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CALL TO SERVICE: CRITICAL MASS

Diocese of Las Vegas struggles to build up number of priests in growing city

Two weeks ago, during one of his last Sunday Masses at St. Andrew Catholic Community, the Rev. Joseph Annese gathered a gaggle of children at the altar during a key part of the service.

"I want you to see what I'm doing up here," explained Annese, who officially retired the following day after spending 30 years as pastor of the Boulder City parish.

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  • Why? Simple, Annese told them. "We need more priests."

    Annese's pitch for vocations as he, himself, was leaving full-time ministry underscored how important it is that the Diocese of Las Vegas find new priests to replace its chronically overtaxed clergy.

    Granted, the Las Vegas diocese isn't alone in suffering a vocations crisis, and most other dioceses across the country are struggling to find men who wish to become priests. But the clergy gap in Southern Nevada has been made more acute by a population that has grown dramatically during the past decade.

    According to the Very Rev. Kevin McAuliffe, the diocese's vicar general (the bishop's chief administrative official), about 740,000 of Southern Nevada's roughly 2 million residents are Catholic. Serving that large, and still growing, Catholic population are about 65 priests.

    However, according to McAuliffe, only about 20 of those priests are priests who "actually belong to the diocese, (who) are incardinated into the Diocese of Las Vegas, and are active."

    The rest are members of religious orders -- who serve in the diocese but can be relocated if their superiors deem it necessary -- visiting priests from other dioceses, or retired priests who've moved to Southern Nevada and have agreed to assist the diocese by celebrating Masses here.

    Now factor into that dispiriting equation this: The Las Vegas diocese's clergy is, comparatively speaking, an aging one.

    The average age of priests in the Las Vegas diocese is about 60, McAuliffe noted. Because priests may submit letters of resignation at age 65, the diocese could face an even more significant reduction of its clergy in the next decade or so.

    Certainly, retired priests may continue to assist the diocese. Annese, for example, is 75 and said he agreed to stay on as full-time pastor at St. Andrew for 10 years beyond his official retirement age. And, although he is officially retired, Annese said he'll continue to say Mass at parishes across the diocese when he can.

    Filling in as parish administrator at St. Andrew until a full-time successor to Annese can be found is the Rev. Sam Falbo, 75, who retired six years ago after serving for more than 42 years in the Archdiocese of Santa Fe, N.M.

    Falbo became acquainted with Las Vegas Bishop Joseph Pepe in Santa Fe. "Since I was retired, I was thinking of moving to this area and asked if he needed any help," Falbo recalled.

    According to a Santa Fe archdiocese spokeswoman, the archdiocese -- which serves about 307,400 Catholics -- has about 83 diocesan priests, about 83 priests who belong to religious orders, about 41 retired priests and 22 seminarians.

    "There's a real tightness of vocations here," Falbo says. "So, I accepted."

    According to McAuliffe, 10 to 15 retired priests are helping the Las Vegas diocese serve parishioners. But it isn't a given that retired priests always will be willing or available to do so.

    "Sometimes, they retire and want to stay retired," McAuliffe said.

    The next five years will be "exceptionally critical," he added. "When so many men hit 65 all at the same time in five years, we hope that means nothing to them, and they'll say, 'That's OK' (and stay on)."

    Against this backdrop of an already stretched clergy, Southern Nevada's population continues to grow. The bottom line, McAuliffe said, is that the diocese's "personnel issues are really getting kind of severe."

    However, there's no quick fix on the horizon. Candidates to the Catholic priesthood begin by participating in a discernment process, during which they examine whether they do have a vocation to the priesthood. That can take a year.

    Once a man officially has been accepted as a diocesan seminarian, a candidate just out of high school will spend four years earning an undergraduate degree, typically in a discipline such as philosophy. (Seminarians who already have an undergraduate degree will take two years of pre-theology courses.)

    Then comes four years of theology study, followed by a pastoral year, during which seminarians serve something akin to an internship at a local parish. Only then can the seminarian be ordained a priest.

    "It's essentially nine years from start to finish," McAuliffe said. "And, typically, you have a pretty healthy attrition rate in ordination class. My class, for example, we lost two-thirds by the time we got to the end."

    The next priest scheduled for ordination in the diocese is John Assalone, a former entertainment executive at the MGM Grand, who was ordained a deacon in May. He is scheduled to be ordained a priest a year from now. (In 2002, the Review-Journal profiled Assalone and three other men who were exploring their call to the priesthood. Of that group, only Assalone still is seeking diocesan ordination.)

    The Rev. Mugagga Lule, the diocese's vocations director, said the Las Vegas diocese has four other seminarians studying for the priesthood. One of them is Jesus Garcia, 26, a Chaparral High School graduate who is entering his fourth year of undergraduate studies at Mount Angel Seminary in Oregon.

    Garcia has lived in Las Vegas since he was 3 months old and said that, while growing up, "I was never close to the Mass and never close to church or religion at all."

    After high school, he attended college with plans of becoming a physical education teacher. But, Garcia said, "I started reading the Bible and attending Mass, and it opened my eyes."

    After attending a series of retreats to explore a possible vocation, "I felt God calling me," Garcia said.

    Some who have known him are curious about the new direction his life has taken. Some, Garcia noted, even wonder if they, too, may have a calling to the priesthood.

    "What I always tell anybody is, you have nothing to lose and so much to gain if you give it a try," he said. "One thing I didn't want is to have that doubt in my mind. Now, it's the best decision I've ever made."

    In promoting vocations to the priesthood, the Las Vegas diocese faces all of the obstacles every other American diocese faces, from a general de-emphasis on religion in American society to a greater societal emphasis on material success.

