Baby Crying during Mass Homily

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I think the priest was wrong, he embarrassed the family even though the babies were crying and making noise. I had a priest share with me once that no matter how annoyed the priest may be at noise or people coming in later, one should never call out someone in public during Mass. Is this a young priest and inexperienced? Sorry he was wrong.
I agree with this. It sounds like the couple should have had the good sense to go to the cry room while the baby was creating a disturbance, but they were probably pretty overwhelmed with whatever was going on. To call them out in public like that is highly insensitive and embarrassing and could have the result of driving them from the church permanently. If such things must be addressed, they should have been approached privately and sensitively.
 
I was not there, I did not hear the crying, I did not hear the Priest’s words or tone so I will not comment…however, this just strikes me as wrong.

The only person who the Priest is answerable to is the Pastor, and if the Pastor then the Bishop. The finance council has zero business in this matter. The Parish council has zero business in this matter (for the record, I just rotated off our PC and I can assure you we would have killed this discussion early, especially if it was being discussed on social media).
They were meeting anyway- this just came up and they wanted to talk about it and gather everyone’s thoughts. I’m just looking for something to say that won’t be hurtful to anyone.
A. Why didn’t the mother get up and leave ?
B. Why did it come to a point where Father had to say something ?
C. Public humiliation is wrong.
D. Why have a cry room ?
E. Mass if for everyone and if someone is being disruptive, shouldn’t they take it upon themselves to ‘exit’
F. I have trouble voicing my opinion because I don’t like ripples but I feel the priest is being met with unreasonable women.

His “For God’s Sake” wasn’t in the context that most people use it, he was saying “Gods” sake, take your child to the cry room.
 
I agree with this. It sounds like the couple should have had the good sense to go to the cry room while the baby was creating a disturbance, but they were probably pretty overwhelmed with whatever was going on. To call them out in public like that is highly insensitive and embarrassing and could have the result of driving them from the church permanently. If such things must be addressed, they should have been approached privately and sensitively.
I like your words, I may use them.
 
I don’t think it’s kind to suggest that I should re think my opinion based on assumptions. I clearly stated it was all subjective and that many people experience different things. I am strong willed and other peoples opinions don’t bother me -I was explaining my personal experience since the op suggested that I had none. Or is explaining my perspective unkind?
OK, let me explain why what you said got to me. I’ll admit I am a really sensitive person. I am trying very hard to work on that, but in the meantime, patience please 🙂

Specifically, you said, “Perhaps I’m just stronger willed and I don’t let other people get to me.” An incredibly sensitive person, like the kind who may be so humiliated by a priest doing this that they would never return to that church again (and I admitted in my first post on this thread that I would be such a person), may read this and think that you are saying that sensitivity means weak will, or that it is their fault that they would be embarrassed/ashamed. I think anybody would be embarrassed in that position.

At the end of the post, you said, “I’m not going to stop going to church over it lol that’s silly.” I don’t think it is silly, at all. I may not stop going to Mass ever, but I would stop going there. I certainly can say I would have a hard time trusting a priest who calls people out like that - even if it shouldn’t be his “job” to feel the need to do so.

Perhaps I am being oversensitive. But dismissing concerns of sensitive people is not likely to make us suddenly “get over” our sensitivity. If anything, it’s going to make it worse. Your tone (hard to read over the Internet, I know) suggests dismissiveness to someone like me. I’ve had to get over a lot of embarrassing things as a parent. I try to accommodate others but I don’t always succeed to the extent that I should or they would like. It is hard. If a priest did this to me, I would be so embarrassed I would never, ever return. I do think priests need to be sensitive to that, which is why there needs to be some kind of protocol in place for dealing with disruptive people that avoids public shaming, because the disruption is usually not intended (and if you’re me juggling the tantrum-ing two year old, I’m already mortified enough at it is. My “I don’t care” face is for my two year old, not for the rest of the congregation.)
 
We have crying and noisy babies all the time. The priest says its music to God’s ears. I don’t mind. The running up and down the aisles needs to stop, as does walking into the Sanctuary - that’s a no-no. Our Church is originally based in India of the Malankara Syriac Tradition. In India there are no pews, parents have toddlers sit up front and pay attention. Little ones are with mom, who usually takes them out when they start fussing. I notice that when they are closer to the front, unless they are wet or hungry, they tend to focus on the actions up there.
 
I agree with this. It sounds like the couple should have had the good sense to go to the cry room while the baby was creating a disturbance, but they were probably pretty overwhelmed with whatever was going on. To call them out in public like that is highly insensitive and embarrassing and could have the result of driving them from the church permanently. If such things must be addressed, they should have been approached privately and sensitively.
Privately? How, exactly, was the priest supposed to “privately” call out the couple with a child causing a disturbance in the middle of the homily?
 
