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EnglishTeacher
Guest
A great article, as always from this author: This Mother’s Day, Have a Heart for Those Who Suffer.
My parish roses placed at the Mary statue.I know of one woman who won’t go because many years ago, when she was a teenager, she gave a baby up for adoption. It’s too painful for her to see all of the mothers come to the front for a blessing. I’ve wondered about that when I go to the front for a blessing and see the women who remain seated. How many have faced infertility? Multiple miscarriages? Elective abortions? How many have outlived their children?
But thank goodness they have you, and you are doing everything right, attending church with them and showing them the right way to live. You’re a mom to celebrate!Blockquote That just sucks for the kids.
That’s what our parish does. And the youth group hands out carnations after Mass. But they offer them to every woman, no one is singled out either way.The priest simply gave a general blessing to all mothers at the end of Mass. No one was asked to stand or come up. I think that was the perfect balance.
Our area parishes offer the roses to all the mothers and/or to anyone who wants to take a rose home for their mother or a mother they know.But they offer them to every woman, no one is singled out either way.
I guess that most people commenting are American. In the UK we have Mothering Sunday on the fourth Sunday of Lent. It is a religious observance, although it is now largely secular.It’s a secular holiday so I don’t believe it should be mentioned in Mass at all.
Is that partly because Father’s Day isn’t such a big deal? I live in the UK, so my experience may be different. We do have Father’s Day, but it’s not a big deal. Whereas Mother’s Day is almost universally observed, Father’s Day is regarded as a commercial imitation of Mothering Sunday and is more of an optional occasion. Therefore if one is an infertile man or had an abusive father or whatever, it is easy just to ignore it. There’s no avoiding Mother’s Day, and it does cause problems in families where mothers and children have a bad relationship for whatever reason. I think the concerns over infertility or bereavement are less of a big thing here.This DOESN’T happen on Father’s Day
Agreed. I will also say, I’m confused where the practice of blessings for mothers comes from. How can a secular holiday affect the celebration of the Mass? I can understand wishing everyone a happy mother’s day during announcements, but anything beyond that really has no place at Mass imho.Mother’s Day is not on the liturgical calendar, but culture, retail, and, yes, Hallmark, have made everyone feel like it is.
I know from my perspective, a lot of this is because the rhetoric around fathers and fatherhood just isn’t the same as that around mothers and motherhood. People with abusive mothers often feel that they face a lot more pushback and disbelief than if they had an abusive father - as though it’s unbelievable that a woman could do those things. And there’s a lot more of a sense for women that motherhood is seen as the full expression of female identity in a way that fatherhood isn’t seen as for men, or that a woman who isn’t a mother somehow isn’t a complete woman.But I’ll add this: in recent years, the entire day has been marred for me by those who struggle with it. It’s no longer just a happy day to celebrate moms — now it’s a day to explain that someone is infertile, someone’s mom died recently, someone had an awful childhood with an abusive mom, etc. This DOESN’T happen on Father’s Day, which seems a bizarre contrast.