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Catholics See Difference In Loyalty To Faith, Hierarchy According To Poll

Catholic Poll Faith

First Posted: 10/25/11 05:08 PM ET Updated: 12/25/11 05:12 AM ET

By David Gibson and Kevin Eckstrom
Religion News Service

WASHINGTON (RNS) American Catholics have by and large remained loyal to the core teachings and sacraments of their faith, but increasingly tune out the hierarchy on issues of sexual morality, according to a new study released Oct. 24.

The sweeping survey shows that over the last quarter-century, U.S. Catholics have become increasingly likely to say that individuals, not church leaders, have the final say on abortion, homosexuality and divorce and remarriage.

That trend holds true across generational and ideological divides, and even applies to weekly Mass attenders, according to the survey, which has been conducted every six years since 1987.

“It's the core creedal sacramental issues that really matter to American Catholics, more than the external trappings of church authority,” said Michele Dillon, a sociologist at the University of New Hampshire and a co-author of the report, in releasing the report at the National Press Club.

At the same time, the authors note, Catholic loyalty and identity remain remarkably strong, even as 83 percent of Catholics say the clergy sexual abuse scandal has hurt the bishops' moral and political credibility.

“By and large, Catholics like being Catholic,” said co-author Mary Gautier of Georgetown University's Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate.

The report identified two-thirds of U.S. Catholics as “moderately committed,” a group that inched up in size as the share of “highly committed” has shrunk from 27 percent in 1987 to 19 percent this year.

More than half (56 percent) say they would “never leave” the Catholic Church, and one in three say it is unlikely they would leave. Three-quarters of respondents said “being Catholic is a very important part of who I am.”

Across the board, Catholics tend to agree on four key markers -- the resurrection of Jesus (73 percent), helping the poor (67 percent), devotion to the Virgin Mary (64 percent) and the centrality of the sacraments (63 percent) -- as core to their Catholicism.

Opposition to abortion (40 percent) and to same-sex marriage (35 percent) and the authority of the Vatican (30 percent) and support for a celibate, all-male clergy (21 percent) were further down the list.

The issue of homosexuality showed one of the largest gaps between the pulpit and the pews. The portion of Catholics who say church leaders have “the final say” on homosexuality has plunged by half, from 32 percent to 16 percent, over the past 25 years, while those who say individuals make the final call has shot up from 39 percent to 57 percent.

Dillon noted that other issues have remained relatively stable, which leads her to conclude that Catholics are taking their cues from the larger culture, much like they did on birth control.

“They've made up their own minds on that issue and I think they see same-sex marriage in the same way,” she said. “It's reflective of the culture but also indicative of Catholic autonomy.”

The survey also confirms that American Catholicism is also increasingly Latino, with about a third of Catholics in the United States identifying as Hispanic -- a figurethat has tripled in size in the past 25 years.

Even as Catholic loyalty persists, weekly Mass attendance continued to decline, from 44 percent to 31 percent. Those who go less than once a month grew, from 26 percent to 47 percent.

“Monthly Mass has become the new weekly,” Dillon said. “Catholics are still remaining in touch with the sacraments and the Mass even though they're not saying they need to go because it's an externally imposed mandate from the hierarchy.”

Ironically, while the bishops may not appreciate the growing distance between the pulpit and the pew, that gap may have helped shield American Catholicism from some of the fallout from the abuse scandal.

Roughly one in three Catholics give the bishops good-to-excellent marks in handling the crisis, with everyone else giving them poor-to-fair marks. Those numbers are only slightly better for weekly Mass-goers.

The loosening ties to the authority of the hierarchy may also parallel a diminishing commitment to the poor and to parish life.

In the 2011 survey, 60 percent of Catholics said you could be a good Catholic without donating time or money to help the poor, up from 44 percent in 2005. Similarly, three-quarters (74 percent) said you could be a good Catholic without donating time or money to a parish, upfrom 58 percent six years earlier.

