L
losh14
Guest
I love the recent humor here - helps lighten the discussion.
It should be pointed out that, while you technically belong to one parish, there is not a mechnism to track. There’s no diocesan audit of households, for example. If you’re living in one parish but registered at another it seems that the only time this comes to the parish’s attention is when you need to enroll your kids in the parish school, arrange for a wedding or baptism, etc.
We’ve a unique and somewhat frustrating situation. We belong to a parish down the street but attend one across the city (where we are still registered from before we moved). The parish down the street is fine and good except for the cry room - which is almost always filled with people who do not have small children. We’ve a 15-month-old who likes to sing when no one else is so we often sit in the cry room. At the local parish, the cry room is never enforced and instead is populated by folks with teenagers who use the cry room to talk on the phone, tell jokes among each other, etc. The last time we went, a family with four children (the youngest was 10, oldest probably 16) were so distracting that we went to the main body of church, and were asked to sit in the cry room as soon as our daughter uttered a peep, so we left early. We didn’t even make it to the Eucharist.
Instead, we still attend the parish across the city where the cry room is very much respected. A solemn quiet is maintained and people know how to keep their kids in line. It’s just a completely different mentality towards the Mass.
So yes, you can attend a different parish than the one in which you’re registered, and I’ll go against the strictures of Canon Law and say you should register where you attend so that the diocesan tax and appeal reflect accurately the needs and abilities of the parish population.
It should be pointed out that, while you technically belong to one parish, there is not a mechnism to track. There’s no diocesan audit of households, for example. If you’re living in one parish but registered at another it seems that the only time this comes to the parish’s attention is when you need to enroll your kids in the parish school, arrange for a wedding or baptism, etc.
We’ve a unique and somewhat frustrating situation. We belong to a parish down the street but attend one across the city (where we are still registered from before we moved). The parish down the street is fine and good except for the cry room - which is almost always filled with people who do not have small children. We’ve a 15-month-old who likes to sing when no one else is so we often sit in the cry room. At the local parish, the cry room is never enforced and instead is populated by folks with teenagers who use the cry room to talk on the phone, tell jokes among each other, etc. The last time we went, a family with four children (the youngest was 10, oldest probably 16) were so distracting that we went to the main body of church, and were asked to sit in the cry room as soon as our daughter uttered a peep, so we left early. We didn’t even make it to the Eucharist.
Instead, we still attend the parish across the city where the cry room is very much respected. A solemn quiet is maintained and people know how to keep their kids in line. It’s just a completely different mentality towards the Mass.
So yes, you can attend a different parish than the one in which you’re registered, and I’ll go against the strictures of Canon Law and say you should register where you attend so that the diocesan tax and appeal reflect accurately the needs and abilities of the parish population.