Business
Priest Shortage Forces Vatican To Hire Temps To Deliver Sacred Rites

October 19, 2009 | Issue 45•43

MILWAUKEE—In an emergency effort to boost the dwindling number of
Roman Catholic priests in the United States, the Vatican contracted
with a nationwide staffing firm last week to hire thousands of
temporary employees to provide liturgical services and administer holy
sacraments in its American churches.

[image caption: Following a background check, all newly ordained temps
must take a vow of punctuality.]

"The reduced number of active diocesan clergy has forced us to take
unprecedented measures to stop parishes from closing," Pope Benedict
XVI explained in a decree issued Saturday by the Vatican. "That is
why, for the first time in two millennia, we're allowing pretty much
anyone who is willing to show up at 9 a.m. and work for slightly more
than minimum wage to act as a Vessel of Christ."

According to a statement issued by Manpower Inc., most of the
part-time priest applicants are 18- to 26-year-old males with no
previous clerical experience. After watching a 35-minute video on the
Rite of Ordination and receiving Holy Orders during a brief phone
conference, new hires are issued two sets of ecclesiastical vestments
and assigned to fill a pastoral vacancy.

Randy Nelson, a recently hired temp priest at St. Joseph's Cathedral
in Miami, said he was initially nervous about celebrating mass in
front of a large congregation, but soon got the hang of it.

"I was a little intimidated on my first day because I had no idea what
I was supposed to do during communion," said Nelson, referring to the
transubstantiation of the Holy Eucharist, a miracle he is expected to
perform at each mass in order to transform earthly bread and wine into
the Most Precious Body and Blood of Christ. "But basically I just have
to pour some watered-down cabernet into the gold cup, wave my arms
around, say some stuff about God, and give each person in line one of
those wafer things."

[Image caption: Frequent cigarette breaks offer temps the chance to
pity the poor souls who have to work there full-time.]

"It's really not all that different from a fast food gig," Nelson
added. "Except maybe the uniforms here are a bit more humiliating."

Many temp priests told reporters they were only planning to work for
the Church until they could land a more serious job, and that having
the name of an archdiocese on their resumé was probably better than
nothing.

"This is okay for now. They need somebody to do their grunt work and I
need the money," said recent college graduate Justin Willingham,
explaining that the vow of celibacy is "kind of a drag" but that he
rarely has sex between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. anyway. "Plus, I make a ton
in tips. The people here are super generous."

According to parishioners at the Church of the Immaculate Conception
in Fayetteville, AR, their recently acquired temp is unfamiliar with
many of his priestly duties and frequently takes the Lord's name in
vain when he loses his place during Gospel readings.

"These things never happened when Father Tom [Whelan] was here," said
Gloria Huston, 67. "In the 45 years that I've been a member of this
parish I never once saw a priest sitting on the altar eating
McDonald's."

Ben Rosenthal, 23, who is a newcomer to Catholicism, said the most
interesting part of his job is administering the Sacrament of Penance,
because while sitting in the confessional he hears "all kinds of shit
you wouldn't believe."

"My friends were totally cracking up when I told them how Doug
Merchant confessed to having impure thoughts about his next-door
neighbor's daughter and was almost caught masturbating in the bushes
outside her window," Rosenthal said. "I feel like I should probably
call the cops on some of these people, but during orientation they
told us we would get fired if we broke the Seal of Confession. So I
just make them say a lot of Hail Marys."

While a majority of temps said they were happy just to have a job,
some, like Greg Purcell, believe the priesthood is simply too
demanding.

"There's no fucking way I'm working Sundays," Purcell said. "Not for
what they pay."

Despite receiving numerous applications from qualified women with
extensive knowledge of Church doctrine and advanced degrees in
theology, the Vatican continues to oppose female ordination.

[from the ONION]
-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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