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NATIONAL CATHOLIC
REGISTER
Cyber Faith: Catholics Use the Internet to Meet, Mingle and Meditate
More and more, technology is being used in Catholic life — from dating to RCIA.
Is it helping or hurting?
BY TIM DRAKE
Register Senior Writer
October 22-28, 2006 Issue
Posted 10/19/06 at 7:00 AM
SANDWICH, Mass.
— Catholics are using the Internet more and more, relying on new technology for
everything from dating to marriage preparation to faith formation.
At 79, Marie
McGrath didn’t hold out hope that she would find another soulmate. In 2000, she
lost her ailing husband after caring for him for 14 years.
“You don’t ever
really expect to find happiness again,” the Cape Cod resident said.
But she has,
through the help of a Catholic Internet match-making site known as Catholic
Mingle. Through the site she met Bernie, an 83-year-old man who also lost his
spouse in 2000.
“Neither of us
expected to find this kind of happiness,” said McGrath. “He pampers me, and I
let him.”
Catholic Mingle
represents just one of many ways that new technology is helping to meet the
needs of Catholics. Not only are Catholics meeting online, but they’re also
preparing for marriage that way.
In May 2004,
Christian and Christine Meert of Colorado Springs, Colo., unveiled their
Catholic marriage preparation online class. While the two had presented many
live classes, the online classes developed out of the needs of the engaged
couples they were encountering.
“We had been
doing marriage preparation in the Archdiocese of Denver at the time,” said
Christian. Yet, he explained that it wasn’t working for everyone, especially
couples who live great distances away. So he and his wife decided to try
offering a class via e-mail. “We saw that it worked very well. Within a few
weeks we encountered six more couples who were in the same situation. Based on
their response, we decided to rebuild the website so that marriage preparation
could be done online.”
For a cost of
$150 per couple, engaged couples can take the six classes online. As part of the
classes, the couple is required to follow online links and read Church documents
on the sacrament of matrimony and key doctrines of the faith. Each class
requires the couple to fill out and discuss a worksheet that the Meerts
personally correct.
Christian said
that they find they get better results from the online class than the live
class.
“In the live
setting, couples can be very passive,” said Meert. “In the online class they
have to go deeper and answer and discuss the questions. Some couples think and
work through a single worksheet for three days.”
“We were both
surprised at the variety of topics the class caused us to discuss,” said Sarah
and Andy, a couple who went through the online course. “Instead of just focusing
on religious topics, we had the opportunity to talk about our values and
feelings about kids, family, jobs, and roles in the household.”
‘Growing
Market’
To date, the
Meerts have taught 1,080 couples, both live and online. They receive
approximately three times as many couples online as they do live. They have
formal relationships with the Dioceses of Colorado Springs, Buffalo, N.Y.,
Denver and New Orleans. Individual parishes in New York and California send all
of their couples to them for marriage preparation.
The Archdiocese
of New York and Dioceses of Bismarck and Fargo, N.D., have ordered the materials
and are considering using the program as well. They’ve also taught couples from
as far away as Australia, China, Peru and the Philippines. The Meerts currently
coordinate the Office of Marriage and Family Life for the Diocese of Colorado
Springs.
Meert said the
course appeals to those who can’t attend normal classes because they live in
separate states or far from a teaching site, and those who have busy work
schedules such as police officers, doctors and students. Christian said that
couples are also beginning to take advantage of Natural Family Planning courses
online.
CatholicMatch.com, another Internet dating service, plans to ride on the success
of programs like the Meerts’. The company recently took over CatechismClass.com
and, within two months, plans to begin offering classes through its new site (FourMarks.com).
The site’s
co-founder said they receive at least a dozen requests per month from parishes
that would like to use their classes for RCIA (Rite of Christian Initiation for
Adults) or CCD classes.
“We think this a
growing market,” said Brian Barcaro, co-founder of the Pittsburgh-based
CatholicMatch. “Directors of religious education and parish priests are having
an increasingly difficult time getting people together for personal formation.
Less and less, people are turning to books, yet they are already online.”
“We’re not
trying to supplant anything that dioceses or parishes are doing,” said Barcaro.
“We’re providing a tool for them.”
Not everyone
agrees.