Cat, 90% of the homilies are inspirational not instructional. I’ve spoken with those who teach at seminaries and this is what priests are taught as a guide to do. I think if someone’s young child or baby begins to cry at Mass, 90% of the time, one of the embarrassed parents usually runs out with them. Now why these people didn’t do that, no one knows, too embarrassed, sat up front to close, in the middle of the isle etc. But, the priest coming from another country and maybe not always understanding Americans really should not have called and embarrassed the parents further. Maybe that sort of thing is more common in India but not so much in USA. It’s not about his right as a priest, its about being more prudent and I would wager that these people won’t be back and another family leaves the Church.
Well, not in our parish. We have all kinds of instructional homilies. I’m always grateful when the priests do this, because it’s important for us all to know the facts and be aware of what kind of behavior we should practice.

Not sure if all the parishes in Illinois did this, but last Sunday, our bishop asked that his letter condemning Illinois’ decision to legalize gay marriage be read in ALL Masses, and it was read in ALL Masses, including the children’s Mass that I played for. It wasn’t a graphic letter, but it did not leave any wiggle room for Catholics who want to believe that “we are a church of tolerance and love when it comes to gay marriage.” You could have heard a pin drop in that gym while the priest read through that letter. I think if any baby had started crying (and there were a lot of babies in that Mass), the parent would have immediately left because everyone knew that this letter was important and that EVERYONE needed to hear it so they wouldn’t have any excuse to believe in gay marriage like our Catholic governor does.
 
Parents need to take their kids out if they are disruptive(I have three children so I am not speaking from some ivory tower). But the Church encourages us to have thousands of children each needs to provide adequate cry rooms so parents with small babies can attend mass without being on pins and needles. When my kids were babies we had one church with a giant cry room so thats were we went but the priest insisted that we could not turn up the volume on the speaker so it was impossible to hear. Church is for families so people need to get over it this includes the Priest unless he wants to be a solution to the problem.
 
To me, this sounds like a classic instance of useless and harmful parish drama.
If the priest was rude, and mind you, none of us was there, that is a small issue compared to any sort of lay council that thinks they have a part in dealing with this. If I was the priest, I think I would do away with the parish council and make sure the finance council discussed only for areas of finance. This gossip is unbecoming Christians.
 
Well, not in our parish. We have all kinds of instructional homilies. I’m always grateful when the priests do this, because it’s important for us all to know the facts and be aware of what kind of behavior we should practice.
Same here. It is hard to make the case for the homily being of lesser importance since without catechesis the laity will not understand the rest of Mass. I know some may see themselves as having arrived an no longer in need of the homily, but we all need this instruction, whether we know it or not.
 
Thank you for explaining yourself. I appreciate you taking the time to do that. Just to be clear I would most definitely be embarrassed if a priest called me out, I’m strong willed not invincible : ) But it would cause me to pause and reflect and my reaction would be a humble one. Now when people give me scornful looks or loud sighs that doesn’t bother me, because some people are just grouches and that’s their problem not mine. That is what I was trying to convey, not so much that I am a better person for it, but that the grouches are not worth allowing myself to be hurt over. As far as the priests actions I am giving him the complete benefit of the doubt in this story, because I wasn’t there. It had to be serious enough that he felt the need to speak up. I doubt he wanted to do that all. Maybe I am not as sensitive because our priest is pretty harsh and does not mince words and I’ve gotten use to it. I find him very refreshing and I respect his candor. Not many priest “keep it real”, but I wonder if he has scared some people away too, I think sometimes we forget the church should be evangelizing.
I hope I also better explained myself and my intentions.
 
OK, let me explain why what you said got to me. I’ll admit I am a really sensitive person. I am trying very hard to work on that, but in the meantime, patience please 🙂

Specifically, you said, “Perhaps I’m just stronger willed and I don’t let other people get to me.” An incredibly sensitive person, like the kind who may be so humiliated by a priest doing this that they would never return to that church again (and I admitted in my first post on this thread that I would be such a person), may read this and think that you are saying that sensitivity means weak will, or that it is their fault that they would be embarrassed/ashamed. I think anybody would be embarrassed in that position.

At the end of the post, you said, “I’m not going to stop going to church over it lol that’s silly.” I don’t think it is silly, at all. I may not stop going to Mass ever, but I would stop going there. I certainly can say I would have a hard time trusting a priest who calls people out like that - even if it shouldn’t be his “job” to feel the need to do so.

