This is not necessarily the case, as you present it.
No. It is
exactly to case as I presented it. If a properly qualified candidate for the position can be employed then it should be done. Only if no one so qualified can be found should a parish turn to a girl volunteer out of dire necessity.
That should not negatively reflect on the girl who volunteers. Stepping up to help the Church in a time of need is extremely noble and it should give the boys and parents of the parish great pause to reflect on the dire circumstances.
Nobody is asking anybody but the priest or bishop to preside over the mass. Further, not all deacons go on to become priests; many men feel called to become permanent deacons. What’s more, not every parish has instituted acolytes and spare deacons at its disposal. Sometimes the laity participates out of necessity.
All of which is completely redundant to what I already said.
After all, the role of the Lector is properly that of a Deacon.
I believe that is incorrect. The serving Deacon’s role in the Liturgy of the Word is actually to read the Gospel. Lectors conduct the other readings. This used to be the role of the Subdeacon before the major order of the subdiaconate was ended in the Latin Church.
In my diocese, there are perhaps six deacons, for well over seventy parishes. Having a layman, or just as often, a laywoman, give the readings is the only practical way to have a mass at every parish on every sunday.
The lack of proper numbers of deacons and priests speaks to our collective failure, as a people, to properly nurture religious vocations in our young men. If anything it should be a clarion call to step up and show that we take these traditions seriously.
Excellent, save that it is my understanding that two altar servers are required at minimum for mass to proceed, and it seems to be a chore for my parish to put together that many on anything more than a once-weekly basis.
And that’s a horrible shame.
Father P has often said he would offer a daily mass were it not for a lack of available servers through the week.
If you are blessed with such an able priest and an opportunity then thank God judiciously and
find that man altar servers - boys first, girls as needed.
For example, at the 10:30 AM Wednesday mass, often the only one in the week… should we pull the young boys from their classes to come serve?
Frankly the answer is “yes - if it won’t seriously adversely effect the child’s education.” A shared burden would be easier, or an earlier or later daily Mass.
The real point here is that you make do with what you have, but
never let yourself fall into the trap of thinking confusing what
is with what is
right.