped up everywhere. These churches are more like movie theatres or sports arenas, seat a thousand or more people, and have all the latest audio-visual bells and whistles. They are attractive to people with short attention spans and who revel in bad pop music, lots of noisy audience participation opportunities, plus the pastors' promises that they'll become rich as a symbol that God loves them (as long as they contribute generously to the needs of the church and its pastor). What the RCC and other traditional denominations lose in membership is being gained by the Prosperity Gospel crowd.
MineralMan
(147,606 posts)as the RCC. Typically, for protestant churches, each church is owned by its congregation. If that congregation slips in membership, there may simply not be enough people to support the costs of keeping that church open. That's especially true of that particular church needs substantial renovations due to the age of its building or other factors.
Mega churches often don't have that disadvantage. Often, they are located in former commercial properties which have lots of space, but not much character. Sometimes, they're owned by the congregation, and sometimes the church is in leased property. Instead of a shrinking congregation, many of those, through more attractive services, etc., are growing in size.
But, the RCC owns its buildings collectively. They belong to the diocese, in most cases, or the archdiocese. When revenues drop from a parish, for whatever reason, there is a financial imbalance, and churches with larger congregations find themselves paying for churches with shrinking congregations, but increasing costs. So, we have parish mergers or just shutdowns of parish churches.
The central organization structure makes such shrinking more obvious and affects the entire organization, rather than just one, independently owned church.
murielm99
(31,447 posts)The United Methodist Church owns all the church buildings, even if they were financed and built by the local congregation. There are other denominations who have the same setup. I believe the Episcopalians have gone to court over this. Presbyterians do not own their churches locally, either.
MineralMan
(147,606 posts)The Velveteen Ocelot
(120,940 posts)The Lutherans went on a building spree in the late '50s and early '60s (they seemed to favor Brutalism, and wound up with a lot of butt-ugly churches). I believe their churches are owned or at least controlled by the congregations, but if a congregation dissolves, the church reverts back to the synod. The Episcopal church operates more like the Catholic church the sense that the buildings belong to the diocese and not to the individual congregation, and the diocese has the authority to disband a congregation and sell the church (I know of one recent instance of that situation; the beautiful old church is now a performing arts center - where I will be attending a recital this afternoon).
Megachurches are a scourge - architecturally, artistically and socially.
MineralMan
(147,606 posts)murielm99
(31,447 posts)It is true of Lutherans, Methodists and Church of the Brethren. I don't know how Episcopalians handle things, but I have a hunch they are centrally controlled.
The Velveteen Ocelot
(120,940 posts)There are dioceses that manage local churches, a governing body for the entire denomination, and there's also an Archbishop (the guy who spoke at Meghan and Harry's wedding), though I think his position is more spiritual than managerial.
Major Nikon
(36,900 posts)However around where I live in North Texas they are still building big ones. You have to remember this is an area where the likes of Copeland still has lots of sheep that need shearing.
SWBTATTReg
(24,128 posts)have been converted for other purposes. At least they're not letting them sit down abandoned and unprotected as they did at one time, in other parts of the city (stained glass windows broken etc.).
MineralMan
(147,606 posts)Igel
(36,118 posts)trotsky
(49,533 posts)Are people leaving schools because they protect and enable rapists?
Voltaire2
(14,724 posts)civil forfeiture, as assets of a criminal enterprise.
The proceeds should then be transferred to a trust fund to compensate the victims of abuse.