Washington Post
By Cathy Lynn Grossman
September 21, 2015
On
the day Pope Francis comes to the National Mall, his first morning
greeting the American public, Hispanic Catholics from miles around will
flood into downtown Washington
churches for 6:30 a.m. Mass.
Then
they’ll walk to the Ellipse together to witness the first Latin
American pontiff when he takes a popemobile spin around the Mall and the
Ellipse.
“You
will see a huge river of Hispanics coming from all directions to gather
as one flock to celebrate, to rejoice, to make fiesta because Pope
Francis is with us,” said
the Rev. Evelio Menjivar, of Our Lady Queen of the Americas Catholic
Church, at a media briefing.
And
the Argentine-born pope will speak their language. All but four of his
18 addresses planned for the U.S. visit, including his address to the
United Nations and all
his homilies, will be in Spanish. A highlight of his stop will be the
Mass where Francis will canonize Spanish-born missionary Junipero Serra,
the Franciscan priest who established mission churches in the
Southwest.
Today,
Hispanics are 34 percent of U.S. Catholics, according to the Public
Religion Research Institute. More people identify as both Hispanic and
Catholic nationally (9
percent of U.S. adults according to PRRI) than there are Methodists,
Lutherans and Episcopalians added up in a Pew Research Center survey.
More significantly, Hispanics are the face of the church’s future in
America.
Nearly
one in six (57 percent) of Hispanics in the U.S. identify as Catholic.
Hispanics also have a higher retention rate — people reared in the
Catholic faith who stay
in the faith — than non-Hispanic Catholics. It’s 71 percent compared to
61 percent, according to the Catholic research agency, the Center for
Applied Research in the Apostolate.
They’re
significantly younger than the non-Hispanic U.S. population — 42 is the
median age for Hispanic Catholics adults, compared to 53 for
non-Hispanic white adults,
according to Pew Research.
Francis
may not see the full extent of Hispanics’ U.S. influence during his
three-city visit to the East Coast, but Hispanics dominate the Catholic
population in five
southwestern states — Arizona, California, Nevada, New Mexico and
Texas, according to the American Values Atlas from PRRI.
One
in four U.S. parishes hold Masses in Spanish, but the impact of
Hispanics can’t be measured by attendance at church, said sociologist
Mary Gautier, a senior researcher
at CARA.
“Immigrant
Hispanics have a different culture and lived reality” than the
descendants of European immigrants who comprised most of U.S. Catholics
until recent decades,
said Gautier.
“These
immigrants come from places with 8,000 Catholics per priest. Here in
the U.S., they are probably working multiple jobs, Saturday nights and
Sunday mornings. If
the only Spanish Mass is when they are working the shift at Target,
they’re not going to be there. But they’re still Catholic,” she said.
And their concerns, including social and economic justice and immigration reform, are high on Pope Francis’ agenda.
The
nonprofit group Faith in Public Life found sharp splits between
Hispanic and non-Hispanic Catholic voters on the role of the government
in economic life and on immigration.
A survey released Sept. 16 showed:
*
49 percent of Hispanic Catholics preferred a somewhat or much larger
government that provides more services, compared to 22 percent among
non-Hispanics.
*
64 percent of Hispanics say government should do more to narrow the gap
between rich and poor, compared to 50 percent among non-Hispanic
whites.
* 77 percent say politicians should prioritize reducing poverty and homelessness, compared to 65 percent among white Catholics.
*
70 percent of Hispanic Catholics agreed that a path to citizenship
“should at least be an equal priority in immigration reform,” compared
to 41 percent among non-Hispanic
whites.
But
Menjivar said Francis is coming to speak to everyone, not only
Hispanics. He’ll arrive on Tuesday (Sept. 22) after a stop in Cuba with a
message to Americans and the
world, said the priest.
“Pope Francis embodies the culture of encounter,” he said, “the church without borders where no one is a stranger.”
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
No comments:
Post a Comment