C
CarolAnnSFO
Guest
Yep! Some readers don’t enunciate well and some can’t project their vocies. Even when the reader has a marvelous voice, there’s the acoustics to deal with. Acoustics in my church are great for the choir, but terrible for speech, somehow. When I’m up in the choir loft, I can’t understand a word being said, unless it’s our pastor speaking (he knows everything there is to know about projecting one’s voice).Forcing people to listen and not read “may” be a noble goal, but there are people in the pews who need missals: the hard of hearing, those for whom English is a new language, and children who need to follow the written Word to stay attentive. Then, of course, there is the matter of whether the readers are clear and audible to begin with.
Also, my church is very, very large – lots of people. There’s always someone coughing or a baby fussing – even if it’s 200 different coughers and 200 different babies, it can form a stream of sound that goes all through the Mass.
Add to that the different learning styles (I learn by seeing, not by hearing – what I only hear goes in one ear and out the other), I think we should keep the missals.
If the paperback ones get removed from the church, I’ll buy my own! (I actually have some old missals, but since the translation was changed, the words don’t match closely enough to be worth using them anymore. I also still have my pre-Vatican II Sunday missal.
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