Wow, I just had a great idea: let’s talk about what the archbishop said instead of rehashing what we think of LSN!
I’ll start. I just read an article last night about the results of the young people’s meeting the Vatican had called for. I thought the article was to o vague to post here (
Young Catholics call for an authentic, empowering church ), but it said that YP wanted a sense of community and welcome.
That kind of sounds like what the D&R want, and what Pope Francis thinks we should give them.
It is also a complaint we hear from many other geoups of people: older single people, young married people, (potential) converts, etc.
So maybe what is happening here is that lay people are all asking for the same thing: a church which has a sense of human community.
I have long thought that since the Church developed for so long in a situation in which there was one church in the town or neighborhood, that the parishioners would already be in a community and so could “afford” to concentrate on worshiping God when they came together for Mass, but that in our changed world, Catholics are not in solely Catholic communities so there is no longer a sense of a community coming together.
We have friends at church, and maybe even develop stronger friendships, but in a lot of parishes, parishioners just don’t run into each enough away from church to become friends. We have lots of fragmented “communities”: the school and activites communities for the children, and work communities for the adults, and, tbh, not much else, especially for those without a lot of spare money.
We live in a world where even those we call our families are composed of friends rather than relatives.
Teens so desperate for community and a sense of belonging that they join murderous gangs to get that sense of inclusion!
Maybe we are all looking at what the Pope is saying backwards (and ai definitely include myself in that “we”!): maybe he is not saying: break the rules for people, but instead saying that we need to pull ourselves together and form true communities which revolve around the parish? Communities in which one can find people with whom to share
deeply, not just superficially, people from whom to learn to become more holy, people with whom to just hang out and relax.
Abd maybe some few D&R people will be able to receive Communion under this new situation, but the community will be close enough that this will not cause a problem, which is why this part was put into a footnote.
Yes, I think there can be criticism of this or that aspect of what is happening, but which is more important: to critique or to learn and perhaps even do something?