Even among the “highly committed” Catholics, the importance of helping the poor fell from 39 percent to 30 percent in the past six years, which co-author William D'Antonio of Catholic University attributed to a “recession that they weren't confronting in 2005.”

The survey also shows U.S. Catholics to be as discerning about their political leaders as they are about their bishops.

Some 57 percent of Catholics say they identify to some degree as Democrats, compared to 40 percent for the GOP. In recent elections Catholic voters have alternately backed George W. Bush and Barack Obama, confirming them as a large and crucial swing vote.

The new survey indicates that Catholics in the pews will continue to make up their own mind in the ballot box, as well as the bedroom.

Views on abortion and care for the poor continue to be the chief markers dividing Catholic Democrats and Catholic Republicans; nearly half (48 percent) of Republicans said the church's teaching against abortion was very important,compared to just 35 percent of Democrats.

Catholic Democrats, on the other hand, were more likely than Republicans to say helping the poor was a religious priority, by a 72-61 percent margin.

The online survey of 1,400 adult Catholics (with a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points) was conducted by D'Antonio, Gautier and Dillon in cooperation with the National Catholic Reporter, an independent newsweekly.

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By David Gibson and Kevin Eckstrom Religion News Service WASHINGTON (RNS) American Catholics have by and large remained loyal to the core teachings and sacraments of their faith, but increasingly ...
By David Gibson and Kevin Eckstrom Religion News Service WASHINGTON (RNS) American Catholics have by and large remained loyal to the core teachings and sacraments of their faith, but increasingly ...
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KenInd
We too shall get through this.....
07:03 PM on 11/07/2011
Uh oh. The whole thing is built upon unquestioning loyalty toward an infallible Pope and central hierarchy. If that premise falls, the people will....................think for themselves!!!!!
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10:25 AM on 11/07/2011
Well, I am VERY pleased when I read a lot of your comments. VERY pleased!
99.99% of those who call themselves Christian are NOT disciples of Jesus at all. They think that simply stating that they believe that Jesus is the SON of GOD, makes them a Christian. When in fact Satan not only believes it, he KNOWS it. Is Satan a Christian?
They believe church is a building that they sit in, when in fact if you are a member of the Body of Christ, Church is what you are.
When people see the hypocriscy, idolatry, and blantant SIN that goes on in the name of Christianity, whether it be catholic or protestent, Satan wins a great victory over you're eternal soul.
Because instead of people leaving RELIGION behind, they leave GOD altogether!
I tell you this day, a prostitute who has slept with 100,00 men, had 25 abortions, has lied everyday, and robbed half her clients will be better off before the Whitethrone judgement seat of Almighty GOD then the religious leaders of this world!!!!!
And not only was it NOT disciple's of Jesus Christ who started the vatican, but jewish Pharisee's. The same ones who Jesus looked at and said"You belong to your father the devil". The pagan practices of the vatican are IDENTICAL in everyway, to the pagan practices my people began while in captivity in Babylon. Jeremiah Ch7 tells us the jews worshiped the "the queen of heaven".
A jewish disciple of Jesus Christ
KenInd
We too shall get through this.....
07:04 PM on 11/07/2011
You sit in judgment??
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03:05 PM on 11/09/2011
NO! Not of the person, however the LORD commands me to judge doctrine.
When people put themselves as up as "leaders" they first of all, they will be judged by GOD on a "higher" standard. Because they have put themselves there.
And if you DO put yourself there, you BETTER know what you're saying! Is it Biblically sound. NO cathecism's, NO talmud's. ONLY the breath of Almighty GOD!
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Sam Winchester
04:50 PM on 11/04/2011
The Catholic Church has a good racket going on. They take a small potion of a conversation that Jesus had with his disciples and established an entire hierarchical structure around it, with the Bishop of Rome at the head, making all spiritual and temporal decisions for the church and its followers.

