Maryknoll Father John Lange as he visits sick residents in Mukuru Kwa Njenga slum in Nairobi, Kenya, Feb. 13. (CNS)
At 5:00 each morning, Father
Mike Snyder rises and prays before the Blessed Sacrament. At 6:30, he offers
Mass at his university’s chapel; he spends most of the rest of his day meeting
and praying with students, visiting the sick at a local hospital, and
performing mundane office tasks.
Ordained in 1979, Father
Snyder has ministered in Tanzania for decades and now works as the Catholic
chaplain at Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences (MUHAS), the
national medical university. The university is located in Dar es Salaam, a city
of 3.2 million and the nation’s capital.
Tanzania is among the world’s
poorest nations; the life expectancy is 53. According to Vatican statistics, 30
percent of the nation’s 41 million people are Catholic. The US State Department
estimates that 35 percent of Tanzanians are Muslim and 35 percent retain
indigenous beliefs.
Whether Tanzania will be
predominantly Catholic or Muslim in a century is an open question. Addressing
the Synod of Bishops for Africa in 2009, Archbishop Norbert Mtega of Songea
warned of “the Islamic monetary factor, whereby huge sums of money from outside
countries are being poured in our countries to destabilize peace in our
countries and to eradicate Christianity.”
At MUHAS, half of the 1,600 students are Catholic. Father Snyder told CWR that
his ministry’s greatest successes “lie in seeing these gifted young peoplethe
intelligentsia of Tanzaniatake responsibility for the operations of the
Catholic student community…I would say 50 percent are active in our community.
I am able to train them in leadership skills while seeking out ways to assist
them in developing their faith. We organize regular retreats and seminars for
the students and always have excellent turnouts.”
“My visits among the sick are
also often rewarding as they show the depth of their faith and hope in Jesus
through the patient endurance they display during this time of illness,” he
adds. “So often I walk away realizing that I have come in contact with the face
of Christ through them.”
Father Snyder’s work is not
without its disappointments and challenges. “The disappointments lie in the
lack of good medical facilities,” he notes. “Muhimbili is probably the
best-equipped hospital in the country, but there is still so much lacking.
Also, the corruption rampant throughout the country is a disappointment.”
“Challenges lie in motivating
our medical students to remain in Tanzania after graduation,” he says. “So many
are lured to attractive jobs outside the country and others to lucrative
employment inside the country but outside the medical sector. There is just one
medical doctor for 28,000 Tanzanians and one nurse for every hundred hospital
patients. Medical salaries in government service are much lower than in other
fields.”
Father Snyder is part of a
rapidly dwindling breed: he is an American missionary priest.
Plentiful harvest, few laborers
The Maryknoll Fathers and
Brothers, of which Father Snyder is a member, were founded by the US bishops in
1911 as the Catholic Foreign Mission Society of America. Today, the average
Maryknoller is 74 years old; the order’s vocation director is 80. According to
various editions of the United States Catholic Mission Association’s handbook,
158 Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers now serve abroaddown from 279 in 2004.
The challenges that the
Maryknollers face in attracting new missionaries are not unique. In 1968, the
United States had 282 diocesan priests, 3,715 religious priests, 869 brothers,
4,150 sisters, 208 seminarians, and 419 laity serving as missionaries; those
numbers have since fallen to 68 diocesan priests, 784 religious priests, 171
brothers, 1,962 sisters, nine seminarians, and 358 laity. Remarkably, 48
percent of these US missionaries are now based in the United States, either in
retirement or doing administrative or pastoral work.
The decline in missionary
vocations extends throughout the Western world. “We have not received vocations
to the missionary priesthood from any of our English-speaking countries
(Ireland, England, the US, Australia, and New Zealand) for a number of years,
although lay missioners continue to enrich our numbers from these countries,”
says Father Bob Mosher, a Nebraska-based Columban missionary priest who served
for decades in Chile. Likewise, Msgr. John Dale, director of the Pontifical
Mission Societies in England and Wales, sees “very few missionary vocations in
the traditional sense. Few men and women are presenting themselves for
formation in the established missionary societies.”
Marist Father Paul Shannahan,
director of the Pontifical Mission Societies in New Zealand, concurs. “Interest
in missionary vocations or in any religious or priestly vocations is restricted
to very few,” he says. “The mission societies like the Marists and Columbans
have only single figures in study.”
