M
milimac
Guest
I have heard that there are rules regarding parish boundaries. Does anyone know if these exist, and if so, what they are? To what degree can Catholics “parish shop”?
Your “home parish” is the parish within whose boundaries you reside. That’s where all of your paperwork, etc., is kept. As far as I can tell, we can go to Mass anywhere we want to.I have heard that there are rules regarding parish boundaries. Does anyone know if these exist, and if so, what they are? To what degree can Catholics “parish shop”?
The one time I saw a parish boundary map was at the offices of my diocese. The bishop (or someone under his auspices) would determine the boundaries.How does one determine what the boundaries are for a parish?
I have a hunch it’s because the cathedral actually looks and feels like a Catholic church, unlike many of the contemporary structures that lack the same sense of reverence that it felt at a cathedral.We have 1200 families attending in a largely abandoned (housing wise) downtown area. Why?
Good for you. We all like to be appreciated and to fit in. Sounds like you are well on the way in both instances.I’m glad they have changed the rules. I never asked when I became Catholic, so I never knew there was such a thing. I go to a parish in another city than I live. My primary reason was that when I attended, they were real short of any musicians needed volunteers, where as the large, up-scale parish was rich in talent. I can’t stand sitting on the side-lines and being a pew warmer, so I went to where there was the greatest opportunity to volunteer.