I mean, if you think about it, it makes no sense at all! Christianity started in Jerusalem, in the Mid-East. Rome is in the West. Think about Peter traveling to Rome in the first century, how long it would have taken. We know the started the church in Antioch, and many others. Why would the Bishop of Rome inherit authority over the church, because Peter was the first Bishop? Peter was the first Bishop in Jerusalem, Antioch, and many more churches. That was his mission, to build churches.

I can't believe people are still falling for this, but Catholic are taught as children, that the church (sacraments) and the Pope (priesthood) are the proxy to God. However, people are not stupid, and they know the centuries of corruptions -- foul, evil deeds -- of the Catholic priesthood. Yet they are still sold on the Gospel message, it is the power of the Gospel that saves.

So it would make sense that Catholics would remain loyal to the church, because they still see it as the avenue to the Church. Once Catholics realize that they can have Jesus without the church, they will really be free.
KenInd
We too shall get through this.....
07:07 PM on 11/07/2011
It is thought that Al Capone and other bosses structured the Cosa Nostra upon the Vatican. Al knew a good business model when he saw it. Only the taxes caught up with him....let's wish the same fate on churches that meddle in anything political or temporal.
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thebearclaw007
Is your conscience functioning properly?
01:10 PM on 10/30/2011
When I tuned in to the Tudors, I learned all I needed to know about Catholic leaders: They are simply going for the gold,if you catch my drift. I read the Gospel. Jesus' dispensation centered upon feeding the poor, healing the sick, speaking out against social injustice (of which corrupt religion plays a large part). According to Bills Catz below, "The CC had slightly over 1.2 billion salted away as of 2009." Didn't Jesus say that the rich should live for God? And didn't Jesus show us that living for God meant working diligently for those ideas mentioned earlier. It looks to me as though the Catholic Church has decided that the blessings they're receiving on earth are more valuable than the ones they are to receive in Heaven (See the Parable of the rich man and poor Lazarus). And that they're in complete harmony with the rich man's fascination for the sin of GREED.
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Bills Catz
Don't believe everything you think.
05:20 PM on 10/29/2011
I was raised a Catholic -- pretty well gotten over it, tho -- and even as I child thought they were out in left field somewhere. Mumbo-jumbo, pray, mumbo jumbo, collection, mumbo-jumbo, amen. Nothing I was told then or since seems to apply to reality. A verse in the Bible says nobody stands between man and God except Jesus -- then they belabored us to confess every week to a priest in a dark booth. They told me to "have faith" and then showed me nothing worthwhile to have faith in, they muttered about "spirituality" and then didn't appear to have even a nodding acquaintance with the term.

Have faith in a bunch of impotent old men, many of whom have never worked a day in their lives, handing down edicts based on 2000 year old morality. We think not. Have faith in an organization that's been shuffling around pedophiles for fifty years that I'm personally aware of, and rarely even helps it's own members. The CC had slightly over 1.2 billion salted away as of 2009, but I'm still waiting to see soup kitchens in Detroit, homeless shelters in Bangor and schools in rural Appalachia. Apparently God himself wants all that money, He said so, so it can't be squandered helping human beings.

I'm okay with the God of my understanding, we get along just fine, but those folks in Rome might want to bring along asbestos suits in case their version of Hell is correct.
08:11 PM on 10/26/2011
The research merely confirms what a lot of committed American Catholics already know and observe. That many of our fellow Catholics are cappuccino "Catholics" along for the subsidized ride of a good Catholic education for their children, the showy ceremonies of Baptism, Matrimony and a Catholic funeral without reflecting on the underlying sacraments. Still we can hope that some of these less committed members and their children over time become more committed. The Church is in that sense is optimistic and at the same time ever forgiving. At the end of the day (Time), saving souls for Christ is paramount.
05:41 PM on 10/25/2011
Summary of the coming comments: blah blah blah religion is evil blah blah blah invisible pink unicorn blah blah Dawkins is the best blah blah...
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rextrek
50yr old, Moderate-liberal in S.NJ/Phila
07:14 PM on 10/25/2011
see you get it..and KNOW the answer already...now Just admit it.