At the same time, missionary
vocations from Asia and Africa are relatively numerous, allowing some
missionary orders to expand. With 6,131 members, the Society of the Divine Word
is now the sixth-largest religious institute for men, surpassing the Dominicans
and the Redemptorists, “and the only one of the top 10 to have consistently
grown over the past 40 years,” says Theresa Carson, public and media relations
director of the order’s Chicago province. Divine Word Father Stephen Bevans,
professor of mission and culture at Catholic Theological Union in Chicago,
cites “the large crop of vocations in Asia, especially in Indonesia.” Father
Mosher observes that “the Columban Fathers, like most other missionary
congregations and societies of apostolic life, have experienced a surge in
mission vocations from the Philippines, Korea, Fiji, Chile, [and] Peru.”
“Very clearly there is a
decline of lifelong missionary vocations ad gentes [to non-Christian
peoples] if we talk of Europe and North America,” Father Socrates Mesiona,
director of the Pontifical Mission Societies in the Philippines, told CWR.
“The vocation situation for mission ad gentes in South America, Africa,
and Asia has remained the same, if not improved, for the last two decades.… My estimate
is that [in the Philippines] there are more or less a hundred new missionaries
every year, men and women combined,” not counting lay missionaries.
The demise of the missionary
vocation in the West has occurred despite the intense interest in the missions
shown by the popes since Pope Benedict XV issued his landmark encyclical Maxime
Illud in 1919. Pope Pius XII begged the world’s bishops to send diocesan
priests to African dioceses in his 1951 encyclical Fidei Donum; in the ensuing decades, 1,300 French
priests ministered in Africa. As African vocations surged and Western vocations
plummeted, the generosity was reciprocatedin 2005, more than 1,000 African
priests were ministering in French parishes.
In his 1990 encyclical Redemptoris
Missiosometimes called the Magna Carta of Catholic teaching on the
missionsBlessed John Paul II said that the time was ripe for a new
evangelization of once-Christian nations and a reinvigorated mission ad
gentes. “The number of those who do not know Christ and do not belong to
the Church is constantly on the increase,” he lamented. “When we consider this
immense portion of humanity which is loved by the Father and for whom he sent
his Son, the urgency of the Church’s mission is obvious.”
Emphasizing that “salvation can
only come from Jesus Christ,” the late pope sought to correct certain trends in
missionary work, including a secularized misinterpretation of the concept of
the Kingdom of God. “Proclamation is the permanent priority of mission,” he
taught, adding:
The
Church cannot elude Christ’s explicit mandate, nor deprive men and women of the
“Good News” about their being loved and saved by God. The proclamation of the
Word of God has Christian conversion as its aim: a complete and sincere
adherence to Christ and his Gospel through faith.… Nowadays the call to
conversion which missionaries address to non-Christians is put into question or
passed over in silence. It is seen as an act of “proselytizing”; it is claimed
that it is enough to help people to become more human or more faithful to their
own religion, that it is enough to build communities capable of working for
justice, freedom, peace, and solidarity. What is overlooked is that every
person has the right to hear the “Good News” of the God who reveals and gives
himself in Christ.
Echoing Blessed John Paul,
Pope Benedict XVI told directors of the Pontifical Mission Societies on May 14
that “only if we are rooted profoundly in Christ and in his word are we capable
of withstanding the temptation to reduce evangelization to a purely human,
social project, hiding or glossing over the transcendent dimension of the
salvation offered by God in Christ.”
Pope John Paul’s concerns are
“still valid and important,” says Father Mesiona, for some missionaries have
tended “to dilute or tone down proclamation in favor of other concerns.” He
adds, “What makes a missionary distinct from any person of good will is that he
or she has the Gospel with him or herthat needs to be proclaimed. And this
Gospel has to be proclaimed because people have the right to hear it. Whether
people will accept or reject it is another story. But the Gospel has to be
proclaimed in word and deed!”
The need for missionaries to
non-Christian regions is more acute than at any time in the Church’s history.
The number of non-Christians has swelled to 4.6 billion, including 1.52 billion
Muslims, 935 million Hindus, and 484 million Buddhists. (In comparison, nearly
1.18 billion of the world’s 6.9 billion people are Catholic, 274 million are
Orthodox, and some 800 million are Protestant.)
Causes of the collapse
A loss of faith, the needs of
local dioceses, a lack of awareness of the missions, and concerns about
fidelity to the teaching of the Church have contributed to the loss of
vocations to missionary institutes, according to missionaries who spoke with CWR.
