A
a_cermak
Guest
What about the possibility that girls who serve as altar servers will be more likely to foster vocations in their sons? It’s probably too early to tell as the practise isn’t that old.
Pax,
Amy
Pax,
Amy
I think it can be HELPFUL…ofcourse! But it just sounded to me that some writers really saw ‘male alter servers only’ as the end-al-and-be all, as if that in itself would bring to fruit lots and lots of vocations to the priesthood, and I just felt it wasn’t as simple as all thatWho here is suggesting it’s not?
Nevertheless, serving at the altar is a prime means to foster priestly/diaconate vocations no matter how you want to spin it.
I don’t lie. Yes, I agree w/ you…there are bigger problems but that is not for this thread.Your sample size is too small.
It’s axiomatic that serving at the altar is one of the primacy ways to foster a priestly vocation in a male.
(BTW, there’s something wrong with your parish if you are telling the truth. In other words, you’ve got bigger problems…)
It’s one of the prime ways to foster vocations to the priesthood and permanent diaconate. It’s certainly not the only way.I think it can be HELPFUL…ofcourse! But it just sounded to me that some writers really saw ‘male alter servers only’ as the end-al-and-be all, as if that in itself would bring to fruit lots and lots of vocations to the priesthood, and I just felt it wasn’t as simple as all that.
Anna x
Are you sure they want to serve Jesus or are they being pushed into the breach to make a statement? If they truly want to serve Jesus, we must keep in mind that there are many other ways to do that.I don’t lie. Yes, I agree w/ you…there are bigger problems but that is not for this thread.
My sons grew up next door to the church and had some very holy priests as examples(not in my present parish)… my husband and I fostered an atmosphere of good Catholic culture in our daily living and they both attended Catholic schools…neither had a desire to become a priest! I would have loved that more than I can express…
We now have Altar girls which I’m not totally in favor of…but since it is happening and by the approval of our Bishops are we to tell all those sweet nice little girls who just want to serve Jesus…Go away???…we don’t want you because you are FEMALE! No my good man…that is not the answer…
Cecelia,
“…the presence of girls at the altar alters the holiness, the sacredness, and the sublimeness of what is transpiring at the altar…”
With all due respect that may be the case for you, but honestly there is no proof that having girls at the alter alters the holiness. If he did do you honestly believe Pope John Paul II would have allowed girls to serve at the alter? As a further example, if a presiding priest is in a state of mortal sin and offers communion it does not invalidate or alter the holiness of the sacrifice for us receiving the Lord.
Everyone,
As far as tradition, we should all remember there was a time that the laity did not even witness parts of the Mass and as was pointed out earlier when only deacons could assist the priest at the alter. Do we wish to go back and honor those long-held traditions? Just because something is not how it was done when we grew up does not mean it is an abuse or wrong. There have been numerous changes over the years that have upset earlier traditions.
As Catholics we should be proud and mindful of our traditions, but we must always remember that traditions are man-made and not equal to the laws and love of God.
You have missed the point by 180 degrees.I have absolutely no problem with the girls altar servers in my parish. In fact they are better and more reverent than most of the the boys that serve and just plain do a better job.
Why is it that some feel that it is only for those boys discerning a possible priestly vocation, when some of these girls could be discerning a religious vocation as well, and this could well be a big factor. I’ve never heard anyone talk about that though. Maybe it’s time we started think, (and talking) in those terms to get the ranks of the faithful religious filled back up so that we can again have great teaching nuns and nursing nuns and all that the Holy Spirit will give us?
I have absolutely no problem with the girls altar servers in my parish. In fact they are better and more reverent than most of the the boys that serve and just plain do a better job.
Why is it that some feel that it is only for those boys discerning a possible priestly vocation, when some of these girls could be discerning a religious vocation as well, and this could well be a big factor. I’ve never heard anyone talk about that though. Maybe it’s time we started think, (and talking) in those terms to get the ranks of the faithful religious filled back up so that we can again have great teaching nuns and nursing nuns and all that the Holy Spirit will give us?
