Catholic priests
are not immune to the more sedentary lifestyle affecting much of society
today, brought about by technological advances over the past century.
Several
priests Catholic News Service interviewed talked about the need to stay
physically fit to ward off illnesses and avoid being overweight.
To
many of them, physical health is as important as spirituality, and if
they take care of themselves they can better serve the church.
Msgr.
Rick Hilgartner, executive director of the Secretariat of Divine
Worship for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, called it being "a
good steward of the gift God has given me -- the gift of myself, my
body, who I am as an instrument for the Lord."
In general,
officials in the Catholic Church are concerned about the physical health
of seminarians and priests, according to Father John G. Guthrie,
associate director of the Secretariat of Clergy, Consecrated Life and
Vocations for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.
There appears to be a reason for this concern.
A
United Nations report released in July 2013 put the U.S. obesity rate
at 31.8 percent, making it second only to Mexico in the Western
Hemisphere, excluding Belize and some small Caribbean Islands.
A
2009 study of the psychological and spiritual health of priests --
conducted by Msgr. Stephen Rossetti, a clinical associate professor of
pastoral studies at The Catholic University of America -- found that 46
percent of the nearly 2,500 priests surveyed identified themselves as
overweight.
That same study found that 26.3 percent of the priests
surveyed listed themselves as obese, and 3.4 percent reported having a
body mass index indicating they were morbidly obese.
These
statistics show that U.S. priests are among those affected by the
obesity epidemic in the country and church leaders are searching for
ways to encourage priests and seminarians to live healthier lifestyles.
It's
one of the reasons that rectors of U.S. seminaries are stressing the
importance of physical health to all seminarians, Father Guthrie said.
"The
program for priestly formation asks seminarians applying for seminary
to have a full physical to make sure they are in physical good health,
because physical health is important, right from the get go," he told
CNS.