C
clem456
Guest
People who make these decisions have to be open to change. Sadly that open mindedness is missing in our parish. In fact those who have spoken most loudly about change may be the least open to it. In our parish and in others I suspect, the parish is staffed by a “ministry class” which is predominantly older, well educated, financially comfortable, female, retired or not working. None of these are bad characteristics, but the culture and thinking has attracted itself like magnets, turned inward on itself and become intolerant. It has marginalized those with healthy respect for the whole tradition of the Church. Oddly enough, the mantra is “If you want things the old way, you should step aside”. The old way???
When “change” means the same music that a 55 year old played at Mass in 1970, something has gone wrong.
I really have no idea what breaks this gridlock, other than ugly disagreements. I don’t want to go there, so…I don’t know.
When “change” means the same music that a 55 year old played at Mass in 1970, something has gone wrong.
I really have no idea what breaks this gridlock, other than ugly disagreements. I don’t want to go there, so…I don’t know.