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Showing posts from December, 2022

There will likely be fewer Catholic baptisms and marriages next year… again.

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 http://nineteensixty-four.blogspot.com/2010/08/there-will-likely-be-fewer-catholic.html 8.31.2010 There will likely be fewer Catholic baptisms and marriages next year… again. The August  National Vital Statistics Report  was just released and it shows fewer Americans (Catholics and non-Catholics) married or had children in 2009 than in 2008. What does it matter? As shown in this post, these two rates are statistically linked to the rate at which the sacraments of baptism and marriage are celebrated in the Catholic Church in the United States. Baptisms and marriages in the Church have declined in number each year since 2001. The crude infant baptism rate (annual number of infant baptisms per 1,000 Catholics) reached a peak during the post-war Baby Boom in 1956 at 36.1. In 2009, this had fallen to only 12.7 infant baptisms per 1,000 Catholics. The crude marriage rate (annual number of marriages celebrated in the Church per 1,000 Catholics) peaked right after World War II at 15.1 in 1947

Vatican statistics report increase in baptized Catholics worldwide

  Vatican statistics report increase in baptized Catholics worldwide https://www.ncronline.org/node/120526 via @NCRonline Vatican City — March 7, 2016 Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email to a friend The number of baptized Catholics worldwide has grown at a faster rate than that of the world's population, according to Vatican statistics. Although the number of priests has increased globally, the number has decreased slightly in Europe and Oceania, according to the Vatican's Central Office for Church Statistics. The figures are presented in the "Annuario Pontificio 2016," the Vatican yearbook, and will appear in the Statistical Yearbook of the Church, which gives detailed figures on the church's workforce, sacramental life, dioceses and parishes as of Dec. 31, 2014. The number of baptized Catholics reached 1.27 billion or 17.8 percent of the global population, the statistics office reported March 5. Despite the increase of Catholics worldwide, the yearbook no