Our parish Pastor said that they frequently get requests for use of the church for a wedding from people they have literally never heard of. You know, inactive Catholics who probably only come for the major holidays and aren’t involved in the least bit in any church activity. I’m glad that he followed that up with – we don’t know those people, so they won’t be getting any kind of priority on the use of the facilities. He encouraged everyone to REGISTER with the parish and make themselves active in the parish. If you aren’t active in the parish, it’s not your church and you have no business asking to use it** for anything.** (that conclusion is mine, not my pastor’s)
THOSE people are the ones complaining about having to give a donation for the use of the facilities and for the priest’s time. Who in their right mind wouldn’t think it was worth it to pay, if they are able to do so, a donation for the use of the facility. Our parish seats 1,000+ people and has a massive vaulted ceiling and is in South Texas. Any ideas on what air conditioning costs?.. Lights?.. Custodial workers?.. And that’s not even considering any other aspect of it, such as respect for others time.
FYI, protestant churches charge for the use of their facilities, too. I’m not sure what the comparison here is supposed to be. Sure, if you are in a small protestant church (of which there are MANY MANY with as few as 100 members), then it’s possible they might not expect any specific donation. However, wouldn’t it be rude to not even OFFER a donation for the use of time and facilities???
The previous exception should still exist: the poor should not be denied marriage because they cannot afford the “fees”… It should always be a donation and it should always be up to the ability of the parishioner to pay. A rich person should be paying more than someone of modest means, etc. I have attended Catholic weddings where 10,000+ was spent on alcohol alone (to the potential encouragement of sin, BTW)… I should hope that some amount larger than that was donated to the parish.
-Michael