No Latin Mass For These Latin Masses

Michael Paulson discusses a new Pew survey showing the Catholic Church on the decline in Latin America, where evangelicals have made major inroads in recent years:

PR_14.11.13_latinAmerica-overview-18A sweeping new survey, conducted by the Pew Research Center, finds that 69 percent of Latin American adults say they are Catholic, down from an estimated 90 percent for much of the 20th century. The decline appears to have accelerated recently: Eight[y]-four percent of those surveyed said they were raised Catholic, meaning there has been a 15-percentage-point drop-off in one generation. The findings are not a total surprise — it has been evident for some time that evangelical, and particularly Pentecostal, churches are growing in Latin America, generally at the expense of Catholicism. But the Pew study, which was conducted by in-person interviews with 30,000 adults in 18 countries and Puerto Rico, provides significant evidence for the trend, and shows that it is both broad and rapid.

The region remains home to over 40 percent of the world’s Catholics, but the trend is unmistakeable. Adam Taylor adds:

Their reasons for leaving one Christian church and joining another are complicated:

Across the region, the report found, more than 80 percent of former Catholics who had joined the Protestant church did so because they were seeking a “personal connection with God,” while 69 percent said they enjoyed the new style of worship at their new church. Fifty-eight percent said they had converted after the church reached out to them, the report noted. Pew’s report also points to a smaller, yet still considerable, number of people who don’t profess a religion — the “unaffiliated.” These people tend to be younger than Catholics and Protestants and don’t necessarily see themselves as agnostic or atheist: Most just have “no particular religion,” the report notes.

Peter Blair illustrates how the selection of Pope Francis was partly to stem the tide:

[I]t’s possible to read much of Francis’s papacy so far as an attempt to appeal to Catholics and former Catholics in his home region. The friendly, personable style of communication, his closeness with evangelical leaders both before and after his election as Pope (Argentine evangelicals said Francis was “an answer to our prayers” upon his election), his forthright attitude towards the Devil, even his lukewarm or perhaps hostile attitude to Pope Benedict’s liturgical reforms—all of this is consistent with an attempt to stem a growing defection to Protestant churches.

Why The Catholic Hierarchy Will Lose

This is a terrific interview of the embattled Archbishop of Minneapolis and St Paul (he is credibly accused of covering up child-abuse and having inappropriate relations with other men) that is worth watching in full as well as the extract below. But the interaction below truly reveals how morally bankrupt Church teaching on homosexuality is. In fact, even Nienstedt concedes that he understands how the church’s position – that all gays must remain celibate for life – does not make any sense when given the actual lives of actual human beings:

Here’s the transcript of that section:

N: Homosexuals need to lead chaste lives.

L: They need to lead celibate lives?

N: Well, yes.

L: Okay. Does that seem reasonable to you, that we should all lead the lives of priests?

N: Well… um…

L: Tell me, archbishop, why should I lead the life of a priest?

A: Because it is of your nature to, um, express yourself sexually through a committed relationship.

L: I am. I’ve been with the same partner and husband now for 21 years.

And there you have it. Someone who expresses their sexuality through a committed relationship of 21 years has no place in the Catholic church if they are gay. In fact, it seems that the more committed the relationship, the greater the penalty. Gay men and women who have married in a civil ceremony find themselves singled out for discrimination and expulsion. Here’s the latest example via New Ways Ministry:

Colin Collette was the beloved music director at Holy Family Church in Inverness for seventeen years, but lost that job when he became engaged to his longtime partner last week. The couple was traveling in Rome, when Collette’s partner proposed in front of St. Peter’s Basilica, and then they posted the good news on Facebook. The Daily Herald details what happened next:

“On Sunday, after leading the music for all five Masses at Holy Family, Collette said church pastor [Father] Terry Keehan asked him to come to his office. ‘He said, ‘I know this is something you’ve been longing for a long time, and in light of this I’d be happy to accept your resignation,’ ‘ Collette said, recounting what Keehan told him. Collette said at first he considered resigning, but something inside him told him he shouldn’t because he had done nothing wrong. He left Keehan’s office without resigning, but was fired Monday, he said.”

According to Collette, his relationship was never secret and his partner, who is Catholic, was an active member of the parish and known to Keehan. The music director cleared out his office on Tuesday

One reason I veer toward greater religious freedom than many of my fellow gays is that I believe that perhaps it is only through witnessing these extreme injustices and inhumanity that the people of the church will start demanding a change in these practices. These instances tell the world something about Catholicism – its continuing cruelty and disdain for gay people’s actual lives. Many, many Catholics do not think of gay people that way. It’s time their disproportionately gay clergy did the same.