‘Sober’
report on religious orders
includes profile of newest members
By Patricia Zapor
Catholic News Service
BALTIMORE (CNS) — Religious orders may be shrinking
in size and their members aging fast, but a study of their newest members
offers signs for hope, Holy Cross Brother Paul Bednarczyk, said executive
director of the National Religious Vocations Conference.
The “Recent Vocations to Religious Life” study conducted for
the vocations conference by the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate
at Georgetown University was the first of its scale ever done, Brother
Bednarczyk said.
The study is not related to the Vatican’s ongoing apostolic visitation,
an analysis of women religious in the United States. The vocations conference
study was well under way when the apostolic visitation was announced last
year.
Brother Bednarczyk called the results of the CARA study “sobering,”
but at the same time, emphasized that the responses to the survey engender
great hope for the future of religious life.
“Our study has confirmed that part of the richness of religious
life lies in its diversity of charisms, lifestyles and ministries that
have always been a hallmark of religious institutes in this country,”
he told the U.S. bishops when they gathered in Baltimore last November
for their fall general assembly.
Among the “sobering” statistics Brother Bednarczyk cited:
• The number of men and women in religious life has decreased by
63 percent since the peak in the mid-1960s, from 23,000 priests to 13,000;
from 12,500 brothers to 5,000; and from 180,000 sisters to 59,000.
• About 75 percent of the men and more than 90 percent of women
religious are age 60 or older. Among men and women religious under age
60, only 1 percent are younger than 40.
But he said comparing current numbers to the peaks of the 1960s isn’t
the most realistic standard.
“The truth is that throughout history men and women religious have
always made up a small percentage of our Catholic population,” he
said. “The temptation is to compare the high numbers of the ‘50s
and ‘60s as the norm, when in actuality, they were an anomaly.”
Among the newest members of religious orders — those who professed
vows within the last 15 years — a higher percentage are Hispanic,
Asian and African or African-America, Brother Bednarczyk said. And they
are older and more likely to be college graduates with career experience.
He noted that religious organizations with the most success in attracting
new members have a more traditional style of religious life, in which
members live in community, participate in daily Eucharist, pray the Divine
Office and engage in devotional practices together. They also are more
likely to wear a religious habit.
He said the study is a snapshot of who is entering religious life currently,
not necessarily a predictor of future generations.
Brother Bednarczyk said despite the challenges identified by the study,
it “affirms that the Holy Spirit continues to inspire and guide
the Church as evidenced by the founding of new religious institutes, the
multitude of charitable works established by religious and, most encouraging,
the zeal and passion for the Gospel and hope for the future embraced by
our newer members.”
He asked the bishops for their prayerful support of vocations to consecrated
life, as well as their cooperation in promoting it “as a viable,
joyful and grace-filled option for the men and women in your dioceses.”
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