How to handle screaming baby during mass

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Pew cards from our parish - same verbiage with Pastors name and diocese version from their we page - the reverse is a doodle page …scroll down to see it :
Celebrate Kids Pew Card: Help Welcome Families

CELEBRATING CHILDREN
Dear Parents of our young parishioners
Our parish enthusiastically welcomes your growing family to fully celebrate with us.
May we suggest:
  • **Relax. **God put the wiggle in children; Don’t feel our have to suppress it in God’s house.
  • **Sit towards the front or aisle **where it is easier for little one to see and hear
  • Quietly explain the parts of the Mass
    *** Sing **the hymns, **pray **the prayers and say the responses. Children learn from your actions
  • If you must leave Mass with your child, feel free to do so, but please come back. As Jesus said. “let the children come to me” MT 19:14
Note to all parishioners:
The presence of children is a gift to our Church. Like all of us, they are members of the Body of Christ and a reminder of the growth and future of our Church. Please welcome our children and their parents, and give them a big smile of encouragement!

Link: pdxfamlife.org/year-of-mercy/
scroll down the page
🎉 That’s cool
 
We have a cry room.
I’ve always had this theory that cry rooms work best not because they’re closed but the kids seem to be better with each other (not siblings) rather than with adults. Kids learn to develop social skills rather early.
 
I’ve always had this theory that cry rooms work best not because they’re closed but the kids seem to be better with each other (not siblings) rather than with adults. Kids learn to develop social skills rather early.
Kids learn to appreciate liturgical prayer rather early as well and they have plenty of other opportunities to develop their social skills.

Besides, how much time have you actually spent in -]purgatory/-] a cry room to test your theory? The kids basically view it as a play room. They zoom cars (often real, but if you’ve forgotten to bring yours, imagination works fine), throw sippy cups, squabble with other kids… all things that they do in the congregation, mind you, but consolidated in one place. If you happen to be a parent who doesn’t bring toys to Mass, it is pure torture for your toddler, who insists upon wanting to crawl around and snatch someone else’s toys.

A cry room is a nice place to retreat if you’ve got a fussing baby or toddler, while the baby is fussy, It is nice to be able to hear the readings and the homily while my baby insists upon babbling non-stop. It is nice to be able to give a wiggling toddler a break from the developmentally inappropriate demands to sit still and be quiet for an hour. It is entirely appropriate to remove a distracting child from the congregation until the child is better able to sit quietly. It is nice to give the parents a break from constantly feeling watched and judged (real or imagined). It is actually quite an awful place to remain for any length of time, especially if you hope to eventually teach your child decent behavior in Mass.

My current baby is 10 months. She’s only just starting to be a problem during Divine Liturgy. It is generally easier to have a baby during Divine Liturgy that during Mass because there is more sound to begin with. A baby babbling usually break the silence. If she starts to fuss, I walk around the walls of the church with her, venerating the icons on the wall. A former parishioner once complained that he thought that was inappropriate and distracting. He apparently hasn’t spent too much time in eastern churches, where the adults sometimes get up in the middle of the service to venerate icons. I suppose we’ll become reacquainted with the cry room before this is all done. Ours is usually pretty quiet, because our parish is small and the parents don’t usually stay there for more than 10 or 15 minutes. Despite the quiet, I’ll still look forward to bringing my baby back into the church, where she can experience the sights, smells and sounds of the Divine Liturgy in person.

Please don’t misunderstand. I am grateful that my parish has a cry room. It has a purpose and I’m happy to use it for a crying baby. But I’m also grateful that my fellow parishioners and my pastor are welcoming of children in the congregation, and tolerant of the reality that sometimes kids will struggle to sit still and be quiet for 90 minutes.
 
