General key results include the following: There was a 41% increase in every-Sunday Masses in the dioceses surveyed. 19 dioceses saw an increase in the number of every-Sunday Masses, 14 remained status quo (three remained at zero), and one saw a decrease. Sacraments in the traditional form appear to be generally available:
- Baptisms - 79%
- Nuptial Masses - 71%
- Requiem Masses - 68%
- Confirmations - 53%
20% of dioceses had personal parishes for the EF Mass.
Attitude of the local ordinary toward the EF was rated:
- Bad and no hope - 35%
- Bad but improving - 3%
- Stagnant - 18%
- Generally improving - 15%
- Good - 9%
- About as good as can be imagined - 6%
- No response - 15%
- Worsened - 9%
- Unchanged - 18%
- Slightly improved - 32%
- Substantially improved - 21%
- Dramatically improved - 6%
- There is indeed a demand for the EF and Summorum Pontificum has helped make the EF more accessible to the faithful.
- There is still an unfulfilled demand for the EF. Some increased oversight or better "enforcement" of SP may be necessary to insure the demand is met.
- Training for seminarians must become mandatory.
- There is a significant need for training in the EF of already-ordained priests. Una Voce America must continue to support the F.S.S.P. initiative on priestly training. Bishops should make more training available on a local basis and encourage priests to attend the F.S.S.P. training week. (UVA is financially able to assist clergy with the costs of training, if necessary -- thanks to the generosity of its members and supporters.)
[Acknowledgement, Allen Maynard and Nota editor, "Much done ... much more to do," Una Voce America Nota, No. 45, Spring 2011]
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