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Xanthippe_Voorhees
Guest
VERY illegal to lock people in. At least in America.Never heard of this. Might possibly be illegal. I take it the Altar of repose is within the Church proper?
You can lock people out, but never, ever, in.
VERY illegal to lock people in. At least in America.Never heard of this. Might possibly be illegal. I take it the Altar of repose is within the Church proper?
Because locking people in is potentially deadly and wholly illegal.Really our priest is probably a little paranoid. He was sent halfway around the world, away from his friends and family, into a culture he doesn’t yet fully understand. If securing the doors during Mass helps ease his tension, then it’s a small inexpensive thing to do, whether it’s objectively necessary or not.
“Allow” is a loose term. The bishop has very little to do with the day to day running of a parish. While he would be able to say “don’t do that please” for the most part Bishops don’t step into parish matters. If a majority of the parish was fine with it, most would not stand in the way.I’d be shocked if the Bishop has allowed this.
It’s still silly that he’s locking people out, even if I haven’t read each and every part of your other posts. It’s security theatre and potentially much worse for both parishioners and himself if something should happen–as the attacker would not have to worry about first responders getting in, either.Nobody is locked in, go back and read my earlier post. Our doors operate in such a way that there is no hindrance in exiting the building. The generic term is “panic hardware.” You can exit the building just as you always would. Your fears in this case are 100 percent unfounded.
This makes me kind of sad. I guess I take for granted how available our churches are - for the most part, if I’m having a bad day, I can go to my church at almost any time and sit in front of the Blessed Sacrament to pray. I have a volunteer position that requires me to have access which means I have my own key now, but even when I didn’t, if I went to the church and it was the rare occasion that it was locked, Father would often see me from the glebe house and come out and unlock it. If he was worried about my safety (i.e., he was leaving and I would be by myself) he would lock me in (we have safety doors we can exit without a key).Around here, it’s normal for churches to be locked, except when there’s a Mass imminent, and then the church gets locked up again about 20 minutes after Mass has concluded. So you don’t get the kind of drop-in-and-pray ability that you might get in other places. I thought that was a bit overboard (and sad) when I first came to Texas. But I’m not used to Texans absolutely losing their collective minds because of the smidgiest possibility of a threat… All of the security measures have been from the diocese, and the parishioners just kind react like-- “Really?”