    But, McAuliffe added, "one of the problems we're facing that's very difficult to overcome is that Las Vegas is a relatively new city."

    Unlike Boston, Baltimore or other older cities with strong historic Catholic traditions, Las Vegas isn't blessed with a deep-seated "Catholic culture," McAuliffe said.

    Also a problem is the transient nature of the city, Lule said, that can prevent newly relocated Catholics from identifying strongly with the Las Vegas Catholic community.

    "When I talk to many people," he said, "their feeling is, 'Well, back East ....' "

    But, for Lule, the primary obstacle to diocesan vocations is a lack of Catholic teaching and culture in many homes. "Basically, one of the biggest obstacles is, we're talking about a generation that was not catechized," or taught the basics of their faith, Lule said. "So, when kids come to church, they don't really understand the very concept of church, the very concept of God."

    And, Lule said, "you cannot love what you don't understand."

    Lule addresses such issues when he speaks about vocations at local parishes. One of the points he makes is that, without priests, the things Catholics take for granted -- visits to the sick, priests who are available to hear confessions, even the celebration of the Mass -- would be impossible to provide.

    Yet, it's not all bleak, McAuliffe said. Las Vegas' Catholic clergy are "a tough, dedicated group," he said, and "if anything is going to give (prospective seminarians) an example and draw others to this life, it will be that commitment, that dedication.

    "Never has a weekend gone by where I get a call on Monday or Tuesday where a Mass was not celebrated or 'Father didn't show up.' Never. No matter how shorthanded we get, no matter how large these parishes get, I have yet to hear that 'Father wasn't there for something,' and that's the kind of dedication and commitment that, despite the constant growth and (being) shorthanded, to me, is the bright spot."

    But even that "bright spot" can be compounding the problem.

    "People still don't realize the situation here in terms of personnel, because their needs are being met and continue to be met by this clergy who will show up at all hours of the day and night and do what needs to be done and are seeing to people's needs," McAuliffe said.

    "How long that can continue, I don't know."

    Contact reporter John Przybys at jprzybys@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0280.



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    Carmine A. DiFazio wrote on July 17, 2008 11:15 AM: I came to LV within the last 2 years from the east coast and the Catholic Dioceses of Newark NJ, Washington DC, and Arlington VA. Priests there were over worked and under appreciated. But most, if not all, are very spiritual and dedicated. Without question.

    Since living here, there have been 3 high profile news cases about failings and shortcomings of the Las Vegas Diocese and several of its Priests. Very sad. Breaks my heart to read. I can't imagine what that does to Holy Mother Church and The Sacred Heart of Jesus and The Immaculate Heart of Mary.

    The author did not research and/or comment on the role of the first Bishop of Las Vegas with regard to the present lack of Priestly vocations. I think there is a story there waiting to be told that got missed in this article. And is the root cause for the existing problem.


    Edward Gangloff wrote on July 14, 2008 02:54 PM: A further thought on the comment by "Concerned Catholic", I cannot believe that someone who calls themself a concerned Catholic would be so cowardly as to not sign his or her comment. Coward!!


    Edward Gangloff wrote on July 14, 2008 02:46 PM: I have never read a more vicious, untruthful comment as the one from a 'concerned Catholic". I am a member of Fr. Kevin's parish, St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, and he is unquestionably the hardest-working, most dedicated priest I have ever met--and I have met a great number. In addition to being the pastor of an 11,00 family parish he also serves as the Vicar General of the Dioces--both more than full time jobs. He is also a most holy man and a gifted learned pracher. I don't know Bishop Pepe as well, but I think very highly of him and he has done a great job in a most ususul type of Diocese, such as LV. I have complete confidence in him.


    Concerned Catholic wrote on July 13, 2008 07:05 PM: The fact that this diocese has the lowest amount of active clergy and up and coming vocations is directly related to the poor leadership of the bishop and the over-emphasis on money to the exclusion of concern for biblical principles. Kevin McAuliffe is not respected by the priests of the diocese; same with the bishop because both are consumed with their power and not with serving God's people or building up the diocesan priests. As soon as the bishop and Kevin McAuliffe start acting like Christians and acting with charity and justice towards all Christians in Southern Nevada then God will bless this diocese with more vocations. The lack of vocations of this diocese is directly related to the lack of faith and service to God and His Church. Once this bishop and Kevin McAuliffe begin to act like Christians and create a God-serving diocese, then vocations will flourish as will priests wanting to come here from other dioceses. Since that has not happened, this is precisely why there are very few priests serving in the diocese. Furthermore, if Kevin and Pepe did not mistreat so many priests and lay people alike, there would be more priests and lay people willing to serve this diocese. Until their attitude changes, nothing will change. They both need to go to confession and make amends for their sins; those two are bad people and their results are harming all Las Vegas Catholics.


    Jim Behrendt wrote on July 13, 2008 12:54 PM: Good article on lack of vocations. I have an idea on how to improve the church all around. Confirmation is the continuation of a baptism. When the kids finish confermation classes they should be informed catholics and have no problem in starting a spiritual walk.
    What has happened the kids get the head knowledge but not spiritual knowledge. When you are confirmed its a release of the Holy Spirit where the human spirit and the Holy Spirit work in harmony with each other. The catholic then recieves power in the gifts and fruits of the Holy Spirit.
    The kids need to go through a Holy Spirit seminar along with what they get in confirmation classes. The laying of hands with spirit filled catholics for the release of the Spirit. They need to be taught that our God is bigger than any physical or spiritual sickness on earth. The kids need to be super motavated so when they work in their parish they are faith filled energetic lamp stands of God. That kind of Zeal is what brings men into seminarys not just book smart catholics.
    JIM Behrendt