In 2013, the Barna Group did a large survey on the importance of Christians who share their faith. The group which had the lowest number of people who actively shared their faith was Catholics. Here is the truly sad part. They only polled those they designated as "people who said they have made “a personal commitment to Jesus Christ that is still important in their life today” and who also indicated they believe that when they die they will go to Heaven because they had confessed their sins and had accepted Jesus Christ as their savior."
This means they polled the best and most engaged Catholics who have had an encounter with Jesus. They found that only 1 out of every 3 Catholics agreed with the statement, "I, personally, have a responsibility to tell other people about my religious beliefs." Additionally, only 1/3 of Catholics who have encountered Jesus and chosen to follow him agreed with the statement, "During the past 12 months, I explained my religious beliefs to someone who had different beliefs, in the hope that they might accept Jesus Christ as their Savior."
This means we Catholics in the USA are not good at evangelization - the core mission of the Church! God didn't make you his disciple to merely get you to heaven. Rather, all of us are his disciples to get others to heaven as well. Jesus commanded that we "go make disciples" not just be his disciples. To put it another way, If you have fed the animals at Sea World, but have never been fishing - you can't say you are fisherman. If you stay safely inside the walls of Church buildings to talk about Jesus, but never do it at other times - you can't say you are a fisher of men.
It is no wonder that so few Catholic parishes are growing, due to new believers. The stats don't lie, we have lost our way.
Before you get too depressed, I would bet the average reader of this blog is more likely to evangelize. But, it also lays a bigger burden on us - we cannot simply aim to evangelize. We must aim to spiritually multiply disciples who evangelize! Remember this - Jesus had to save the world and gave us his strategy, by deeply investing in a handful of other people.
Our goal in the rest of this post is to better understand why Catholic don't evangelize, in order to have a good strategy to overcome the issues later.
5 Reasons Catholics Don't Evangelize!
With all of these reasons (and more), we can see that there are no good reasons why Catholics don't evangelize. Now, it is time for us to take hold of our sacred job to help others come to know Jesus and then also help them to become evangelists themselves.
"In our day Jesus’ command to “go and make disciples” echoes in the changing scenarios and ever new challenges to the Church’s mission of evangelization, and all of us are called to take part in this new missionary “going forth”. Each Christian and every community must discern the path that the Lord points out, but all of us are asked to obey his call to go forth from our own comfort zone in order to reach all the “peripheries” in need of the light of the Gospel."
-Pope Francis EG 20