J
Joe_5859
Guest
Many prayers for a good meeting next week.
Again, I haven’t experienced this type of situation first hand, so I can’t advise you from a place of having successfully navigated this. My best advice would be to try to befriend the priest as much as possible. Invite him over to dinner. Be friendly. And be sure to point out the good things that he is doing. Then, hopefully, he will be more open to hearing concerns from you.
Like with the visitation ministry, it really is good that he wants to participate in that himself. Having the priest pay personal visits to the sick and homebound is a beautiful thing. And of course he is correct that people don’t need to receive Communion every week. He knows that. You know that. However, the sick and homebound are now experiencing a loss of something they used to have. That’s going to sting no matter what. They desire to receive the Lord in the Eucharist. That is a good thing that should be encouraged.
I guess my general approach is to affirm the good being done, and bring up the negative in such a way that places the focus more on the undesirable consequences (i.e. the parishioners who are hurt) rather than on finger-pointing.
Again, I haven’t experienced this type of situation first hand, so I can’t advise you from a place of having successfully navigated this. My best advice would be to try to befriend the priest as much as possible. Invite him over to dinner. Be friendly. And be sure to point out the good things that he is doing. Then, hopefully, he will be more open to hearing concerns from you.
Like with the visitation ministry, it really is good that he wants to participate in that himself. Having the priest pay personal visits to the sick and homebound is a beautiful thing. And of course he is correct that people don’t need to receive Communion every week. He knows that. You know that. However, the sick and homebound are now experiencing a loss of something they used to have. That’s going to sting no matter what. They desire to receive the Lord in the Eucharist. That is a good thing that should be encouraged.
I guess my general approach is to affirm the good being done, and bring up the negative in such a way that places the focus more on the undesirable consequences (i.e. the parishioners who are hurt) rather than on finger-pointing.