Perhaps I am being oversensitive. But dismissing concerns of sensitive people is not likely to make us suddenly “get over” our sensitivity. If anything, it’s going to make it worse. Your tone (hard to read over the Internet, I know) suggests dismissiveness to someone like me. I’ve had to get over a lot of embarrassing things as a parent. I try to accommodate others but I don’t always succeed to the extent that I should or they would like. It is hard. If a priest did this to me, I would be so embarrassed I would never, ever return. I do think priests need to be sensitive to that, which is why there needs to be some kind of protocol in place for dealing with disruptive people that avoids public shaming, because the disruption is usually not intended (and if you’re me juggling the tantrum-ing two year old, I’m already mortified enough at it is. My “I don’t care” face is for my two year old, not for the rest of the congregation.)
Thank you for explaining yourself. I appreciate you taking the time to do that. Just to be clear I would most definitely be embarrassed if a priest called me out, I’m strong willed not invincible : ) But it would cause me to pause and reflect and my reaction would be a humble one. Now when people give me scornful looks or loud sighs that doesn’t bother me, because some people are just grouches and that’s their problem not mine. That is what I was trying to convey, not so much that I am a better person for it, but that the grouches are not worth allowing myself to be hurt over. As far as the priests actions I am giving him the complete benefit of the doubt in this story, because I wasn’t there. It had to be serious enough that he felt the need to speak up. I doubt he wanted to do that all. Maybe I am not as sensitive because our priest is pretty harsh and does not mince words and I’ve gotten use to it. I find him very refreshing and I respect his candor. Not many priest “keep it real”, but I wonder if he has scared some people away too, I think sometimes we forget the church should be evangelizing.
I hope I also better explained myself and my intentions.
 
Privately? How, exactly, was the priest supposed to “privately” call out the couple with a child causing a disturbance in the middle of the homily?
I never said that the priest should have called out the couple in the middle of the homily. 🙂 Handling the situation privately would preclude that situation entirely. It could have been handled by ushers. The priest could have put up with the disturbance and approached the couple privately afterwards. He could have started a campaign to educate families about his own personal level of tolerance for distraction by making announcements before church and perhaps putting notices in the bulletin. I know of a priest who put a short letter in the bulletin after a particularly distracting Sunday Mass. He acknowledged the difficulties that parents have in dealing with children, made it clear that children were always welcome in the church, encouraged others to be generous and loving in their response to children who were present, but laid out some very clear guidelines to parents as to when they should remove their children. It was clearly a response to a particular incident, but was treated as a teaching moment for the entire parish.

It is also a reality that every priest, just as every person sitting in the pews, has a different tolerance level. I have 5 children and a lot of experience taking them out when they make a disturbance. I used to attend daily Mass at a parish with an elderly priest who was starting to occasionally lose his place. He was so easily distracted that I would remove noisy little ones at the slightest peep, especially during a daily Mass. I’m pretty sure just my act of getting up and leaving was distracting, but what could I do? I’ve asked my current priest about his level of tolerance, and he says he doesn’t even notice little ones crying.
 
Parents need to take their kids out if they are disruptive(I have three children so I am not speaking from some ivory tower). But the Church encourages us to have thousands of children each needs to provide adequate cry rooms so parents with small babies can attend mass without being on pins and needles. When my kids were babies we had one church with a giant cry room so thats were we went but the priest insisted that we could not turn up the volume on the speaker so it was impossible to hear. Church is for families so people need to get over it this includes the Priest unless he wants to be a solution to the problem.
I totally agree with the need for bigger and more accommodating cry rooms. Especially considering how much the church encourages children. You would think this is a no brainer. I personally like to see children in mass even the fidgety and noisy ones, all of them. They belong in mass. Again the issue is how disruptive is too disruptive. Aside from that I admire parents that sit with their littles ones in mass I know that is no easy feat. The easier thing would be to stay home or off in the cry room and never take take the time to teach their children about the mass at a young and impressionable age. Kids are paying attention even when you they don’t act like it they are taking the mass in.
 
I was not there, I did not hear the crying, I did not hear the Priest’s words or tone so I will not comment…however, this just strikes me as wrong.

The only person who the Priest is answerable to is the Pastor, and if the Pastor then the Bishop. The finance council has zero business in this matter. The Parish council has zero business in this matter (for the record, I just rotated off our PC and I can assure you we would have killed this discussion early, especially if it was being discussed on social media).
This, absolutely.

What difference does it make what does the parish council thinks about it?