Your sentiments are not universal. Sound carries in the church and a crying baby/screaming toddler is loud to others and a distraction. Our priest has actually lost his place in the Missal because of people’s loud children, thus In our parish we have the 6 second rule. If your child continues making noise after 6 seconds he/she must be removed from the church area.
I think the temperament of the priest comes into play here. I once went to a parish with a priest who could tolerate almost no distraction, because he was very distractable. I very quickly learned to leave immediately if my child made any noise. He also occasionally lost his place at the sound of a siren going by outside. This was an unusual circumstance and I was happy to accommodate. The vast majority of priests that I’ve encountered, however, have amazing concentration skills.
IMHO, children should be seen and not heard in church.
Does that also apply to the woman with the chronic cough (that would be me)? Or the teenager with Tourette’s Syndrome? Or the autistic adult? Or any other developmentally delayed person? Sometimes, we just have to deal with this sort of thing in our midst in this fallen world, and thank God that he has called these people to himself.
 
Your sentiments are not universal. Sound carries in the church and a crying baby/screaming toddler is loud to others and a distraction. Our priest has actually lost his place in the Missal because of people’s loud children, thus In our parish we have the 6 second rule. If your child continues making noise after 6 seconds he/she must be removed from the church area. IMHO, children should be seen and not heard in church.
I agree.
 
Kids learn to appreciate liturgical prayer rather early as well and they have plenty of other opportunities to develop their social skills.

Besides, how much time have you actually spent in -]purgatory/-] a cry room to test your theory? The kids basically view it as a play room. They zoom cars (often real, but if you’ve forgotten to bring yours, imagination works fine), throw sippy cups, squabble with other kids… all things that they do in the congregation, mind you, but consolidated in one place. If you happen to be a parent who doesn’t bring toys to Mass, it is pure torture for your toddler, who insists upon wanting to crawl around and snatch someone else’s toys.
Toys I see at the doctor’s and dentist’s offices. In line with your calling for liturgical prayer, I’ve seen parents bring along religious coloring books. It’s not guaranteed to keep anyone quiet, though. I don’t know the answer to that.
 
Does that also apply to the woman with the chronic cough (that would be me)? Or the teenager with Tourette’s Syndrome? Or the autistic adult? Or any other developmentally delayed person? Sometimes, we just have to deal with this sort of thing in our midst in this fallen world, and thank God that he has called these people to himself.
I’ve found people who come in late and force people to move down pews or walk over them to be most distracting as well, even if you try to follow the readings along with your missal or missalette. We’ll never make everyone happy.
 
The title of this thread is “How to handle screaming baby during mass.”

Screaming - take child out. How can anyone hear/pay attention with a screaming child?

My mother got a dose of “let the children stay no matter what” when my eldest had her 1st communion. This was Mom’s 2nd Mass - the first was our wedding. One baby screamed & cried thru the entire Mass, not taken out until about 10 minutes before the end. My mother thought it incredibly rude, as did I. This was a very small rural parish, but it did have a cry room.

There are no do-overs for 1st Communion. 😦
 
The title of this thread is “How to handle screaming baby during mass.”
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This was a very small rural parish, but it did have a cry room.
I think the answer to the original question does somewhat depend on circumstances such as configuration of the church and the event.

I would hope parishes would be more tolerant of children at a regular Sunday Mass than at a special event that mainly involves adults and/or much older children.

But the way the sound carries in the church building does matter. Some church buildings amplify every little sound while others (often newer ones) tend to dampen sound. In a large crowded church, a parent and child leaving and coming back multiple times during Mass might not even be noticed except by those sitting in the same location. In a small rural church, just about everyone will notice.

Also, the age of the child matters. A newborn cry is usually mean the parent HAS to do something. That something may or may not involve leaving the nave of the church. A toddler who is upset because her parents don’t want her crawling under the 4 pews in front of (or behind) her may need 30 seconds to express her displeasure or she may need the rest of the Mass.

There’s no way to know without the parents experimenting. Yes there is a time limit but I think the 6 seconds suggested earlier in this thread was excessive. (And yes, I know 6 seconds actually is a fairly long time and can seem like an eternity when one hears an unpleasant sound.)
 
We have a 19 month old and we always tried to sit near the front of the Church. We found at least up there he had something to look at besides the back of heads.

Also, we have a really nice older couple who sits behind us and will hold him if he gets too rowdy.

That’s about it. After that, we just hope our pew-neighbors can bear it. 🙂
 
The title of this thread is “How to handle screaming baby during mass.”

