The Australian Catholic Church In Australia In The 1960's

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The Catholic Church in Australia is connected to the Global Catholic Church and is under the spiritual and authoritative guidance of it. This religion was first founded in Australia in 1788 with the first fleet and has remained as a sound religion containing about a 1/4 of Australians since the 1960s. In 2016, there were ~5.4 million Australian Catholics, or ~23% of the total population. The 1950s was the most significant era for the Australian Catholic Church as there was a massive boom in Australian Catholics. The numbers climbed rapidly, rising the percentage of Catholics in the Australian population.

The enormous social change that Australia experienced in the 1960s and 1970s changed the perspective that the Catholic Church had on their …show more content…

Today, 12% of Australian Catholics attend Mass periodically, the total number of priests, sisters and brothers is decreasing, and their mean age is rising. The relation between the clergy and the people has transformed significantly also. Ancient forms of devotion, such as the Rosary, have almost dissolved, but there is an increasing interest in other ways of prayer that come from a spectrum of cultures and traditions. The changes that have occurred have primarily been changes in rules and practices. The teachings of the Church were slightly reimagined because of modern history, sociology, science, and other human activities, and then expressed in a more up to date language. However, the messages of the teachings have not been …show more content…

Relations between these to groups are civil because of Australia’s great sense of multiculturalism. All religions in this country are well looked after and celebrated freely within Australian society, E.g. Holidays, Multicultural round for the AFL, public demonstrations etc. Another reason for this is the growing sense of inclusion and welcomeness that Australia is giving off to the world. It makes people, no matter what religion, feel safe and welcome inside of Australia and they feel free to express themselves with no consequences (unless the perform an illegal action). Some people of other religions may disagree with some of the fundamentals of another religion, but they usually do respect their choice and their belief. Religions within Australia have a pretty good relationship and interact freely in Australian