“I would have to say that the
decline in the number of lifelong missionary vocations is something of a
mystery,” says Father Kevin Hanlon, a mission educator and promoter for the
Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers. “How is it that the most important work the
Church can do, that of teaching and baptizing the nations, is now considered
just one ancillary work among many, one sort of ministry among others? … [The]
lack of faith that popes from the time of Paul VI onward have referred to is
perhaps the greatest reason for a decline in all vocations, including the
missionary one.”
“We have 13 men in formation
today with four more joining us this fall,” Father Snyder adds. “Young people
are coming to Maryknoll, but not like the hundreds that came to us 60 years
ago.”
“The US Church has become
much more inward-looking,” says Father Ken Mazur, North American regional
superior of the PIME (Pontifical Institute for Foreign Missions) Missionaries.
“Many in authority within the Church are more concerned about their own needsobviouslyand
less about the needs of the global Church. If a bishop doesn’t have enough
priests for his own parishes, he is less likely to encourage vocations to the
missions ad gentes.… The
same is true for pastors and others working in local diocesan parishes.”
“Young people need to hear
that a life in mission is also a very good option for them to consider,” adds
Father Michael Montoya, executive director of the United States Catholic
Mission Association. “Unfortunately we do not speak enough about mission in our
parishesor our baptismal call to mission. Mission is a foreign word to many
Catholics on the pews.”
Father Bevans believes that
“the lack of vocations is due to the loss of prestige of priesthood and
religious life around the world, the end of colonialism, [and] a theology of
the possibility of salvation for all rather than a notion that all are on the
brink of hell and need baptism for salvation. We need to rethink the reasons
for mission in dialogue with these developments.”
Concerns about the orthodoxy
of some missionary institutes may also be deterring young men and women from a
missionary vocation. Father Mazur told CWR that “one of our seminarians,
who studies at the local diocesan seminary, says that many diocesan seminarians
look at him as different, or perhaps ‘unorthodox.’ Perhaps the impression is
that missionaries don’t follow the guidelines of the Vatican?”
These concerns have affected
the Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers. The most famous living Maryknoll priest is
Father Roy Bourgeois, who was automatically excommunicated in 2008 for
assisting at a woman’s “ordination” and now faces the prospect of laicization
and dismissal from his order. Maryknoll superior general Father Ed Dougherty told
Catholic News Service in April that “we learned about situations of injustice
that took place in various parts of the world. And when we came back here, we
were very vocal about peace and justice and spoke openly about what we’d seen.
That wasn’t always an easy fit with the diocesan structures and led, in some
cases, to Church leadership saying we were no longer welcome, because we were
too extreme.”
“After the Council, many of
us missionary groups sought to make our vocation more relevant to the greater
world, so we emphasized, during the 70s and the 80s, the social and charitable
activities we do on the mission fields,” Father Hanlon adds. “Or we spoke more
of the Church’s postconciliar work of dialogue with other religions. While
these were good things to do, they did give the mistaken impression to some
that the preaching of the Gospel, something we have never ceased to do, was
taking a back seat. Especially in this last decade, we have sought to assure
people, especially the young who consider this vocation, that this is still,
and has always been, principally an ecclesial work of making Christ known to
all people.”
A landmark 2009 study
conducted by the Center for the Applied Research in the Apostolate for the
National Religious Vocation Conference may offer solutions to the collapse of
vocations to many missionary institutes in the West. The study found that
“[t]he most successful institutes in terms of attracting and retaining new
members at this time are those that follow a more traditional style of
religious life in which members live together in community and participate in
daily Eucharist, pray the Divine Office, and engage in devotional practices
together. They also wear a religious habit, work together in common
apostolates, and are explicit about their fidelity to the Church and the
teachings of the Magisterium.”
The growth of the
Missionaries of Charity, founded by Blessed Teresa of Calcutta, lends support
to this thesis. According to the United States Catholic Mission Association’s
2010 handbook, 65 of the US citizens who belong to the Missionaries of Charity
now serve abroadup from 17 in 2004.
The lives of missionaries
Maryknoll priests, says
Father Hanlon, typically combine evangelization with their pastoral work.
“I call the work our men do ‘missionary-pastoral’
because most work in the same sorts of recognizable priestly or religious work
you might find here in the US, but it would have more of a missionary goal to
it than a pastoral one,” he says. “For example, I myself worked as a parish
priest in Japan for 17 years, but never did I think that my work was just to my
tiny flock. Rather, I thought that my work, and the work of the faithful in the
pews, was to preach the Gospel by our words and our lives to the over 90
percent non-Christian population. We would try to involve others in our various
Church ministries and activities, especially those which try to help the poor,
or those which try to improve the environment, things non-Christians more
easily identify with; thus, we make friends for the Church, and hopefully the
Holy Spirit opens their hearts a little more to considering the Gospel.”
