Archdiocese of Vienna to undergo radical parish reform

[How will the Neo-Catholic/Fr. Fessio/Ignatius Press types react to this?]

Archdiocese of Vienna to undergo radical parish reform

Mon, 10/08/2012
by Christa Pongratz-Lippitt

ncronline.org/node/36401

The Vienna archdiocese, which is one of the largest in Europe and extends from the Czech frontier down to the southern Alps, will undergo radical parish reforms, reducing its 660 parishes to 150 in the next 10 years.

“This is the most comprehensive reorganization of the Vienna archdiocese since that of Austrian Emperor Joseph II [1765-1790] 200 years ago,” Cardinal Christoph Schönborn told journalists at a Sept. 19 media reception in the archbishop’s palace in Vienna.

The main reasons for these measures were the increasing shortage of priests and the steady decline in the number of Catholics, especially of those who regularly attended Mass and were involved in their local parishes, the cardinal explained.

“I am fully aware that these reforms denote a far-reaching change of perspective,” Schönborn said. “We must take leave of the traditional concept that the church is only present where there is a priest. That is a restricted view that has developed over time but which must now be corrected. Church is community, and leading offices in the church should in principle be carried out collaboratively, even if the parish priest has the final responsibility according to canon law.”

The “common priesthood of all the baptized” will take center stage from now on, Schönborn said, meaning that those who have been baptized and confirmed will be responsible for evangelization and pastoral work. The reform is meant to bring about a new form of cooperation between priests and lay Catholics based on their common vocation to Christianity, he said.

The reforms are scheduled to start in January, and if everything goes according to plan, 80 percent of today’s parishes would be amalgamated by 2022, Schönborn said. It is not yet possible to predict exactly how many nor which parishes would survive, he said, but several hundreds of the present parishes would certainly find themselves part of one large central parish in 10 years’ time, the cardinal explained.

Several priests — “at least three to five” — would be active in each of the central parishes and would run the parish jointly with lay parishioners.

“Participatory leadership with clear task allocation” was the aim, Schönborn said. One priest in each of the central parishes would be responsible to the archbishop.

Within these large central parishes, there would be many small affiliated communities run only by lay Catholics who would work voluntarily. The cardinal expressly emphasized that no parishes would be closed, but smaller parishes might be amalgamated with larger ones.

Catholics would have to travel to one of the large central parishes to celebrate the Eucharist, but Services of the Word would be celebrated by the laypeople running the local affiliated communities.

Church activities would be dedicated to evangelization to a far greater extent than they had been up to now, Schönborn said.

“More and more vibrant communities will be able to develop,” he said, as there would be less administrative work, costs would be bundled, resources pooled and thus “more time left for evangelization.”

“There are still many problems to be solved. We will have to say goodbye to a great deal of what has become dear to us, but the farewell is at the same time a new departure,” Schönborn said.

* * *

[Christa Pongratz-Lippitt is an Austrian correspondent for the London-based weekly Catholic magazine The Tablet.]

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4 Comments to “Archdiocese of Vienna to undergo radical parish reform”

  1. charlesh says:

    The Catholic Church in Vienna is officially dismantled.

  2. gpmtrad says:

    If Meister Zinger Schönborn ain’t fired for gross incompetence, dereliction and just being officially nothing more than the south end of a northbound Lipperzaner ( sans the natural sense of precision and grace ) while in office, then words like “orthodoxy” and “integrity” have completely lost their meaning inside the highest levels of the conciliar church….

    Oh,wait!

  3. St. Elmo says:

    Last one to leave, turn out the lights. The last Catholic in Italy will be coming into the world any day now, or may be alive today. Not far behind, the last Italian in Italy.

  4. LucasB. says:

    Pretty fancy words to simply say that he’s losing parishoners and also doesn’t have enough vocations to replace the priests who are either dying or retiring. Didn’t I say a while ago that the Church would have to return to tradition in the end, even if only because the SSPX will have the only Catholic priests capable of filling the Church’s need?

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