Factors for a vocation to celibacy
By Kevin in Undivided Heart, vocationblog.com entitled 2010 Profession Class, By the Numbers
What do we know about the women religious in the United States who made their final vows this past year? [2010]
Plenty!
The Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate (CARA) released a report last week on the women who professed perpetual vows in 2010. This report, commissioned by the Secretariat of Clergy, Consecrated Life, and Vocations of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), contains an overwhelming amount of statistics and demographic data.
Here, I will provide a “top ten” list of findings that I found most significant:
(1) 77% of the sisters have three or more siblings (the average was five), while only one sister reported being an only child.
Need I say any more about the critically important role of large Catholic families as fertile ground for religious vocations? The generosity of Catholic parents who are open to life speaks volumes to their children.
(2) Prayer matters.
74% had attended a retreat prior to entering the community, and two-thirds of them prayed the Rosary and participated in Eucharistic adoration on a regular basis before entering religious life. While this is a positive stat, I hope that the other one-third picked up these religious practices after they joined!
(3) 52% reported that they were encouraged by other religious to consider religious life.
And nine out of ten reported that they were encouraged by someone in their life. This stat shows the importance of inviting others to “come and see,” and of supporting them in their discernment process. This is especially important in light of the next item.
(4) 66% reported that they were discouraged from considering a vocation by one or more persons.
Even more, 51% reported that they faced opposition within their own families! It makes one wonder how we can make families a more hospitable seedbed for vocations. Certainly a renewal of faith and sense of vocation among Catholic parents is crucial if we are to reverse this trend.
Read the rest here: http://vocationblog.com/2011/02/2010-profession-class-by-the-numbers/
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