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Report from the Secretariat of Clergy, Consecrated Life and Vocations. Rev. John Guthrie, jguthrie@usccb.org. NOCERCC CONVENTION PASADENA, CA JANUARY 29, 2013. INFORMATION. Power Point Available On-Line: www.usccb.org/priesthood. OUTLINE. USCCB 2013-16 Strategic Plan New CCLV Study
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Report from the Secretariat of Clergy, Consecrated Life and Vocations Rev. John Guthrie,jguthrie@usccb.org NOCERCC CONVENTION PASADENA, CA JANUARY 29, 2013
INFORMATION Power Point Available On-Line: www.usccb.org/priesthood
OUTLINE • USCCB 2013-16 Strategic Plan • New CCLV Study • Key Concerns/Opportunities for USCCB • Hispanic Vocations • Demographics of Priesthood and Religious in the United States • Internationalization of Priesthood and Religious Life • Preaching Document
USCCB 2013-16 Strategic Plan New Evangelization • Faith • Worship • Witness
Implications for Continuing Education • 2013: Implementation of the Preaching Document • 2014-15: Annual Themes for Ongoing Formation
New CCLV Study Consideration of a Vocation to Priesthood and Religious Life among Never-married U.S. Catholics--CARA Survey Report
Key subgroups: most likely to have considered a vocation Most important: • Those who attended Catholic educational institutions at any level • Those who were encouraged to consider a vocation by any type of person • Those who personally know priests and men and women religious • Those involved in parish youth and young adult groups
Other Subgroups Also Important: • Weekly Mass attenders (now and in high school) • Those who lived in households where parents talked to them about religion at least once a week • Participants in prayer and devotional activities, groups, or programs (e.g., Bible study, Eucharistic adoration, retreats, and prayer groups) • Those belonging to a group that encourages devotion to Mary • Those who regularly read the Bible or pray with Scripture • Participants in World Youth Day or a National Catholic Youth Conference
Key Concerns/Opportunities for USCCB • Hispanic Vocations • Key Demographics • Internationalization of the Priesthood and Religious Life
Annual Surveys of New Priests and Religious (2012) PriestsRel.Catholics • Caucasian / White 71% 69% 58% • Hispanic / Latino(a)15% 8% 34% • Asian / Pacific Islander 9% 15% 4% • African / African American 3% 2% 3%
Country of Birth of Ordinands United States 71% Vietnam 5% Columbia 5% Mexico 4% Poland 3% Philippines 2% El Salvador 1% Other 9% Total Hispanics / Latinos: 15% U.S. Born Hispanics/ Latinos: <5%
Key Demographic: 70% of Hispanics in the United States are non- immigrant
Key Statistic: ONLY 3% OF HISPANIC CHILDREN AND TEENS ATTEND CATHOLIC GRADE OR HIGH SCHOOLS
DEMOGRAPHICS OF PRIESTHOOD AND RELIGIOUS IN THE UNITED STATES
Priesthood Demographics There are about 40,000 diocesan and religious-order priests in the United States Diocesan: 27,125 diocesan priests • About 20,000 are active • 30% are retired, sick, inactive • Average age: 62 years old Religious: 12,593 religious-order priests (Jesuits, Dominicans, Franciscans, etc.) • Average age: 66 years old
Priesthood Demographics • Looking back, there has been a 31% drop in the number of priests in the last 35 years • Looking ahead, there will be about 12,520 diocesan priests in active ministry by the year 2035, more than a third less than the numbers who were in active ministry in the year 2010
Retired Priests Many more priests are now in retirement: • In 1970 only 3% of responding priests were in retirement; in 2009, 22% are either retired or semi-retired • In 1970 less than 10% of priests were over the age of 65; now it is more than 40%
Actuarial Projections for the National Religious Retirement Office Report available at: www.usccb.org/nrro
Demographics for Religious COMBINED
Internationalization of Priesthood Because of dropping numbers, Bishops are relying more and more on priests who are from outside the country Percentages: • In 1985: 93% born in US; 6% born in Europe or Canada; 1% international • In 2009: 89% born in US; 6 % born in Europe or Canada; 5% international
Internationalization of Priesthood International priests tend to be younger so the trend will continue: • 51% of all international priests were ordained in 1992 or after (compared to 15% of those from the US) • 98% of all international priests are in active ministry (compared to 77% of US-born priests)
Internationalization of Priesthood In addition: • 25% of all seminarians studying in US are foreign-born and • 29% of newly ordained are born outside the US
USCCB Goal: • Revise Guidelines for the Reception of International Pastoral Ministers • CCLV presenting plan for document in March • Completion by September 2014
Key Workshops • Seminar for Writing Policy April 24-26 Sacred Heart Institute, Huntington, NY • Seminar on Assessing and Welcoming International Clergy June 10 St. John Vianney Center & CCLV, San Diego, CA
Preaching Document PDF available at: www.usccb.org/priesthood
Preaching Document • 30 years since Fulfilled in Your Hearing • Goal: Improve the Quality of Preaching at Sunday Mass • Biblical, Liturgical & Catechetical • Apprenticing to Jesus, the Master Preacher • Spirituality of the Preacher • An opportunity for NOCERCC
Preaching the Mystery of Faith:A USCCB Conference for Teachers of Homiletics • June 24-25, University of Notre Dame • Registration available through CCLV • Limited Space Available for • Seminary Homiletics Professors • Diaconate Formation Teachers • Continuing Education Presenters
Secretariat ofClergy, Consecrated Life and Vocations www.usccb.org/cclv email: cclv@usccb.org