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Year of the New Priest
Ordinations Up, Average Age Down
BY TIM DRAKE Register Senior Writer
June 14-20, 2009 Issue |
Posted 6/5/09 at 7:05 AM
WASHINGTON â When Pope Benedict XVI
inaugurates the Year of the Priest on June 19, American Catholics will have
specific news to celebrate.
There are more priests being
ordained in the United States, and the average age of men being ordained is
getting younger.
The Year of the Priest begins on the
Solemnity of the Sacred Heart and is dedicated in a special way to St. John
Vianney, the Curé of Ars, 150 years after his death.
St. John has been the patron of
parish priests. This year he will be made patron of all priests. And itâs a
good year for it, in terms of numbers, according to the U.S. bishops, who
released the annual data on members of the latest ordination class at the end
of April.
The survey, âThe Class of 2009:
Survey of Ordinands to the Priesthood,â was conducted by the Georgetown
University-based Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate (CARA).
This yearâs class is 465 strong. Thatâs
up from 401 a year ago. The largest classes are in the Archdioceses of Newark,
N.J. (13), Chicago (10) and Washington (eight). The Archdiocese of Portland,
Ore., is ordaining seven, its largest class since the early 1970s. The Diocese
of Cincinnati is also ordaining seven. The Diocese of Memphis, Tenn., is
ordaining six.
When Father John Vianney was
ordained in 1815, he was older than most new priests â 27. But thatâs young by
todayâs standards.
Whereas the average age at
ordination was 37 in 2006, this year the median age for diocesan ordinands is
32. Between 1998 and 2006, the average ordination age increased 2 1/2 years. The average age has been
declining since 2006.
âOne thing thatâs not apparent yet
in the numbers â because when you look at ordination class, youâre looking at
men who entered seminary seven to nine years ago â is the drop in age,â said
Father Len Plazewski, vocation director for the Diocese of St. Petersburg,
Fla., and president of the National Conference of Diocesan Vocation Directors. âIn the next couple of years, it [the graph
of the median age] will look like a ski slope. Youâll see more men being ordained
in their 20s.â
Father Plazewski said that vocation
directors first noted the trend about four years ago.
âWe
noticed who was entering seminary,â he said. âMore guys are entering after high
school or within a year or two after college.â
Father
Brian Christensen, vocation director for the Diocese of Rapid City, S.D., said
thatâs certainly the case in his diocese.
âCurrently
in formation, I have 10 guys and three applicants,â said Father Christensen.
âOf those, only one is above the age of 28. At places like St. Paul Seminary in
St. Paul, Minn., you can see the preponderance of guys are younger.â
Asked
whatâs responsible for the trend, Father Plazewski said that itâs somewhat of a
mystery.
âIt
has to be a move of the Spirit,â he said. âYou also have to give some credit to
Pope John Paul II.
âMy
sense is that the seminary formation programs are far more sound than they were
10 to 15 years ago. The Vatican seminary visitation report also mentioned this
new generation of young rectors,â said Father Plazewski.
More than likely, noted Father
Plazewski, young men visiting seminaries are meeting rectors and other
seminarians who are much like themselves age-wise, and that positive experience
encourages them to begin attending sooner.
Personal Influences
In
his day, St. John Vianney lived in a culture that supported the faith and the
priesthood.
Father
Andrew Ricci, vocation director for the Diocese of Superior, Wis., who has
tried multiple methods of vocations outreach, said todayâs youth need to find
that culture elsewhere â including YouTube, where he posts vocation-related
material.
Nothing,
however, can match the power of the personal invitation, he says.
âThe
personal invitation is absolutely essential beyond belief,â said Father Ricci.
âWhen someone is inviting, it presupposes that thereâs going to be a personal
relationship there. Inviting someone shows that you recognize their gifts and
how those gifts are meant to give glory to God. Jesus called people by name.â
An
application of St. John Vianneyâs life is his commitment to the seminary,
despite others telling him to abandon the idea.
One
disturbing finding from the CARA report was that nearly 45% of priests who were
ordained this year said that they had been discouraged from considering the
priesthood. Of those, nearly six in 10 said a parent or family member was the
source of the discouragement. While 51% said that a friend or classmate had
counseled them against the priesthood, 15% said that a priest or other
clergyman had.
Father
Ricci remembered the response of his father to the news that his only son
wanted to pursue the priesthood. The conversation took place while he was
running errands with his father.
âHe
took a deep breath, looked down, and said, âSon, Iâll be honest with you.
Someday, Iâd like to hold my grandson and Iâd like to know that he carries our
last name.â Then he said, âBut, son, thatâs what I want. What I want is not
important here. If this is really what you want to do, then you need to know
that I would be honored to support you in that,ââ recalled Father Ricci.
Father
Christensen said that as vocation director he has seen families who are âtepid
at best and outright opposed at worst.â
âWe
had a man in seminary whose parents outright disapproved,â he said. âAfter
three years of seminary, he left, but I donât think the desire has left his
heart.
âIn
some cases, itâs a parentâs desire for grandchildren,â said Father Christensen.
âIn other cases, even though they might admire priests and see the Church as
positive, thereâs a fear of the unknown and potential loneliness. Yet, another
CARA survey showed that more than 90% of priests say they are happy in their
vocation.â
âFishers of Menâ
The
Year of the Priest can build on momentum that is already under way.
The
CARA report has consistently noted that a significant proportion of ordinands
cite being encouraged by a fellow priest to consider the priesthood as one of
the primary sources of discerning their vocation. In the latest report, 80% of
ordinands report being encouraged to consider the priesthood by a priest; 50%
report friends, parish members or a parent encouraged them.
By
comparison, relatively few say that television, radio, billboards or other
vocational advertisements were instrumental in their discernment. But 76% of
ordinands had reported seeing the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishopsâ âFishers
of Menâ promotional DVD.
Father
Christensen recalled attending church and a Catholic high school, but it wasnât
until he was in the Air Force that a chaplain asked him if he had considered
the priesthood.
âWe
need to do a better job of inviting others to consider the priesthood,â he
said. âIf someone had said something, I might have considered it sooner.â
Tim Drake is based in
St. Joseph, Minnesota.
Study Finds More Foreign-Born Priests
Over the past
four years, the report from the Georgetown University-based Center for Applied
Research in the Apostolate (CARA) has shown that approximately one quarter of
ordinands were born outside the U.S., with the largest numbers coming from
Mexico, Vietnam, Poland and the Philippines.
According to this yearâs statistics,
the ordination class of 2009 claims 11% Asian-born men, though the percentage
of Asian Catholics in the U.S. is only 3%; 6% of the class is from
Vietnam, and 2% are from the Philippines.
Yet, Father Len Plazewski, vocation
director for the Diocese of St. Petersburg, Fla., and president of the National
Conference of Diocesan Vocation Directors, noted, while the priesthood
certainly is more ethnically diverse, the way that CARA asks the question
doesnât allow ordinands to make a distinction between someone who has lived in
the U.S. for most of his life or is a more recent immigrant.
âWe have five seminarians who are
foreign-born, but all of them grew up in our diocese,â said Father Plazewski.
âThat question needs to be a bit more nuanced.â
â Tim Drake
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