• A Voice in the Church of Central TX

ATX Catholic

A Voice in the Church in Central Texas

  • Articles
  • Podcast Archive
  • About ATX Catholic
    • Contact Us
    • Contributors

Young Adults and the Parish

Published November 8, 2011 • Written by Cristóbal Almanza Herrera Filed Under: Blog, Faith, Young Adult

Looking back on my childhood, I am very grateful for the role that our parish had in my life. We prayed together, and we played together. Outside of school, the parish was everything to me and my family.

That community consists of only a couple hundred families and is the only Catholic church in that town. In a situation like that, we just had to accept our community. There was no “shopping around” for us. When you know it’s the only option, you are forced to be much happier with it.

In her wisdom, Mother Church gave us the institutions of the diocese and the parish to help distribute priests and to aid in the faith formation and nourishment of the faithful.

While it is best to register with the parish that has its boundaries for your home, we do have the freedom to go beyond the set area if we have good reason to do so.

In our personalization-obsessed society, many Catholics today treat church-selection with the same approach as selecting a restaurant. Similar to many other cities, many Austin Catholics often float from one parish to the other, usually basing their attendance on which mass they can wake up in time to make.

The parish floating approach to mass attendance distances the individuals and families from the greater family of the parish and inhibits growth with a community. This is especially common with young adult Catholics.

Young Adults and the Parish

Most parishes have groups for children, mothers, youth, Knights of Columbus, and more, but young adults are among the most under-served groups in the average parish. Catholics in their twenties and thirties are not only the least involved, they are also less likely to attend mass regularly than their older and younger counterparts.

Many theories could be proposed as to why this is true, but I’ll leave that to more qualified people who have done research. What we do need to do is take notice and take action. The young adult generation has a wealth of treasures to offer church. Most notably, they usually are the group that has the most free time to serve the church, and they are the generation that produces the most vocations for marriage and religious life.

Our parishes need to take a bolder missionary approach to reach out to young adults of their mass-attendees in a concentrated effort to promote stronger communities and more solid vocations. Our youth programs are pivotal in this to ensure a larger percentage of well-formed future young adults. Our communities also need to be welcoming and provide formation opportunities to the current young adults that have not be catechised well, if ever.

Holiness is necessary. If Jesus is the center of our parish communities, His presence will attract others. The deepest longing of all our souls is to encounter our Lord, and the parish community provides a very unique, powerful witness and reflection of Christ through each other.

Advice for Young Adults

It’s easy to to go to church just in time for mass and scoot out at the end of the mandatory hour, but your parish can be so much more than that. Looking for friends, clients, babysitters, and more? The parish is a great network of locals for personal, social, business, and spiritual connections.

Building the connections with others in your parish is part of how of the design. Jesus gave us the Church because He knew we needed community, and our union through the Mystical Body of Christ creates a hunger to grow closer to the people around us at mass.

It is understandable that this is not always easy. Sometimes we have a hunger for the social connections, but are hesitant going out of our comfort zone. It will take some effort to get past the initial hesitation to go to a new event or signing up for a new service at the parish, but it is certainly worth it.

The Place of the Parish

It is important to find a parish, register and get involved. Just as a priest has a role and responsibility toward his parish, the laity also has the responsibility to support the parish with their time, talent, and treasure.

Our fallen nature inclines us to take it as optional and pass on giving of ourselves, but it is selfish to do so. There is joy in discovering the blessings that God gives us through the giving of ourselves to the Church. God is not outdone in His generosity.

In my last years in college and after, I too just went to mass and often didn’t return for another week. It kept my faith fairly stagnant. Now that I am 2 years at my parish, I have found so much joy and peace in investing so much of myself into my parish family. Once again, the parish has become everything to my wife and me – our parish is home.

I pray that more Catholic young adults of this diocese and of the world can discover the value of a parish.

Share this:

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • More
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit

Like this:

Like Loading…

Related

Previous Post
Next Post

Written by Cristóbal Almanza Herrera • Published November 8, 2011

Comments

  1. Jeremy Steck says

    November 8, 2011 at 6:44 PM

    Great article! All so true! Parish Life is very important.

    Reply
    • Cristóbal Almanza says

      November 9, 2011 at 4:39 PM

      Thank you for the support. Yes, Parish life is essential to a strong spiritual formation and nourishment. 

      Reply
  2. Angela Sealana says

    November 8, 2011 at 7:25 PM

    Overall, I’m very disappointed with efforts to minister to young adults. I mean, come on…most of the diocesan-run programs/retreats/etc are irrelevant to our lives.

    And more often than not, YA programs do little to reach out to those YAs who don’t regularly attend Mass. That requires being bolder, being more authentic, and frankly being in touch with cultural trends and the vox populi.
    When dioceses create job descriptions for YA ministers, they need to take these things into consideration. Is this somebody who’s more comfortable with church ladies or with the regular Joes and Janes?

    Reply
    • Cristóbal Almanza says

      November 9, 2011 at 4:37 PM

      Very good points. Still, one diocesan minister for a diocese only does a small part of the job. The parishes themselves hold more of the responsibility on a more localized and concentrated effort. 

      I didn’t touch too much on the how part for parishes, but I will in a future post. 
      Thanks for the great comment.

      Reply
  3. Smoura85 says

    November 10, 2011 at 3:06 AM

    Let us pray for zeal to evangelize to Young Adults and inspire love ad movement. Myself being a young adult, it’s not easy out there at all. However, inspite of this sad reality, it’s somehow yet an awesome opportunity for us to practice courage in and hope for our beautiful Church.

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Translate Site

Subscribe via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 1,529 other subscribers

Latest Posts

Brown Scapular Investiture July 13

By Deacon Guadalupe Rodriguez

Psalter page

How to Encounter God in the Psalms

By Geoffrey, Obl.OSB

Site Stats

  • 1,948,062 Views

Today’s Top Posts

  • Strewing Flowers at the Corpus Christi Procession
    Strewing Flowers at the Corpus Christi Procession
  • A Mother's letter to her daughter for her Confirmation
    A Mother's letter to her daughter for her Confirmation
  • The Corpus Christi Procession and Divine Mercy
    The Corpus Christi Procession and Divine Mercy
  • ATX Catholic
We are dedicated to bringing the good news of Jesus Christ into the world through engaging new and social media, with particular focus on Catholics in the Diocese of Austin.

Ora Pro Nobis

St John Paul II
St John Paul II
Our Lady of Guadalupe
Our Lady of Guadalupe
Ven. Fulton Sheen
Ven. Fulton Sheen

• Copyright © 2026 ATX Catholic • All content posted on this site is copyright of ATX Catholic unless credited otherwise. All links and partners are indirectly affiliated with ATX Catholic and do not necessarily express the views of this group. We work to support the local church in the Diocese of Austin, but ATX Catholic does not directly represent or speak for Bishop Joe Vásquez or the Diocese of Austin.

Loading Comments...

    %d