Imagine someone from one of those diocese who (for whatever reason) is less-than-pleased with the new parish boundaries. Now imagine that person turning to the internet and looking for more information. How likely is it that such a person might (just might) find his way to a thread like this one on CAF? Does this scenario seem unrealistic?
In many ways, I was this hypothetical person, so no, the scenario is not unrealistic.
Now, such a person is looking for answers. That person wants to know the truth. Is that person entitled to actually know the truth about what the Church’s canon law has to say on the subject? Yes, of course, they are entitled to the truth. I was not able to find the answers to my questions via several parishes. Blank stares from church volunteers, etc. had me fleeing to sources online for answers. The Vatican website should be any Catholic’s or seeker’s first stop for true answers.
What kind of information better serves a person who has such questions?
I would really like people to answer that: what kind of answers best serve a Catholic who has questions about an issue that is clearly defined in canon law? Answers based on what the Code actually says, or answers based on a handful of examples where canon law has been ignored? We are entitled here to share what our own experiences are regarding the local diocese’s practices. I am not the one disregarding canon law, I went to ‘my’ parish, ‘my’ parish could not help me. I sought help elsewhere.
Another situation:
A person is unsure about how the Church defines a parish. That person comes to CAF with questions, or merely reads others’ questions and the responses. That person decides, based on what was read on CAF, to disregard parish territory. Here’s the kicker: years later, that person finds himself in a difficult situation because he followed the advice of people on CAF and disregarded parish territory. Does anyone here really think that such a person can go to his pastor & bishop and tell them that they are obligated to ignore canon law based on the fact that the individual was misinformed by comments on CAF?
I’d really like to know the answers to the 2 questions I’ve posted (bolded) above.
And finally, I must (yes must) make this comment: People who say that pastors and bishops in the US do not care about parish boundaries have no idea what they are talking about. Plain and simple. They are writing their comments from the perspective of complete ignorance of any facts. Some people seem to think that just because their weekly bulletins don’t include a map of the parish territory, that means that such a thing does not exist, or that the pastors and bishops do not care. That’s not the case at all.
If it helps, I did learn about parish boundaries here at CAF
There are always going to be a few examples of parish territories that are not exactly defined very clearly; maybe a rural parish that was founded 150 years ago, or a town with 2 parishes whose territories might overlap or otherwise be a bit vague. It’s never going to be 100% perfect. That does not mean that the matter is irrelevant nor does it mean that it’s ignored.
There are about 200 diocese in the US. People who claim that those diocese don’t care about parish territory have not contacted anywhere near that number, and are not basing their claim on any solid, reliable information. On the contrary, they are basing that claim on nothing more than a few anecdotal examples, and their own personal lack of awareness of what happens between pastors, such as one pastor asking for permission or delegation from another pastor. The mere fact that someone might be able to show a handful of examples where exceptions to the law were made, is not (not by a long shot) an indication that the majority of bishops and pastors nationwide are all disregarding canon law.