Screaming - take child out. How can anyone hear/pay attention with a screaming child?
Absolutely, this should be the response if you have a child who is screaming for more than a few seconds. Sometimes, it is easier said than done to accomplish this immediately, however. The example that comes to mind is a parent with two young children, and no other adult in the pew. Both kids have to be taken out, often at awkward times, crawling over others in the pew. Sometimes, parents make a judgement call in hopes that it will get better, and it ends up going on too long. I would just hope that we could all have patience and mercy toward parents who are doing their best.

I actually would remove an inconsolably screaming child from a cry room as well. Cry rooms exist so that the people in them can still hear and see the mass, without disturbing others. If I have a loudly screaming child, I’m not able to benefit from the cry room, nor is anybody else.

While the title of this thread might be “How to handle screaming baby during Mass”, a number of the comments seemed to extend this to any child noise whatsoever.
Your sentiments are not universal. Sound carries in the church and a crying baby/screaming toddler is loud to others and a distraction. Our priest has actually lost his place in the Missal because of people’s loud children, thus In our parish we have the 6 second rule.** If your child continues making noise** after 6 seconds he/she must be removed from the church area. IMHO, children should be seen and not heard in church.
And sometimes more than a distraction. I’ve had difficulty hearing the priest or lector because of screaming or otherwise noisy children.
 
The title of this thread is “How to handle screaming baby during mass.”

Screaming - take child out. How can anyone hear/pay attention with a screaming child?
. :(l
I totally agree. It’s beyond rude to let your child scream throughout Mass and ruin it for everybody else.
 
I totally agree. It’s beyond rude to let your child scream throughout Mas and ruin it for everybody else.
I’ve got to say - I’m 46 years old and a cradle Catholic. I don’t recall ever hearing somebody’s child screaming throughout Mass. For an uncomfortably long time, yes. But never more than a minute or two, which can seem like forever, of course. But I really think this kind of behavior is extremely rare. But what constitutes a scream is subjective, of course, and I have a high tolerance for baby noises.
 
I’ve got to say - I’m 46 years old and a cradle Catholic. I don’t recall ever hearing somebody’s child screaming throughout Mass. For an uncomfortably long time, yes. But never more than a minute or two, which can seem like forever, of course. But I really think this kind of behavior is extremely rare. But what constitutes a scream is subjective, of course, and I have a high tolerance for baby noises.
I 've seen kids eating in Mass, leaving crackers or whatever crumbs ground into the carpeting. I’ve seen kids walking back and forth on the pews. I’ve heard babies screaming loud enough that I can’t hear or pay attention. It’s just all rude behavior on the part of the parents.
Luckily, I haven’t seen or heard either in awhile.
I have heard babies crying but the parent took them out.
 
Absolutely, this should be the response if you have a child who is screaming for more than a few seconds. Sometimes, it is easier said than done to accomplish this immediately, however. The example that comes to mind is a parent with two young children, and no other adult in the pew. Both kids have to be taken out, often at awkward times, crawling over others in the pew. Sometimes, parents make a judgement call in hopes that it will get better, and it ends up going on too long. I would just hope that we could all have patience and mercy toward parents who are doing their best.
./QUOTE]

Imo, if a parent has a baby and other kids and she or he can’t handle all of them, they need to go to the cry room or have someone watch the kids while the p aren’t attends Mass until the kids behave better.
 
Imo, if a parent has a baby and other kids and she or he can’t handle all of them, they need to go to the cry room or have someone watch the kids while the p aren’t attends Mass until the kids behave better.
Wow. Things happen. Usually well-behaved babies and toddlers have bad days. Parents, who generally try to remain at the end of pews (allowing for a quick exit), find themselves trapped in the middle of the pew and have to make a choice - stay and hope the baby will calm down soon, or cause certain disruption as they try to crawl over keeling people in the pew. Sometimes perfectly quiet, but wiggly children fall and hit their heads on the pew in front of them. It happens, and it is almost a guarantee of a prolonged scream. (It isn’t negligent parents; falls are just a part of toddlerhood. Can we just not assume the worst of someone (rudeness) and assume the best and sympathize with the struggle, even if they don’t make the best choices. Mass isn’t the theater and we cannot set our expectations as if it is.

