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The
data was gathered by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops’
(USCCB) Secretariat for Vocations and analyzed by the Center for Applied
Research in the Apostolate (CARA), the Catholic Church research group
based at
Responses
to the survey were submitted by 233 seminarians from 98 of the 195 dioceses
and 24 of the more than 200 religious orders of men in the
A
separate survey response was submitted by 144 diocesan vocations directors
and heads of 44 religious orders who estimated 359 potential ordinands.
Given that about 25 percent of the dioceses and 90 per cent of the religious
orders did not respond to the survey it appears that the number of ordinands
remains steady. According to the Official Catholic Directory (OCD),
the number ordained last year was 438. In 2004, it was 454; in 2003,
472. OCD numbers for 2006 will not be available until next year.
The
largest archdiocesan/diocesan class was in the Archdiocese of Newark,
the ninth largest archdiocese/diocese with 17 men slated for ordination.
The next largest was the Archdiocese of Washington, 12 ordinands;
Archdiocese of Denver, 11 ordinands; and the
Diocese of Rockford, Illinois, 10 ordinands.
In
Findings
from the survey also indicated that the percentage of ordinands
who are Asian (13) is higher than the U.S. Catholic Asian population
overall (2); the percentage of Hispanics (12) is lower than U.S. Catholic
Hispanic population (28); the percentage of African Americans (1) is
lower than the U.S. Catholic African American population (4).
Of
ordinands born outside the
The
percentage of foreign-born ordinands increased
from 24 percent in 1998, to 30 percent in 2006.
More
than half the ordinands attended a Catholic elementary school and about
75 percent of the ordinands reported having
full-time work experience before entering the seminary, most often in
education.
Almost
ten percent had served in the U.S. Armed Forces, more than a third of
them in the Navy.
Six
percent of the ordinands are converts to Catholicism.
More
than one-third of the ordinands attended a World Youth Day and more than half had
served as an altar server, lector, Eucharistic minister, or participated
in a parish spiritual retreat. Two-thirds of the ordinands
were initially invited to consider the priesthood by a priest.
Bishop
Blase Cupich of
The
entire report can be found at www.usccb.org/vocations.