Home   |  About Us   |  Contacts   |  Products    
 News Items:
 Headlines
 News Briefs
 Stories
 Movies
 Word To Life
 More News:
 Vatican
 Africa
 Special Section:
 Vatican II at 40
 Archives:
 John Paul II
 Tsunami
 Election 2004
 Charter update
 John Jay study
 Other Items:
 Client Area
 Links
 Origins
.
 Did You Know...

 The whole CNS
 public Web site
 headlines, briefs
 stories, etc,
 represents less
 than one percent
 of the daily news
 report.

 Get all the news!

 If you would like
 more information
 about the
 Catholic News
 Service daily
 news report,
 please contact
 CNS at one of
 the following:
 cns@
 catholicnews.com
 or
 (202) 541-3250

.
 Copyright:

 This material
 may not
 be published,
 broadcast,
 rewritten or
 otherwise
 distributed.
 
 Copyright
 (c) 2006
 Catholic News
 Service/U.S.
 Conference of
 Catholic Bishops.

 CNS Story:

POPE-CANADA May-22-2006 (530 words) xxxi

Canada's declining birthrate shows pessimism, pope tells bishops

By Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Canada's declining birthrate is a sign of a lack of hope in the future, a pessimism that is fed by growing secularism, Pope Benedict XVI said.

Meeting bishops from Canada's Atlantic region May 20, the pope said the "plummeting birthrate" in Eastern Canada is a "disturbing testimony to uncertainty and fear, even if not always conscious."

The bishops from New Brunswick, Newfoundland, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island were making their "ad limina" visits to the Vatican to report on the status of their dioceses.

Nova Scotia Bishop Raymond J. Lahey of Antigonish, president of the regional bishops' conference, told the pope that lower birthrates and a population shift to large cities have meant most dioceses in the region are facing a serious need to reorganize or consolidate parishes.

But an even bigger concern, he said, is the disappearance of local cultures and the traditional life of small towns, which included an active participation in church life.

Bishop Lahey said secularism has been fueled by pervasive media, which "under the guise of avoiding the promotion of religion" are entirely devoid of or even hostile to Christian values.

In response, he said, the region's bishops are giving priority to evangelization, religious education and the revitalization of ministry, both through training lay leaders and promoting vocations to the priesthood, diaconate and religious life.

Pope Benedict encouraged the bishops to take every step possible to support the Christian faith that has been "the cultural soul" of Canada's people for centuries.

"The attempt to promote a vision of humanity apart from God's transcendent order and indifferent to Christ's beckoning light removes from the reach of ordinary men and women the experience of genuine hope," the pope said.

In the face of confusion sown by secularism, he said, people look to the bishops "to be men of hope, preaching and teaching with passion the splendor of the truth of Christ."

Pope Benedict said he knows the bishops face serious challenges, particularly with an aging clergy and the faithful spread over a vast area, but "no effort can be spared in finding effective pastoral initiatives to make Jesus Christ known."

"Particular care," he said, "must be taken to ensure that the intrinsic relationship between the church's magisterium, individuals' faith and testimony in public life is preserved and promoted."

Only when Catholics live what the church teaches can the church be effective in healing the "debilitating split between the Gospel and culture."

Pope Benedict praised the commitment and work of Canadian catechists and encouraged the bishops to recruit more young people to help pass on the faith to their peers.

He also told them that, when looking at ways to carry out the necessary reorganization of their dioceses and parishes to meet the needs of a shifting population and lack of priests, the plans must include a strong component of spiritual renewal.

New parish configurations, he said, must not be a response to personnel needs alone, but must result in the formation of communities that are schools of holiness where all the faithful are attentive to the will of God.

END


Copyright (c) 2006 Catholic News Service/USCCB. All rights reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed.
CNS · 3211 Fourth St NE · Washington DC 20017 · 202.541.3250