B
biffoqueen
Guest
We only have baptisms on Sunday after last mass or maybe Saturday afternoon never during mass that would be most unusual.
Sacraments, by their nature, are actions of the gathered faithful. Think about the text in the Rite of Baptism. I don’t have my books at home, but somewhere in the ritual text is a sentence where the clergy says words to the effect that “the Church welcomes you.” On a Saturday in a nearly empty nave with a couple of families only, does that mean the building?My husband and I were looking at our parish website for baptism information (due next St Patty’s Day if all goes well!) and it said that baptisms are only on Saturdays between 10am and 12pm. This seemed odd to me, and also very disappointing. I guess I never noticed that we didn’t have baptisms during Mass…But it just seems to me that an important part of the sacrament is welcoming the child into the Church family, and that having a tiny ceremony with only whichever friends and relatives can afford to or care enough to travel across the country doesn’t have much of a joyous community feel. Our parish isn’t the most friendly, so we don’t know many people, but I was looking forward to everyone welcoming our future arrival in the way that it is normally done.
Does anyone have any thoughts on this? Is there anything I can do? I guess some people would love the more intimate setting, but to me it just feels isolating, like no one in the parish wants to be bothered with the small amount of extra time added to the Mass that it would take to welcome a child.
Is Reconciliation an ‘action of the gathered faithful’, or is it between a confessor and a penitent?Sacraments, by their nature, are actions of the gathered faithful.
No, it means that the priest is speaking on behalf of the Church. In fact, the very next line after the one you referenced is “*n its name I claim you for Christ our Savior.”Think about the text in the Rite of Baptism. I don’t have my books at home, but somewhere in the ritual text is a sentence where the clergy says words to the effect that “the Church welcomes you.” On a Saturday in a nearly empty nave with a couple of families only, does that mean the building?
Sacraments aren’t accomplished in degrees – ‘best’, ‘worst’, ‘just ok but could’ve been better’…! They simply are; my baptism (in the presence of my family) isn’t qualitatively different or ‘sub-optimally accomplished’ than yours in the context of a Sunday Mass.Like the immediate family, we, the church family, also welcome our newest members. This welcoming (like all sacraments) is best accomplished with the church is together - the Sunday Mass.