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Catholicism, Faith,
Catholic Crossroads
Young Catholics in the region and across America identify strongly with their church, but aren’t in lockstep with it.
Posted 03/22/2007
Jack Gannone was about to have a defining moment, one that would unite him with more than a billion people of 200 nations and 600 langu ages. Like most of them, he never saw it coming. The day was April 23, a Sunday, and inside the sparely modern sanctuary of St. Eleanor Roman Catholic Church in Collegeville, 6-month-old Jack squirmed on his mother's lap.
Gallery: Slideshow: Catholics around the Philadelphia region
 
Counting the flock is educated guesswork
 
Parish that values young people like gold has hit upon a way to lure them
Catholic Crossroads
A Catholic Latin America was once a given. Now the church competes with many faiths. Could a charismatic Brazilian priest show the church there — and in this region — a new way?
Posted 03/22/2007
Straitlaced clerics deride the new "happy clappy" Catholicism, and here, in a converted bottling plant, Sunday morning Mass really is a laughing matter. Loud guffaws and applause from 10,000 worshipers heat the air in the cinder-block Church of the Byzantine Rosary. On stage, the Rev. Marcelo Rossi delivers a sermon that trips lightly through jokes and shtick. In the last quarter of the 20th century, the Roman Catholic Church hemorrhaged Brazilian members by the millions, giving rise to predictions of an unstoppable slide into the ranks of minority faiths in Brazil. Yet Rossi's charismatic brand of Catholic worship has defied the prognosticators.
Gallery: Multimedia | Pentecostal churches overtake Catholicism
 
Multimedia | Strenuous competition for the faithful
 
Multimedia | Pentecostal churches overtake Catholicism
Huge numbers of mostly Catholic Latino migrants flow to this region. The church faces many obstacles in keeping them.
In fast-developing Chester County, there is a growing Catholic presence that is plain to see, and another that is not. One is manifest in the 30 parish churches and 14 parochial schools set among sprawling fields of subdivision homes. They brim with 153,000 suburban church members, a 60 percent increase since 1990. The beating heart of the other is tucked into an Avondale strip mall, in basement rooms lush with polychrome crucifixes and images of the Virgin Mary.
Nigeria offers a portrait of steady Catholic growth on the continent - even producing a surplus of priests, some of whom end up here. Conflicts with Islam are a worry.
Dressed in holiday finery, 500 Nigerian Catholics gathered on Palm Sunday last year at St. Michael's Cathedral, the central church in a traditionally Islamic corner of Africa's most populous nation. In much of the world, Catholics commemorate Jesus' triumphal entry into Jerusalem with a public parade. But in Kontagora, the faithful confined their procession inside the compound's 10-foot walls out of respect for - or fear of - the city's Muslim majority.
Haddonfield
In eighth grade, Rob Sinatra was voted "Most Likely to Forgive." Maybe the other children knew something. Today he is a priest, a new priest - and thus a rarity in an era in which fewer and fewer men choose that path.
Haddon Township
Andrea Grasso is the sort of Catholic who reflexively stops and says a prayer when she hears an ambulance siren.
Philadelphia
On the day before Easter, Benjamin Kohler did something he never thought he'd do. He shed his old religion and embraced a new one: Catholicism.
Philadelphia
Leonard Swidler, 77, is a professor of Catholic thought and inter-religious dialogue at Temple University. He once trained for the priesthood and served on the faculty of the University of Tübingen, Germany, with Joseph Ratzinger - now Pope Benedict XVI.
Philadelphia
In the American Catholic Church, Eleanor Walker, 65, is unusual: an African American, born and raised a Catholic.
Philadelphia
Even when he was a little boy, the Roman Catholic notion of sin made Jimmy Calvarese "deathly afraid of church." Now at age 20, as the Drexel University sophomore and Powelton Village resident explores the subtleties of Eastern mysticism, he belongs to no religion.
Washington Crossing
Carol Marshall left the Catholic Church many years ago. Now 63, she is an evangelical Protestant, a transformation that came from her search for a more personal faith.
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