B
brent68
Guest
This post has an immediate question as well as some speculative questions.
My local parish, like many, has a “problem”, that at Christmas and Easter Mass, there is not enough room for all the people to gather. So, as a solution to the problem, we are using the large meeting area in the church basement as overflow seating. We have a video camera and projector downstairs so that those downstairs can see and hear the Mass and can participate, and Communion is distributed downstairs as well.
First of all, is there any problems with doing so, and does this meet the requirements of participating in Mass for those in the basement area? My thoughts are that even though they are not physically in the same room, they are fully participating, and are partaking in Communion as well.
So, assuming that this is okay, what if the overflow area is in a separate building, such as the school gym/parish activities center?
Now for the speculative.
To my knowledge we still have a shortage of priests, one that is speculated to get worse as time goes on. There are priests which oversee two or more parishes in some areas.
So, based on my parish’s solution to the Christmas/Easter problem, I was thinking of ways to address the priest shortage.
With the amazing advances in real time telecommunications (video/audio), could we have multiple groups of parishoners, each in a different church. One church would have the priest celebrating Mass, and the others would have a live feed. They of course would be participating by praying/singing. At Communion time, designated lay people (or a deacon) could distribute Communion.
Would this be a viable alternative (assuming no better alternatives were available)?
My local parish, like many, has a “problem”, that at Christmas and Easter Mass, there is not enough room for all the people to gather. So, as a solution to the problem, we are using the large meeting area in the church basement as overflow seating. We have a video camera and projector downstairs so that those downstairs can see and hear the Mass and can participate, and Communion is distributed downstairs as well.
First of all, is there any problems with doing so, and does this meet the requirements of participating in Mass for those in the basement area? My thoughts are that even though they are not physically in the same room, they are fully participating, and are partaking in Communion as well.
So, assuming that this is okay, what if the overflow area is in a separate building, such as the school gym/parish activities center?
Now for the speculative.
To my knowledge we still have a shortage of priests, one that is speculated to get worse as time goes on. There are priests which oversee two or more parishes in some areas.
So, based on my parish’s solution to the Christmas/Easter problem, I was thinking of ways to address the priest shortage.
With the amazing advances in real time telecommunications (video/audio), could we have multiple groups of parishoners, each in a different church. One church would have the priest celebrating Mass, and the others would have a live feed. They of course would be participating by praying/singing. At Communion time, designated lay people (or a deacon) could distribute Communion.
Would this be a viable alternative (assuming no better alternatives were available)?