J
jmcrae
Guest
Look to your own soul; Heaven isn’t won by means of a popularity contest - Mary is already there, and God has already won the battle with her - He doesn’t need us, so if we thoughtlessly throw ourselves into Hell by the very few moments between Holy Communion and the final blessing, that is surely not God’s problem.I’m sorry to say, that at EVERY catholic church I have been to on Sunday, the doors blow open as soon as communion has been received by the “faithful”. ANY catholic church, I don’t care where it is. “Count”, as in “getting 'er done” (as I have heard it before) you know? Fullfilling the Sunday obligation. The church that I mentioned in this thread, or perhaps another, heck, the priest even tells the folks they don’t have to be there for the whole “bit”. Nothing to do with folks with other duties, doctors or the like, it’s folks with other things they HAVE to do, which, obviously, is not the worship of our Lord.
I went to pick up my folks from mass one day and asked folks leaving the church early, why they were leaving. Answers? “It’s all over”, “I have more important things to do”, “I have a dinner engagement”, “I really needed a smoke”, “You don’t have to stay for the whole thing” and “I got it done for the week”.
Great, eh?
If “everyone” is leaving early from Mass (before the final blessing) then “everyone” is not fulfilling their Sunday obligation (unless there is a grave reason to leave before the final blessing, of course) - but then, if “everyone” were actually doing that, then the priest would be blessing an empty Church, and we know that that isn’t happening - yes, there are people who leave early, but it’s hardly the entire congregation, or even most of it - my personal experience is that the majority of people (more than three quarters) stay until the end of the final hymn, and there are quite a few who stay for about half an hour afterwards for prayers and fellowship.