Giving

Catholic Charities Reports Record Lenten Giving Despite Economic Headwinds

Donations to parish-based relief programs surged this Lenten season The national director of Catholic Charities USA C atholic Charities USA has announced that Lenten donations to its network of parish-based programs reached record levels this year, defying broader trends of declining charitable giving amid economic uncertainty. Officials attribute the increase to a coordinated campaign that linked fasting, prayer, and almsgiving in a more intentional and integrated way than in previous years. The campaign, titled Give as You Fast , ran from Ash Wednesday through Easter Sunday and was adopted by over three thousand parishes across the country. Participating parishes committed to a structured weekly giving theme tied to specific local needs — food insecurity, housing, refugee resettlement — accompanied by formation materials and testimony from those served by Catholic Charities programs . Several dioceses piloted digital giving platforms tied to daily Lenten reflections, which appeared to drive significantly higher engagement among younger donors. Total contributions are expected to exceed two hundred million dollars when all parishes have reported — a figure that would represent a thirty percent increase over the previous record set in 2019. People are hungry for ways to make their faith concrete. Lenten almsgiving gives them that. The surge in giving comes despite falling Mass attendance in many dioceses, suggesting that charitable engagement and active sacramental participation may be decoupling in ways that pastoral leaders will need to address. Researchers at the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate plan to study the phenomenon in detail. Catholic Charities has announced it will expand the campaign nationally next year, making formation and platform resources available to any parish that wishes to participate regardless of size. Officials say the goal is to make the integration of fasting, prayer, and almsgiving a permanent feature of Lenten culture in American Catholic life.

Catherine Nguyen

Mar. 16, 2026