B
babochka
Guest
I would say that in EC parishes, there is more for kids to do as well as see. The liturgy is very active. The singing is constant, congregational singing in the case of the Ruthenian Church, there are processions and movement of the congregation and the priest or deacon. The priest or deacon incenses the entire church and congregation. There is bowing and making the sign on the cross. Worship is very physically active, which is good for little ones.Also, I’ve personally noticed at the EF Masses and the EC Divine Liturgies, its rare to hear children making a fuss. I think that in those churches, there is more for kids to look at like art/statues/stained glass in churches that have EF Masses, and many icons in EC churches as a start. Younger kids also often emulate older siblings and parents very well in terms of what to do in those forms but it can be done at Ordinary Form too.
But still, the kids in our parish have meltdowns. Sometimes the back door feels like a revolving door - one parent in, one parent out. We mostly have big families, as well. If it’s not one kid, its another. The liturgy is long; ours averages 85 minutes, but during Lent it is 10-15 minutes longer. That’s a long time for a little one to hold it together and it’s unreasonable to expect it. I think the little fusses are less noticeable in an Eastern parish because we do not have silence in the liturgy. Movement and sound are constant.
One time I apologized to my priest because one of my children had been particularly obnoxiously loud during the liturgy, at a highly inappropriate time, and I had difficulty leaving quickly, for a variety of reasons. His reply? “I thought it was one of mine.”
Another time, last Palm Sunday, my baby was being baptized. We knew it would be a long liturgy, but decided to do it on Palm Sunday anyway, because it was the fortieth day. Father had laid out ahead of time what he was going to do, in what order, etc. It was to end with the churching of the infant. As predicted, it was really, really long. Father joked that I’d asked for a three hour liturgy, so he was going to give it to me. Anyway, at one point in the liturgy, after well over an hour, every baby in the place started wailing. It was a symphony of crying babies. Quite amazing how it happened all at once. So, my pastor and the Godfather (who was a concelebrating priest) made the call to cut out a few parts of the ceremony and decided they could “church” the baby the next week. So, the liturgy was just over 2 hours, the babies were wailing, and one very quiet baby was baptized. Success.