In any case, they won’t have a representative sample of public opinion, because the people who were sitting there, gritting their teeth to keep from looking at the baby and keep a pleasant expression on their faces, straining to hear the homily, well, those people aren’t going to call anyone up afterwards and say, “Way to go, Father!” People who complain are a self-selecting, non-representative sample.

I would also like to point out that priests (and public speakers generally) who are speaking with a non-local accent are usually aware that it is harder for some people to understand what they are saying. So the fact that the priest was from India may be relevant in a non-cultural way. Loud noises during the homily would have a larger effect on people’s ability to understand what he is saying than if he were local.

I also don’t understand (I mean “I don’t understand,” not “I think it is wrong”) what is so embarrassing about having Father ask them to go to the cry room. If they are sensitive, I’d think they would have been just as embarrassed by the disruption their children were making, since if the children were that loud, everyone in the church was already thinking about them, trying not to think about them, surreptitiously looking at them, sedulously trying not to look at them, and so forth. Were the parents just kidding themselves that nobody noticed? All Father’s first admonition did was increase the number of people who were sympathetic to the parents’ embarrassment. Whether or not Father should have made the first admonition (and not being there I have no way to tell), there should never have to have been another admonition.

–Jen
 
The fact that it took three times for the parents to comply indicates a significant noise level was going on and that is not good for anyone in the entire congregation. I can’t fathom anyone not realizing how disruptive their children were being in such a situation and not having the respect for the office of the mass and ANY part of it to rectify things asap on their own initiative. That other parish members are actually scolding the Priest in open, public dialogue and intend to more formally attempt to reprimand him for how he handled this episode also indicates as much a lack of respect for the office of the priesthood as the parents’ did for the homily and their fellow attending parishoners.

As far as I am concerned, the Priest was being as polite as the situation called for. Part of his duty is to ensure that respect is shown during the Mass as much as is reasonably possible and I can’t imagine a noise level significant enough to deafen parents to a microphone augmented appeal to them is in any way respectful. It is not like no one knew whose children were making the raucous and that he unnecessarily ratted them out is it.
 
I realize some think the priest did harm to the parish by calling out the family and insisting they go to the cry room, possibly causing them to stop attending Mass. However, think of the families and singles of all ages who attend Mass expecting to be able to actually hear the Mass and who will be less likely to attend there in the future because of rude parents and crying babies.

The reality is that we’re supposed to be a community of people from all backgrounds and of all ages. Black, white, rich, poor, old, young, etc. That kind of community can only be maintained and possibly thrive if people are considerate of others. When a baby or young one cries for a moment or two, I agree that people should be happy there are young ones present, accept that kids make noise, and get over it. When a baby or young one is loud for more than a few moments and Mass cannot be heard, it’s the parents who are at fault and in the wrong for allowing their child to disrupt the community during worship and the priest had every right to publicly point that out since it occurred in public. Frankly, if rude and insensitive parents don’t “get it” on their own maybe they need to be publicly called out.
 
The babies don’t bother me but the young women and even old women dressed like hooch’s in hooker heels and skirts that barely cover their privates is another story.
 
👍
I realize some think the priest did harm to the parish by calling out the family and insisting they go to the cry room, possibly causing them to stop attending Mass. However, think of the families and singles of all ages who attend Mass expecting to be able to actually hear the Mass and who will be less likely to attend there in the future because of rude parents and crying babies.

The reality is that we’re supposed to be a community of people from all backgrounds and of all ages. Black, white, rich, poor, old, young, etc. That kind of community can only be maintained and possibly thrive if people are considerate of others. When a baby or young one cries for a moment or two, I agree that people should be happy there are young ones present, accept that kids make noise, and get over it. When a baby or young one is loud for more than a few moments and Mass cannot be heard, it’s the parents who are at fault and in the wrong for allowing their child to disrupt the community during worship and the priest had every right to publicly point that out since it occurred in public. Frankly, if rude and insensitive parents don’t “get it” on their own maybe they need to be publicly called out.
 
A young couple who has a 2yr old and a less than a year old. Baby boy and baby girl. The little ones were fussing quite a bit during mass. During the homily, I don’t know what happened, but all of the sudden, it did get pretty loud. I’m not sure if people whispering overtop of the baby crying or what, but it reached a point where Father stopped his homily and said, Please, we have a cry room, Please take your baby to the cry room. ((crickets, nothing- still fussing)) Again- he asks ((Me ? You can’t mean me?)) The third time he says For God’s sake, take your child to the cry room. So they do.
I understand the priest having the right to excuse the couple without congregation questioning him but the BOLDED is what bothers me. Did he really take the Lord’s name in vain like that from the altar? He may have been being pious with the phrase, but it sounds like given that there was immediate debate from the congregation that this one not the case.
 
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