There is a hymn in the Byzantine Divine Liturgy, the Cherubic hymn, in which the people sing, "Let us who mystically represent the cherubim, and sing the thrice-holy hymn, now set aside all earthly cares, that we may worship the king of all, invisibly escorted by angelic hosts. " The liturgy of the Eucharist begins with this hymn. I’ve always had to chuckle a bit at this, because it is at this point, just as we sing “now set aside all earthly cares”, that my babies have always decided that they’ve had quite enough. My earthly cares intrude upon my attempts to pray, and I tend to them. Sometimes I nurse them, sometimes I try to distract them, and sometimes I take them out. Such is the reality of life this side of heaven. We have earthly cares.

Again, I don’t advocate keeping a screaming baby in Mass. This isn’t helpful to anyone - not the baby, not the parents of the baby, and certainly not the other people in the Mass. I just advocate compassion and understanding, along with the acknowledgement that those babies, along with others who might make noise that distracts us and makes us uncomfortable, have a right to be there. Should we work on teaching them good Mass behavior? Absolutely. (This is a process that takes years.) Should we take them out when they cannot or will not be quiet? Of course! But again, I ask that we have tolerance and compassion for parents who are doing their best. Show them the same mercy that God shows us. Do we want to drive them away, so they next show up to Mass when it is time to sign their child up for First Communion classes?
 
Okay,
This is kind of one of my pet peeves. I am probably being judgmental. When there is a cry room, why do parents not use it when their kids are being noisy at Mass? If they have to bring other kids there too, so be it. I agree that it seems rude to sit there and let a small child cry / make loud noises for a prolonged time.

I get it that the cry room is not a great place, but it is a useful place. I have used it as well when my kids were too little to understand that they should be quiet during Mass. Me and my husband had lots of times at Mass walking in the back (at a previous parish), wishing there was a cry room, so I don’t understand why people don’t use it when there is one?
 
I 've seen kids eating in Mass, leaving crackers or whatever crumbs ground into the carpeting. I’ve seen kids walking back and forth on the pews. I’ve heard babies screaming loud enough that I can’t hear or pay attention. It’s just all rude behavior on the part of the parents.
Luckily, I haven’t seen or heard either in awhile.
I have heard babies crying but the parent took them out.
I was specifically referring to screaming children in Mass. I have seen all those other things. 🙂 I just don’t recall having seen a parent not take out a baby who is engaged in prolonged crying (more than a minute at the most).
 
Okay,
This is kind of one of my pet peeves. I am probably being judgmental. When there is a cry room, why do parents not use it when their kids are being noisy at Mass? If they have to bring other kids there too, so be it. I agree that it seems rude to sit there and let a small child cry / make loud noises for a prolonged time.

I get it that the cry room is not a great place, but it is a useful place. I have used it as well when my kids were too little to understand that they should be quiet during Mass. Me and my husband had lots of times at Mass walking in the back (at a previous parish), wishing there was a cry room, so I don’t understand why people don’t use it when there is one?
There are many reason that I prefer not to use a cry room unless it is necessary. Primary is that many other parents treat it as a playroom. The kids bring toys and run around. I guess that’s ok - it seems to be the norm, but it doesn’t facilitate my attempts to teach my child how to eventually behave in church. Also, because I’m the parent who doesn’t bring food and toys, etc, my kids are always trying to get into other kids’ stuff. It just makes my life easier to not have to deal with it.

I do retreat to the cry room if necessary, but as I’ve previously mentioned, if my child were all-out screaming, I would go outside, or somewhere else.

My current parish does have a cry room, and it is occasionally used, but nobody parks in it from the beginning to the end. We come in and out as needed. We have a rocking chair, and it provides a nice, quiet place to nurse a baby to sleep if the sights and sounds of the liturgy are too distracting. Most moms stay there for 5-10 minutes, and then quietly come back into the church. Most of us seem to prefer hanging out in the vestibule, waiting for a moment to slip back inside. My parish is teeming with little kids, by the way.
 
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