Thank you BlackKnight…at least you are a gentleman and from your post set an example of a real Catholic Christian…I have absolutely no problem with the girls altar servers in my parish. In fact they are better and more reverent than most of the the boys that serve and just plain do a better job.
Why is it that some feel that it is only for those boys discerning a possible priestly vocation, when some of these girls could be discerning a religious vocation as well, and this could well be a big factor. I’ve never heard anyone talk about that though. Maybe it’s time we started think, (and talking) in those terms to get the ranks of the faithful religious filled back up so that we can again have great teaching nuns and nursing nuns and all that the Holy Spirit will give us?
Alterman,You need to be less emotional about this thread. There is absolutely no question that serving at the altar fosters vocations to the priesthood and diaconate. None.
That obvious truth clearly upsets you. Why, I have no idea – perhaps guilt or perhaps because you feel it could ultimately impact feminism/sexism within the Church. Either way I’m not going to back-off from an obvious truth because I don’t have statistical proof.
One more time: altar fosters vocations to the priesthood and diaconate. Done.
If men ( and women ) see that it no longer matters who does what… is it any wonder that less and less want to serve?You have missed the point by 180 degrees.
The sanctuary is a place that was long reserved for males… not because anyone was demeaning women, or repressing their desires to be of service to God.
Laity innovation has been the cause of females entering the sanctuary… as readers, as EMHC, as girl altar servers… and even as homilists in some misguided parishes.
Non-sequitur. The fact is that so few want to serve because parents and friends and just rank and file Catholics have largely stopped encouraging it in many places.is it any wonder that less and less want to serve?
Please explain how the presence of girls near the altar makes the Eucharist any less:Having girls at the altar of sacrifice is sharp break from the Biblical priesthood and as such, the presence of girls at the altar alters the holiness, the sacredness, and the sublimeness of what is transpiring at the altar.
But if the Mass is the re-presentation of Calvary/Last Supper, then it should be re-presented accurately. It was to 12 men that Christ instituted the priesthood, and it is the priest/male that is Alter Christus (sp). So to have women on the altar subtly changes the re-presentation, and in so doing alters the full import of the re-presentation.
As you have said, the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass is not just the re-presentation of the Last Supper, but of Christ’s death on the cross and his Resurrection. Indeed, it re-presents the entire Paschal Mystery.…With girls at the altar, the sacrificial aspect of the Mass becomes a little more muffled. A little more casualness creeps in, whether intended or not, because the girls are innately not part of the re-presentation. I wish that we would reference or locate this discussion in terms of the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass and what it is intended to do.
Christ is the perfection and fulfillment of the revelation of God from the Old Testament. The New Testament sacrifice cannot be the same!The Old Testament sacrifices were always attended to by males. Why should the New Testament sacrifice be different?
The alb is the liturgical vestment proper to us all. It symbolizes our baptism. If they were, say wearing stole and chasuble, then they would look like priests. In fact, if cassock and surplice is garb proper to the ordained, then no child should be wearing it, girl or boy.Girls and the altar with the alb look like priestesses…notice how we act when we are witness to an all-male altar, with the altar boys in cossack and surplice.
There have been LOTS of threads in this forum on this subject.I have absolutely no problem with the girls altar servers in my parish. In fact they are better and more reverent than most of the the boys that serve and just plain do a better job.
Why is it that some feel that it is only for those boys discerning a possible priestly vocation, when some of these girls could be discerning a religious vocation as well, and this could well be a big factor. I’ve never heard anyone talk about that though. Maybe it’s time we started think, (and talking) in those terms to get the ranks of the faithful religious filled back up so that we can again have great teaching nuns and nursing nuns and all that the Holy Spirit will give us?
We should always place the will of Holy Mother Church above our own desires. I agree with that.Why? Because his opinion happens to match your own?
It’s remarkable just how powerful the forces of PCism and sexism/feminism are in the Church, else this entire thread would be moot as there wouldn’t be any female altar servers if the faithful actually placed the Church ahead of their own desires…