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Local priests optimistic that Catholics still returning home

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Six months after the Rockford Diocese launched TV commercials inviting fallen-away Catholics to return to the church, the Rev. Tim Seigel is still getting calls from people who want to come back, a ripple effect that he believes started with the television advertising.

The commercials, which ran in December and January, were followed by programs led by laypeople and priests at each parish, inviting people interested in regaining their Catholic faith to meet once a week throughout the Lenten season.

Whatever evidence is considered – like an increase in Mass attendance throughout the diocese or anecdotal evidence, like the phone calls Seigel is still receiving – the diocese and local priests know that change is happening.

“There is something happening here and it’s a very exciting time,” said Seigel, pastor of St. Catherine of Genoa Church in Genoa.

The Rockford Diocese, which includes DeKalb County, evaluated the effectiveness of Catholics Come Home in three ways, said Michael Cieslak, the director of research and planning for the diocese.

First, a survey of parish leadership – to laypeople employed by parishes as well as priests – was conducted in late January, after the commercials had ended.

That survey’s purpose was to gauge first impressions, Cieslak said. Overall, 57 percent of respondents said they believe their parish will be energized as a result of Catholics Come Home, 77 percent felt that Catholic identity among currently attending Catholics would be strengthened and 60 percent of pastors had already seen an increase in Mass attendance.

The next step was to physically count people at Mass. This was done over the last two weekends of February at each of the 105 parishes in the diocese.

From October 2009 to February 2010, Mass attendance grew 10.5 percent overall.

In DeKalb County, attendance went up 15.4 percent – the highest of all 11 counties in the diocese, Cieslak said.

Typically, Mass counts are conducted annually in October. So the real test will come this October, when the year-over-year comparison can be made.

“Even if we maintain half of that (increase) – October 2010 versus October 2009 – that would be huge because that would be reversing a six- or seven-year trend,” Cieslak said.

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