Regarding the post by dorothy_smith – Part 1
The Eucharistic Prayer specifically says that we are gathered as a community of faith, and the Kiss of Peace is a representation of that. But the sacrificial offering made at Mass is, first and foremost, a deeply spiritual act that takes place within the individual soul. In my view, God did not intend for the Mass to give people “a sense of belonging – a feeling of being part of the community”; God intends for the Mass to be an eternal offering of the body, blood, soul, and divinity of Jesus Christ, the Son of God and Third Person of the Holy Trinity, as reparation for the sins of the human race so that we, his creatures, my be reconciled to God and have the opportunity to be united with Him in heaven. Because the Church is the body of Christ and attempts to serve the temporal needs of its flock, it has strong social and communal elements such as various clubs and committees which not only perform certain services for the church, but that also have social activities – and yet, it is NOT a social club.
All persons of faith should be trying to develop a solid and loving relationship with God, and attempting to extend that love to one’s fellow man. The coffee get-together after daily Mass (at some churches) is a wonderful opportunity for social interaction so long as it is kept in its proper perspective. That is, not to speak gossip of one’s neighbors or to make snide comments about something you don’t like, but to seek opportunities to help one’s neighbors and to thank your priest for all the things he does for the parish. Indeed, if the priest is joining the get-together for coffee, you can ask him some questions about your Catholic faith which could be of benefit to everyone in attendance. I really like it when the priest “takes command” of the coffee get-together and opens the floor to questions and discussion as a means of sharing, bolstering, and learning more about our faith – although this is probably not the right setting to challenge him on the more controversial issues of the day. I could go on about our senior citizens, daily Mass, the Church as a social club, etc but I think Tantum ergo and I have shredded you enough about that element in your post.
Yeah, sorry – I’ll bet you thought your post was fairly innocuous: you expressed some sweet thoughts about the elderly and loneliness, then followed it up with an innocent question. Ah, not so – the devil is in the details! I would encourage you to study your faith more, as well as some basic philosophy and theology. Indeed, anyone more knowledgeable or faithful than myself could easily spend 10,000 words shredding this post of mine! If we are diligent, persistent, and faithful to the promptings of the Holy Spirit each of us can move up that ladder toward right thought, right intention, right action, true faith, true hope, true love, and eternal salvation. If Tantum ergo and I have been rude or blunt in our comments I apologize – we should all try to have patience for one another, but we must remain firm in our impatience with error (wrong thought, wrong intention, wrong action do not lead to heaven! indeed, the road to hell is paved with good intentions and sweet-sounding epithets).