C
ConfusedLucy
Guest
I’ve never even thought about my churches floor but I think it’s wood
I’ve experienced a few churches with kneelers like that. Also, sometimes the placement of the kneelers in relation to the pew can cause back pain. If there’s space, and nobody else is using the same kneeler, I just leave it up and kneel on the floor.My wife and I actually hate the kneelers my parish has and don’t use them. They are narrow and hit your knee in a place that will cause knee pain and stiffness if you use them often enough. I think they probably concentrate pressure on the patella tendon.
It is far more comfortable for us to kneel on the floor. The floor in the pew areas is carpeted using a very low pile carpet. Kneeling on tile or, sadly, concrete is less comfortable for me over time. I can’t say I’d be as enthusiastic to kneel on a really hard surface for a long time.
I don’t understand the issue. Can’t you pray just as well on your behind as on your knees?Talk to father and then if that doesn’t work, talk to the Bishop before those kneelers are removed.
It’s more than that. There is a theology about kneeling that comes from the time before Christ.phil19034:![]()
I don’t understand the issue. Can’t you pray just as well on your behind as on your knees?Talk to father and then if that doesn’t work, talk to the Bishop before those kneelers are removed.
Do you really think so? I think that a fair number of people are just seeking order. " If we are all one, let’s show we are all one". Different people kneeling or standing, receiving both kinds or just one, on the tongue or in the hand, it can make it a bit more difficult to explain to those who are unfamiliar.Typically, the people who want us to stop kneeling are usually not humble people themselves.
It’s not as though people adopting different postures is a new thing. When I was a kid there was a man with a peg leg in our parish. He certainly didn’t kneel when everyone else did but there were no calls for everyone to stand because he couldn’t kneel.phil19034:![]()
Do you really think so? I think that a fair number of people are just seeking order. " If we are all one, let’s show we are all one". Different people kneeling or standing, receiving both kinds or just one, on the tongue or in the hand, it can make it a bit more difficult to explain to those who are unfamiliar.Typically, the people who want us to stop kneeling are usually not humble people themselves.
It’s not really that difficult to explain. We have choices and people are free (at least for now) to choose what works for them because that is what the Church allows. Easy.Different people kneeling or standing, receiving both kinds or just one, on the tongue or in the hand, it can make it a bit more difficult to explain to those who are unfamiliar.
Yes, but no one is saying that people who are not able to kneel do to physical issues are not humble. What phil19304 said was that people who “want us to stop kneeling” are usually not humble people themselves. And I tend to agree with him. Lets be honest, removing kneelers from Catholic churches is NOT motivated by concerns for the old and disabled parishioners who cannot kneel. It is motivated by wanting to force a change in the way people pray, especially they way they participate in the mass. It seems to me that this is indisputable. That being the case, why the motivation to force us to change our prayer habits? Well, kneeling during prayer certainly seems to me an very strong outward sign of humility before God. So it likely is a lack of humility that is one of their motivations.It’s not as though people adopting different postures is a new thing. When I was a kid there was a man with a peg leg in our parish. He certainly didn’t kneel when everyone else did but there were no calls for everyone to stand because he couldn’t kneel.
In every parish where I have ever attended Mass regularly, this kind of variety is the norm. At the consecration some people stand, many kneel, and quite a few, for reasons of age or infirmity, remain seated. Most people opt to receive in the hand, standing, but a minority receive on the tongue, some standing and others kneeling. Nobody is ever surprised by any of this, nobody ever takes offense, and nobody sees a need to “explain” anything. The answer to your question, I think, is that the people who claim to be “seeking order” are themselves out of order.I think that a fair number of people are just seeking order. " If we are all one, let’s show we are all one". Different people kneeling or standing, receiving both kinds or just one, on the tongue or in the hand, it can make it a bit more difficult to explain to those who are unfamiliar.
I think Catholics understand this, and for the most part don’t take offense.Nobody is ever surprised by any of this, nobody ever takes offense, and nobody sees a need to “explain” anything.
I don’t understand this point. First of all, why would it be difficult to explain? Secondly, at funerals or weddings where there are many non-Catholics, there are typically lots of people not kneeling anyway, so why would anyone even notice that a few Catholics who are elderly or sick do not kneel?I think Catholics understand this, and for the most part don’t take offense.
I was thinking more about how to explain it to the non-catholic masses that sometimes attend Masses. If you are attending a Catholic funeral with friends or business associates who aren’t Catholic, example given
I think @Irishmom2 already answered that question:I was thinking more about how to explain it to the non-catholic masses that sometimes attend Masses. If you are attending a Catholic funeral with friends or business associates who aren’t Catholic, example given.
“seeking order” to that extreme goes against everything the Vatican has stated. Post the Our Father, when you attend Mass around the world (outside of the United States) you will often see some people kneeling, some standing, and some sitting (all at the same Mass). The Vatican has stated that after the Our Father, it doesn’t matter unless the Bishop has asked the diocese to do something specific.Do you really think so? I think that a fair number of people are just seeking order. " If we are all one, let’s show we are all one". Different people kneeling or standing, receiving both kinds or just one, on the tongue or in the hand, it can make it a bit more difficult to explain to those who are unfamiliar.