It’s easy for a parish to accidently
compete against itself by scheduling two events on the same day. It is even easier for this to happen between
numerous parishes. All of a sudden you
realize that two or more parishes have scheduled a concert or a dance or a
fundraiser or some event on the exact same day.
Throw in Catholic high schools, diocesan events, and churches,
synagogues, and temples all doing things and the situation gets worse. Next add city events, major league sports
events, and holiday weekends, and the possibility to schedule something on a
day that nobody else is doing something inches toward nil.
Truth be told, however,
most of this is manageable. But one
thing that drives pastors (across this diocese anyway) absolutely nuts, is when
our parish sports teams practices and games start competing with the faith life
of the parish. For many years, there was
a raging battle to get CYO to stop having games before noon or one o’clock on
Sundays. Too many kids were skipping
Mass because they had to be at the game or risk getting kicked off of the team. Oddly, that threat is perfectly acceptable to
some while cautions about not living the faith life of a Catholic is seen as
harsh.
The center of the life of
a Catholic parish is the Mass and the Eucharist. Everything stems from that. If this parish did not have at its heart the
Eucharist, then there would be no point to staying open. Send the kids to public school, let city
leagues take over the sports, go to dance at the local social hall, have the
art museums take over the art, go hear live music at the bar, and buy tickets
to motivational speakers of we are not going to make Mass our source and
summit. For us, all these things draw
meaning and importance because they are centered in the Mass and flow from it;
grace being the only thing that you will actually take with you at the end of
this life and these other activities being tools to help us live that grace
more fully.
So when these other
activities start competing with the Mass rather than flow from it, it is rather
the tail wagging the dog. And pastors
become a bit hot under their starched collars.
But that doesn’t mean that Mass and those things most closely united to
it should be made as inconvenient as possible and everything else suffer. They should, rather, complement and build up
each other, which I find most involved are more than willing to do, for it is
then that we are truly parish and I thank them deeply for that.
1 comment:
We have Mass on SUNDAY?!
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