“Some of us also work in
Catholic schools at various levels, and since most of the students at our
schools are non-Christians, this is a very direct form of missionary contact
with the greater population through the students and their families,” he adds.
“Besides these types of work, some men devote themselves more completely to
works of charity, which is, historically, one of the greatest types of witness
to the Gospel.… Those that do receive baptism are some of the finest Christians
in the world, and by their baptism are great witnesses to the local
population.”
At times, American
missionaries can find themselves in situations of political turmoil. Father
Mosher’s first decade in Chile coincided with the last decade of the military
regime of Augusto Pinochet, who overthrew Marxist Salvador Allende in 1973 and
left power in 1990.
“My day-to-day duties
included many extraordinary activities beyond the parish, apart from the normal
sacramental and formative duties of a priest anywhere,” he recalls. “The
Catholic Church was the sole protector of the people, oppressed by the military
regime, and I would accompany those who were trying to avoid the road of
confrontation and violence and search for peaceful means to return Chile to its
democratic traditions and to a state of law.”
He adds:
I
and many others in the Church reached out to the victims of exile, torture,
arbitrary arrests, violence from the state, as well as to the many groups
neglected by the regimethe homeless, the unemployed, the impoverished sickand
helped them to establish workshops of education and job training, soup
kitchens, basic ecclesial communities, and medical clinics. I often had to rush
off to funerals of protestors killed during demonstrations, at one stage, and
helped set up medical aid stations in our parish chapels .… There were also the
small, quiet moments of sharing hot tea on cold evenings with supposed
atheists, who could only admire the work of the Church and would engage us in
frank conversations about our values and views, leading many to rediscover the
Christian faith that they had lost as adults.
The ensuing decades of
democracy brought new social problems to Chile. “Drug addiction and trafficking
flourished, creating a culture of violence and disruption, especially [in] the
poorer areas,” Father Mosher recounts. “In parish life, we became concerned
with the street violence, broken families, materialism, extreme competitiveness,
individualism, apathy towards the democratic system, and the selling off of
vast natural resources to foreign companies, as well as the contamination of
water, air, and land.” Serving as the ecumenical officer for the Chilean
bishops’ conference, Father Mosher says that he “participated in efforts to
bring the different Christian communities in the country, especially
Pentecostal Christians (some 10 percent of the population) and Catholics (72
percent), together in a spirit of mutual respect and cooperation.”
Emerging trends
In Redemptoris Missio, Blessed John Paul called upon
missionary institutes to focus their attention on Asia, big cities, the young,
and refugees. The Pope’s words have had an influence on the life of missionary
institutes.
“One important emerging trend
is that we are more focused on Asia than we were for the latter part of the 20th
century,” says Father Hanlon. “This focus comes in no small part from the call
of Blessed John Paul and Pope Benedict that we look to Asia, that we consider
its billions who do not know Christ, who may never encounter a missionary in
the flesh unless we go.”
“Mission work ad gentes has
moved from rural to urban settings,” adds Father Mazur. “The megalopolises of
the world are where much mission work now needs to take place.”
“Probably the most
significant trend in mission ad gentes is the number of lay missionaries
responding to this call,” says Sister Madge Karecki, director of the
Archdiocese of Chicago’s Office for Mission Education and Animation.
“Some of the cutting-edge
issues are the role of liturgy and prayer in the missionary enterprise and the
commitment to ecological wholeness,” Father Bevans states. “Social justice
issues and issues around reconciliation are still paramount, as are issues
about interreligious dialogue.”
Asked what advice they would
give to young men and women considering a missionary vocation, missionaries who
spoke with CWR most frequently recommend prayer and spiritual direction.
Father Hanlon also recommends corporal works of mercy and daily Mass, while
Msgr. Dale suggests reading Redemptoris Missio. Father Bevans, a former
president of the American Society of Missiology, says that
when
one goes to another culture it is important to take the time to listen, to
learn the language, and to really bond with the people. Don’t stay just in the
“mission compound.” Missionary life will demand a rich spiritual life as well,
so get a good spiritual director. Don’t be too eager to “proclaim” the messagewait
until you know the people, and even until they ask you why you are there or
what you have to share with them.
“Do not let the opportunity pass you by,” adds
Father Mosher. “The rewards of a life lived by trusting in that deeply-felt
calling are vast, incalculable.”