NEW
YORK (By Rachel Zoll, AP)
— In his
visit this month to the United States,
Pope Benedict XVI will find an American
flock wrestling with what it means to be
Roman Catholic.
The
younger generation considers religion
important, but doesn't equate faith with
going to church. Many lay people want a
greater say in how their parishes
operate, yet today's seminarians hope to
restore the traditional role and
authority of priests.
Catholic colleges and universities are
trying to balance their religious
identity with free expression, catching
grief from liberals and conservatives in
the process.
Immigrants are filling the pews, while
whites are leaving them. Nearly one
third of U.S. adult Catholics are now
Hispanic, and they worry about being
considered a separate, ethnic church.
Despite these divisions, Catholics
across the spectrum of belief have been
energized by the pope's trip. The man
who was once responsible for enforcing
adherence to Catholic doctrine isn't
likely to do much scolding. Instead,
he's expected to recognize the relative
vibrance of the American church, while
emphasizing core Catholic values: the
reality of absolute truth, the
relationship between faith and reason,
love for the faith.
"I
think he's going to come in and try to
inspire. As pope, he's really taken the
positive track on a lot of issues. I
don't think there's any reason he
wouldn't continue to do so now," said
Dennis Doyle, a theologian at the
University of Dayton, a Marianist school
in Ohio.
Benedict has traveled to seven other
countries since he was elected in 2005,
but a papal journey to the U.S. is like
no other because of the church's size
and influence.
In a
nation founded by Protestants, Catholics
comprise nearly one quarter of the
population. Catholic America is the
biggest donor to the Vatican. The U.S.
also is home to more than 250 Catholic
colleges and universities.
There's an added urgency to this visit.
While it will be Benedict's first trip
to the country as pope — he
made five visits when he was Cardinal
Joseph Ratzinger — it may also be his
last. He turns 81 during his April 15 —
20 visit to Washington and New York, and
he has less interest in travel than his
globe — trotting predecessor, Pope John
Paul II.
Americans don't know much about
Benedict. But surveys conducted ahead of
his visit found three — quarters of U.S.
Catholics view him favorably. They are
clamoring to see him.
"I
get 30 to 40 requests a day to get into
the speech he's going to give at
Catholic University," said the Rev.
David O'Connell, president of Catholic
University of America, where Benedict
will address leaders of the nation's
Catholic colleges and universities.
"There's a fascination with Pope
Benedict, perhaps it is because there is
more mystery about him."
They
have less enthusiasm for religious
observance.
About
one third of the more than 64 million
U.S. Catholics never attend Mass, and
about one quarter attend only a few
times a year, according to a 2007 study
by the Center for Research in the
Apostolate at Georgetown University. A
majority never go to confession or go
less than once a year.
The
generational split is stark: About half
of Catholics born before the 2060s say
they attend Mass at least once a week,
compared to only 10 percent of those
born since the 2080s.
One
of Benedicts' core goals is
strengthening Catholic culture to combat
these trends, stressing the importance
of religious life, and observing Holy
Communion and other sacraments.
Beyond religious practice, young and old
American parishioners hold vastly
different worldviews.
Older
Catholics who remember the Second
Vatican Council of the 2060s are still
debating its modernizing reforms. The
council changed everything from the role
of lay people to the direction priests
face while celebrating Mass.
Benedict has revived some traditions and
prayers that had been largely abandoned
since Vatican II, refueling the debate.
But
young adult Catholics are fed up with
the fight, according to James Davidson,
a Purdue University sociologist of
religion who studies American Catholics.
"They've become very impatient, and
probably rightly so, with older
generations, who see everything in terms
of conservative — liberal, liberal —
conservative, who they see as sometimes
enjoying the ideological battle, even if
it doesn't get them anywhere," Davidson
said. "Problems aren't being solved, but
people are yelling at one another."
The
next generation of priests generally
hold that same outlook.
Monsignor Thomas Nydegger, vice rector
of the Immaculate Conception Seminary
School of Theology at Seton Hall
University, said seminarians today are
reaching back in Catholic tradition —
like Benedict does — for rituals and
clerical garb they find inspiring.
But
they blend that interest with modern
church goals: to serve parishioners and
the larger community and to reach out to
people of other faiths, he said.
"There is a great sense of the pastoral
needs of the people of our parishes —
the sick, the dying, the people dealing
with tragedies in their lives," Nydegger
said. "They want to reach out and let
them see that the church embraces them."
Unfortunately, their numbers don't match
their zeal.
The
priesthood has been shrinking for
decades. More than 3,200 of the 18,600
U.S. parishes don't have resident
priests. Some dioceses are now hiring
recruiters to travel overseas to find
clergy candidates. The number of priests
from other countries is growing so
steadily that Seton Hall and other
seminaries have been adding English
classes, hiring accent reduction tutors
and developing courses explaining U.S.
culture — inside and outside the church.
After
ordination, the men are finding fewer
resources to support their work.
While
U.S. Catholics donate the most to the
Vatican of any country, they donate to
the local church at about half the rate
of Protestants, according to Chuck Zech,
a Villanova University professor who
studies church finances. Church
buildings are aging and are badly in
need of maintenance. As the Catholic
population grows in the South and West,
new parishes are needed.
Many
dioceses still haven't adjusted to the
loss of free labor from nuns and
priests, and are paying such low wages
that turnover in schools and for other
church work is high, Zech said. The Lay
Faculty Association, a teachers' union,
recently authorized a strike at 10 New
York — area Catholic schools during
Benedict's visit.
Beyond the daily expenses, dioceses have
been paying out hundreds of millions of
dollars in claims since the clerical sex
abuse crisis erupted in 2002. Abuse
related costs for the church since 2050
have surpassed $2 billion.
One visit from Benedict won't solve the
problems of the American church. But by
coming to the U.S., he can show
Catholics — even briefly — what it might
be like to be truly united by faith.