All posts tagged: William Lori

Baltimore Catholic parish closures a ‘punch in the stomach’ with long-term impact

Baltimore Catholic parish closures a ‘punch in the stomach’ with long-term impact

BALTIMORE (RNS) — Patrice Ellerbe, a 65-year-old parishioner at St. Veronica, had come to the Cathedral of Mary Our Queen on April 30 for a public forum on the Archdiocese of Baltimore’s proposed plan for closing about two-thirds of parishes in the city. She knew the bad news already: Two weeks before, the archdiocese had announced that her 79-year-old Black Catholic parish was among those proposed to close. “It felt like a punch in the stomach,” she said, a feeling the more than 1,000 Catholics gathered at the cathedral to give their feedback seemingly shared. As the plan was read out, the high arched ceilings of the nave began to echo with boos. The closures, in the nation’s oldest Catholic diocese, are part of a nationwide trend of restructuring in response to falling Mass attendance and priest shortages. In explaining the need to close Baltimore parishes, the archdiocese has focused on the first reason, pointing to weekend Mass attendance that has fallen below 8,000 in a city that used to have 250,000 active Catholics. At …

What happens when most of the Catholic churches in Baltimore close?

What happens when most of the Catholic churches in Baltimore close?

The interior of St. Vincent de Paul Church (1841), the oldest Catholic church in continuous operation in Baltimore, is among those slated to be taken out of operation. (Image courtesy of Google Maps) (RNS) — Last Sunday (April 14), the Catholic Archdiocese of Baltimore showed parishioners its plan for downsizing its operations in Baltimore and nearby suburbs. Two years in the making, the plan would consolidate the number of parishes from 61 to 21 and reduce the number of “worship sites” from 59 to 26, affecting many of the city’s landmark churches. Baltimore’s wider Catholic community will be given an opportunity to weigh in, but it’s hard to imagine the plan being seriously revised. A city that once boasted a quarter of a million Catholics now has fewer than 40,000. A church infrastructure built to accommodate 25,000 worshippers has only a few thousand attending Mass regularly. Something has to give — as it’s had to give in city after city in the Northeast and Midwest that have seen their Catholic populations plummet. The Baltimore Archdiocese …