Pug:
Forest,
Do you know what sort of small communities they are? Our parish has just started considering a Renew program based on the CCC and is calling for volunteers to be “core” volunteers.
My current church has the RENEW communities. They really pushed it for months. They have them twice a year. I don’t like the way they did it. You signed up as groups and elected a leader, or you signed yourself up and they just stuck you in one of the groups. No commonality at all. It really highlighted the fact that we were out of the community loop. Nonetheless, we volunteered to be a small group co-leader. We said we just wanted one with child care (which we were also willing to arrange). Well, out of our HUGE parish, not one other family wanted child care. Not one! We ended up not getting involved. What is has turned in to is the same people who are active in the church anyway are just meeting in their small groups for another regularly scheduled meeting.
The way the other parish I mentioned had it based on geography was so much wiser, imho. You were in the Yellow group if you lived in their boundaries. You didn’t have to
do anything, but you will still part of the small community. The yellow group has a core of people who are most active, but the phone tree lets everyone in the entire group know whenever anything is going on. It wasn’t uncommon to get a phone call saying, “Betty Smith’s mother passed away and we are collecting food for the family. We really need some bread. Is there any way you could get some dinner rolls and I could stop by your house to pick them up tomorrow?” The name tags mean people know who you are and gives you something in common to discuss. And believe me, after Mass you would have people noticing it and introducing themselves. You know you belong and the question is just what you are going to do (and plenty of opportunities are presented to you.) The small communities are not RENEW groups, but just a break down of the parish into different communities. They did also have Bible studies and all that Jazz like Renew, but the small communities were an everyday, practical thing.
The way my current parish has it set up, you have to go through hoops to become part of the group.
You have to put forth the effort to find out where in the community you belong. I don’t think that is the best way of doing things. The RENEW groups themselves apparently have a great reputation in recent years, though.
(Oh, and about the name tags: they put them out across a table until there got to be too many. Then they put them in long, skinny hard plastic bins like you would find at the Container Store, as wide as the name tags. They put a divider between the different letters to facilitate finding them with ease. With them standing upright, it takes up far less space. At first people would throw them into a box when leaving. After the bins were being used, people would just put it back behind the right letter divider, then a person sometime during the week alphabetized them.)
My current church also has a Newcomers Desk. It is always dark, never updated, and never pointed out. Frustrates me… The difference is whether the Holy Spirit is truly alive in the community. If it isn’t, any attempts at welcoming are going to come across as demeaning or brash or arrogant or whatever else. When the spirit of God is alive in a community, it flows out of the community in their words and actions. Being welcoming does not mean smothering. It means the people can
feel the love and faith as something almost tangible, palpable. In the hurry-scurry times we have, it isn’t uncommon at all to go years in a parish and never once get an invitation to anything more. I’ve been at mine for ten. Two people asked me to join them in something: one funny old man who greets every single person and asks them to join his novena group. The other someone who just wanted warm bodies and didn’t care who she got. Needless to say, I sorely miss my old parish. And am finally getting to the point where I am looking at going elsewhere.