U.S. Catholic Mission Handbook 2006

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U.S. Catholic Mission Handbook 2006 U.S. CATHOLIC MISSION HANDBOOK 2006 Mission Inventory 2004 – 2005 Tables, Charts and Graphs Resources Published by the U.S. CATHOLIC MISSION ASSOCIATION 3029 Fourth St., NE Washington, DC 20017-1102 Phone: 202 – 884 – 9764 Fax: 202 – 884 – 9776 E-Mail: [email protected] Web sites: www.uscatholicmission.org and www.mission-education.org U.S. CATHOLIC MISSION HANDBOOK 2006 Mission Inventory 2004 – 2005 Tables, Charts and Graphs Resources ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Published by the U.S. CATHOLIC MISSION ASSOCIATION 3029 Fourth St., NE Washington, DC 20017-1102 Phone: 202 – 884 – 9764 Fax: 202 – 884 – 9776 E-Mail: [email protected] Web sites: www.uscatholicmission.org and www.mission-education.org Additional copies may be ordered from USCMA. USCMA 3029 Fourth Street., NE Washington, DC 20017-1102 Phone: 202-884-9764 Fax: 202-884-9776 E-Mail: [email protected] Web Sites: www.uscatholicmission.org and www.mission-education.org COST: $4.00 per copy domestic $6.00 per copy overseas All payments should be prepaid in U.S. dollars. Copyright © 2006 by the United States Catholic Mission Association, 3029 Fourth St, NE, Washington, DC 20017-1102. 202-884-9764. [email protected] All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, transmitted in any form or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the written permission of the copyright holder. ii TABLE OF CONTENTS PART I: THE UNITED STATES CATHOLIC MISSION ASSOCIATION (USCMA)Purpose, Goals, Activities .................................................................................iv Board of Directors, USCMA Staff................................................................................................... v Past Presidents, Past Executive Directors, History ..........................................................................vi Part II: The U.S. Catholic Mission Inventory: 2004-2005 Section A: ......................................................................................................................................Introduction Preface...............................................................................................................................................1 Guidelines to the Presentation ..........................................................................................................1 Cross-Cultural Guidelines ................................................................................................................2 Section B: U.S. Catholic Missioners by Church Role...................................................................................3 (Arch)Bishops ......................................................................................................3 Deacons ...............................................................................................................3 Diocesan Priests ...................................................................................................4 Lay Persons .........................................................................................................5 Religious Brothers ...............................................................................................8 Religious Priests ................................................................................................10 Religious Sisters ................................................................................................14 Seminarians .......................................................................................................21 U.S. Catholic Missioners by Church Role: 1960 – 2005 Table ..............................................22 Section C: U.S. Catholic Missioners by Country, Gender, Sending Organization ....................................24 . Section D: U.S. Catholic Missioners by Region, Country, Gender ...........................................................39 U.S. Missioners by Region and Gender: 2004 – 2005 .............................................................42 Section E: U.S. Catholic Missioners by State, Gender, Sending Organization .........................................43 U.S. Catholic Missioners by State, Gender and Sending Organization – details .....................50 Section F: U.S. Catholic Missioners – U.S. only – Region, State, Gender ...............................................66 Part III: U.S. Catholic Missioner Statistical Charts ...........................................................................68 U.S. Catholic Missioner Age Distribution by Church Role Table .....................68 Age Distribution (Charts) ........................................................................68 Primary Ministry: All Missioners (World and Cross-Cultural Tables) .............69 World and Cross-Cultural Pie Charts .......................................................70 Primary Ministry: U.S. Missioners by Regions (Table and Chart).....................71 Primary Ministry: U.S. Missioners Within US/Outside US Borders Table........72 Comparative Within/Outside Chart .........................................................73 Primary Work-Within U.S. Pie Chart ......................................................73 Primary Work-Outside U.S. Pie Chart .....................................................74 Comparison of All Missioners & All Activities: 2000-2005 Chart ...................74 Comparison of All Missioners Table: 2000-2005..............................................75 Part IV: Useful Information Handy References ..............................................................................................76 United States Catholic Conference of Bishops: Committee on Home Missions; Committee on World Missions ...............................................................81 iii UNITED STATES CATHOLIC MISSION ASSOCIATION (USCMA) STATEMENT OF PURPOSE: he United States Catholic Mission Association unites and supports people committed to Tthe cross-cultural global mission of Jesus Christ in service to the Church and the world. Globalization challenges the Church to be more missionary than ever before in its history. At this time of dramatic changes, U.S. Catholics face special responsibilities and opportunities for Christian leadership. As Catholics, we are called to live in solidarity and justice with the people of the world, particularly the poor and marginalized. Missioners serve in a unique way to move humanity toward global community. USCMA is an association of lay and religious members who are involved in missionary service. Our varied experiences with God and life challenge us to welcome all who seek to respond to their call to mission at home and abroad. We are in a new moment, seeing new possibilities for mission. USCMA continues to engage in the universal (catholic) Christian call to mission. USCMA seeks to foster and support existing and new forms of cross-cultural and inter-religious partnerships. At the heart of mission is a spirituality that recognizes solidarity among God’s people, reaches out to the poor, always attempts to build mutual relationships. In this way, USCMA assists the local and universal church in building the reign of God. FOCUS AREAS: Over the next three years, USCMA, will concentrate it efforts on the integration of the key elements of mission: Proclamation, witness, dialogue, spirituality and prayer, and reconciliation and social transformation. The call of the Gospel focuses our passion to share with others seeking God through proclamation, dialogue, and prayer. Responding to this call, USCMA will continue to focus on the missionary nature of the Church in the light of the ethnic and cultural diversity that characterizes our time. Aware of the challenges and opportunities presented by inculturation, USCMA seeks to strengthen its involvement in cross-cultural and inter-religious collaboration. USCMA works for social transformation through an integral vision of mission and justice. We strive for reconciliation and healing among all God’s people and with all creation. USCMA will address a deeper integration of a spirituality of solidarity and reconciliation in this era of globalization. USCMA will initiate conversations emphasizing developing areas of mission, such as, evolving theologies of mission, short-term and partnering mission experiences. AREAS OF ACTIVITIES: The board and membership of USCMA are committed to supporting and participating with the staff as they: • Maintain publications, research, conferences, and mission statistics. • Continue efforts at collaboration and networking with mission offices (congregation and diocesan), campus ministry offices, and mission oriented groups. • Implement directions emerging from Mission Congress 2005. • Explore and utilize appropriate technology for communication, mission animation, and education. iv USCMA BOARD OF DIRECTORS Executive Committee: Sr. Mary McGlone, CSJ.........................................................President Rev. John Barth, MM.............................................................Vice President Ms. Megeen White-Testa.......................................................Secretary-Treasurer Mr. Sam Stanton ....................................................................Member-at-Large Rev. Wilfred Steinbacher, GHM ...........................................Member-at-Large Members: Sr. Mary Paul Aseogwu, DDL Rev. Michael Linden, SJ Sr. Shalini D’Souza, SCN Rev. Bill Morell,
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