… as Juan-Pablo II called the country.
Citius64 posted the original (from the paid-subscription only Reforma, 24-Feb-2007) on his website.
Less than ten percent of Catholics attend Sunday Mass, according to the Archdiocese of Mexico (City).
A notice on the Archdiocesan web page estimated that if all baptized Catholics attended Mass, there would not be enough churches, and priests would have to hold services outdoors.
“Unfortunately, the number of persons attending Sunday Mass fluctuates between six and nine percent of those baptized,” according to figures compiled by the Archdiocesan Office of Planning and Statistics.
The report went on “There are approximately 1,129 churches, serving an average of 8,000 people each. Every church would have to be equal in size to the Basilica of Guadalupe if that number of people attended every Sunday mass, at the same hour “.
Many priests admit they recognize that missing masses is something to worry about. “However,” said the report, “the baptized who are missing Mass should be a lot more worried.”
The reality is the nuns, tourists (and tour guides) usually outnumber the faithful, even in the Metropolitan Cathedral. This photo was taken by Dutch tourist:









3 responses so far ↓
Abortion will be non-issue « The Mex Files // March, 29, 2007 at 3:25 am
[...] enlighting statement. According to the Archdiocese of Mexico City’s own figures, only about 10% of people attend Sunday Mass. And how many of them are just there to keep granny happy isn’t [...]
The head-choppers' ball « The Mex Files // April, 12, 2007 at 11:22 pm
[...] as both Edmonds and Fred Rosen write in the Herald is showing the Church in a very poor light. It is losing power – so much so, that on abortion, they had to join forces with the Orthodox and Anglican [...]
DF Abortion decriminalization only the beginning « The Mex Files // April, 26, 2007 at 12:50 am
[...] Mexico is not as Catholic as outsiders like to think, and 2/3rds of voters in the Presidential election cast ballots for leftists or anti-clerical candidates. Despite some alarmist rhetoric, I really think we’re going to see a continuing liberalization in Mexico. Just as a foretaste, I noticed that the Secretary of Public Instruction, pressed on whether abortion would be included in the required sex-education curriculum (even in private religious schools) said it would be at least mentioned. [...]
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