Here's a great calendar for each day of Lent with great ideas from the Catholic Coalition on Climate Change.
http://site.adw.org/pdfs/2013-calendar-bw.pdf
Here's a great calendar for each day of Lent with great ideas from the Catholic Coalition on Climate Change.
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From realministry.org...
For Christmas, a priest friend of mine gave me the book, Forming Intentional Disciples: The Path to Knowing and Following Jesus (Sherry Weddell). I’ve only gotten through chapter 1, but I am blown away by the statistics Weddell presents. You can’t read this book without have a renewed sense of urgency to change. Here’s why: § Only 30% of Americans who were raised Catholic are still “practicing” – meaning they attend Mass at least once a month (pg. 24). § Nearly half of cradle Catholics who become “unaffiliated” are gone by age 18. (pg. 33) § Nearly 80% of cradle Catholic are gone by their early 20’s (pg. 33). § Pew researchers found that attending CCD, youth groups, and even Catholic high schools made little or no difference in whether or not an American Catholic teen ended up staying Catholic, becoming Protestant, or leaving to become “unaffiliated” (pg. 35). § Statistics show that children (86%) and teenagers (69%) attend Mass more regularly than adults (42%) (pg. 35). The data suggests very clearly that our models of church ministry are not effective. Weddell suggests that, “In the twenty-first century, cultural Catholicism is dead as a retention strategy” (pg. 39). More and more, I analyze my ministry in the church to determine if I am doing the right things. The “National Study on Youth and Religion” has already suggested that much of our efforts working with teenagers and children must be focused on parents. But, if only 42% of adults are practicing their faith on a regular basis, then focusing just on the parents that come on to church grounds is not enough. The key for Catholic leaders is to reach out to Catholics who are not showing their face at Mass except for maybe on Easter and Christmas. This is one piece of the New Evangelization. Pope John Paul II said it himself: “It is possible for baptized Catholics to be still without any explicit personal attachment to Jesus Christ; they only have the capacity to believe placed within them by Baptism and the presence of the Holy Spirit.” Weddell stated it very clearly: “The majority of Catholics in the United States are sacramentalized but not evangelized. They do not know that an explicit, personal attachment to Christ… is normative Catholicism as taught by apostles and reiterated time and time again by the popes, councils, and saints of the Church” (pg. 46). |
Parents must be acknowledged as the first and foremost educators of their children. Their role as educators is so decisive that scarcely anything can compensate for their failure in it. The right and duty of parents to give education is essential ...Familiaris Consortio (The Role of the Christian Family in the Modern World) 36. Helpful linksNathan Eten, Youth and Family Ministry CoordinatorParents are the primary catechists for their children. Here we hope you can find more support to live out our Catholic teachings and values to build up our young Church and the domestic church at home. Archives
May 2015
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