“Everyone is
plugged in all the time,” said Christopher Check, executive vice president of
the Rockford, Ill.-based think tank The Rockford Institute. “G.K. Chesterton
said there are no bad things, just bad uses of things.”
Check isn’t
entirely convinced of the merit of modern communication technologies. He thinks
it’s still a good idea to bring people together physically.
“I am skeptical
of the merits of modern communication technology,” said Check. “The promises of
these technologies haven’t been sufficiently examined. I am fearful that they
are supplanting normal ordinary human relationships.”
“Technology can
trivialize relationships,” said Check. “It encourages a kind of quip-think where
people think in sound bites and there tends to be less substance to their
conversations. An online education, for example, isn’t the same as sitting in a
room in the presence of a professor with whom you build a relationship over a
period of years.”
Check points to
a 1986 Vatican document titled “Guide to the Training of Future Priests
Concerning the Instruments of Social Communication,” issued by the Congregation
for Catholic Education.
“The document
called for an antidote to the human costs of too many electronic visual and
auditory stimuli,” explained Check.
“As an antidote
to time-wasting, sometimes even alienating indulgence in superficial media
programs, the students should be guided to the love and practice of reading,
study, silence and meditation,” said the document. “This will serve to remedy
the isolation and self-absorption caused by the unidirectional communication of
the mass media.”
Pulpit to
iPod
Following the
lead of many evangelical Christian churches, more and more Catholic parishes are
using modern technology to help deliver information to their parishioners. While
few Catholic parishes have gone as far as installing electronic donor kiosks in
their vestibules for making donations electronically with a credit or debit
card, and not many Catholic priests are delivering their sermons by podcast,
they are finding ways to meet their parishioners’ needs.
St. Michael’s
Church in Cranford, N.J., for example, offers a weekly RCIA podcast for those
inquiring into the faith or anyone else who is interested in learning more about
the faith. The popular podcast features contemporary and traditional music,
reflections on the day’s Scripture readings and apologetics lessons by Catholic
apologist John Martignoni, founder of the Bible Christian Society.
The podcast was
first launched last Advent as a way to keep the 12 RCIA candidates updated. The
podcast’s creator, architect apprentice Christopher Cavaliere, said it came
about almost by accident.
“In February, we
had a blizzard, and RCIA was canceled,” said Cavaliere. “I had put together
notes for the class and figured, Why not create an audio snippet for those who
couldn’t be there?”
“We wanted to
offer it to RCIA participants, but also to others in the parish who were
searching for something like this,” said Father Edgardo Jocson, pastor at St.
Michael’s. “Even those who can’t make the sessions have a way to receive them.”
Both Father
Jocson and Cavaliere have been surprised by the podcast’s reach.
“It reaches well
beyond the confines of our parish,” said Cavaliere, who admitted that it has
more listeners outside the parish than within. There are subscribers from
England, Japan, the Netherlands, Singapore and Sri Lanka. “The majority of our
RCIA participants this year are not from our parish. They’re from nearby towns
and found out about us from our website.”
Even Catholic
institutions of higher education are jumping on the bandwagon. The Catholic
Biblical School at the Institute for Religious and Pastoral Studies at the
University of Dallas has recently expanded its four-year ancient Biblical
Scripture program to include Internet-based distance education.
“Our decision to
make this important program more universally accessible is in keeping with the
mandate of the Second Vatican Council that ‘access to sacred Scripture ought to
be open wide to the Christian faithful,’” said Brian Schmisek, director of the
Institute for Religious and Pastoral Studies. “We hope that by offering this
program … both onsite and over the Internet, we will make possible the study of
the Bible for those who have otherwise lacked access.”
The Catholic
Biblical School began with 70 students in the fall of 2002. Today, more than 400
students studying at 27 sites participate in this four-year program. The
Biblical School program, which covers every book of the Bible, provides an
in-depth study of the Bible from a Catholic perspective.
Whether it’s
singles, engaged couples, Catholics or non-Catholics, technology is helping
bring the Good News to more people.
“I’m constantly
reading about how single Catholics feel underserved and underrepresented in
parishes. They’re often the ones in the back row. They sneak in late and leave
early,” said Gail Laguna, who handles corporate communications for Catholic
Mingle. “Sites like ours are helping them to meet other single Catholics in a
way that they are no longer finding in their local communities.”
Tim Drake is based in St. Joseph,
Minnesota
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