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FALLING AWAY
"Let no man deceive you by any means: for that day shall not
come, except there come a falling away first." 2TH.2:3a
From the second half of the 19th Century until now we have seen
the steady erosion of the basic beliefs and faith that were at the
core of what is known as the Western Civilization. This phenomena
is known as the "falling away from the faith." Church
attendance has dropped so dramatically that denominations are closing
their doors through what used to be called Christendom. We have
experience a real falling out with God and the church. This is due
to unbelief, loss of faith in God and in the Bible. The world is
full now of skeptics, agnostics, and atheist. People have abandoned
their faith for the false teachings of evolution.
Losing the faith in France

By Robert Pigott
Religious affairs correspondent, France
As secularisation takes an increasingly firm
hold over French society, Catholic congregations are disappearing
and the country's ageing priests are dying.
Father Andre Bouzou moves through the market in Montcuq - a picturesque
place amid vineyards and sunflower fields in the Lot valley in
south-west France - with the easy familiarity of a man confident
of his welcome.
France has already lost more than half the priests it had in the
1960s
The way Fr Bouzou picks his way between the stalls selling duck
confit and local honey, kissing some of the stall holders and
ruffling their children's hair, makes it seem that the Church
still occupies a central role in people's lives.
But priests are scarce in the Lot valley now, so scarce
that Fr Bouzou has no fewer than 40 churches to look after. It would
be a virtually impossible task, but for the fact that many of them
have almost no congregation.
There are just a handful of worshippers for Fr Bouzou's
mass at St Laurent Lolmie.
Outside, the little churchyard is crowded with the
tombs of past generations of the faithful. Inside are just the former
mayor (baptised in this church 84 years ago), two elderly women
and three nuns.
They can all remember when every church like this
had its own priest.
Times gone by
One of the nuns tells me that the pews are now empty
because of materialism and the breakdown in community life, but
Fr Bouzou blames people's aversion to belonging.
Fr Bouzou only manages to visit this village church once or twice
a year
"They're prepared to take part," he says,
"but they don't
want to belong to an institution."
Fr Bouzou, who is 63 and has the faded good looks
of a former film star, is younger than most priests in the Cahors
diocese. The average age is 68.
Fr. Bouzou only manages to visit this village chuch once or twice
a year
For decades, the Church in France has been living
on borrowed time, relying on a body of priests whose average age
has steadily increased. That time has suddenly run out.
Recent research suggests that French priests have
become so old that half of them will die in the next eight years.
At Puy L'Eveque, Michel Cambon is Fr Bouzou's nearest
fellow priest. He is the only one who seems really angry about the
crisis.
As we walk among the dilapidated tombs in the churchyard
with their fallen crosses and mournful statuary, the church bells
clang balefully.
Fr Cambon - who has more than 30 churches to look
after - says his elderly congregation is dying out so rapidly that
in 10 years there may be no church in Puy L'Eveque at all.
People kept saying it would be all right," says Fr Cambon,
"but they're about to be proved wrong. My fear is that the
Roman Catholic Church will disappear altogether in France. That's
the path we're o
"Priests used to have higher status in French
society... they were considered respectable and significant"
- Fr Lucien Lachieze-Rey
For French seminaries it is a well-trodden path. Only 150 men completed
their training as priests last year, for the whole of France.
In the library at Toulouse Seminary, Fr Lucien Lachieze-Rey
pushes ancient wooden stairs into place with a squeal of un-oiled
wheels, and searches for a book to illustrate the point. He says
ordination seems less attractive to young people now.
"Priests used to have higher status in French
society," he says. "They were considered respectable and
significant. Now, like teachers and engineers, they don't have the
respect they used to."
Global recruitment
The Church has sought a solution in the African countries,
to which it took Christianity more than a century ago.
Almost 30 priests from former French colonies such
as Senegal, Gambia and Ivory Coast are in the diocese.
African priests are being drafted in from former French colonies
Fr Anatole Kere sees himself as a missionary, bringing
the faith back to a post-Christian country.
The evening I met him he was sitting amid the faded
grandeur of the presbytery at Fumel, giggling infectiously as he
prepared two young couples for the baptism of their children.
At home, in Burkina Faso, Fr Kere might preach to
5,000 people. Here he will often find just five in church.
He is mystified that the faith that so enthuses Africans
is all but ignored in France. He blames the material wealth of French
people.
"It gives people the sense of having a refuge,"
he says. "They become uninterested in spiritual things. They
don't seem to realise the dangers in neglecting the spiritual side
of man."
In demand
Fr Bouzou must often leave wedding parties early to say mass elsewhere
Fr Bouzou takes a wedding service at Montlauzun on
a sunny
Saturday. This couple were lucky. More and more weddings are conducted
by lay people. So are funerals, and even baptisms.
Fr Bouzou must often leave wedding
parties early to say mass elsewhere
Some priests support a movement called Focalari, a
broad-based, un-dogmatic approach to Christianity aimed particularly
at the young, in the hope of bringing people back to church.
But many others support an even more radical idea,
in open defiance of the Pope's strict edict: an end to compulsory
celibacy and even the ordination of women.
The wedding party unfolds under a huge chestnut tree
in a field behind the church. Someone has tied paper streamers to
the lower branches. A four-piece band is playing and the bride dances
with two children at the same time.
Fr Bouzou mingles for a few moments, then, unnoticed,
disappears.
There is a wedding in St Cyprien, mass later on at
Montcuq, and the funeral of an old friend in Lascabanes.
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