Protestant Attendance Pads

  • Thread starter Thread starter Sweeney
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
S

Sweeney

Guest
The few times that I have visited Protestant churches with friends, I have noticed that they are very obsessive about getting everyone to fill out their attendance pads that they have in the pews. (I didn’t fill out anything) Why is this?

The last time I saw anyone take attendance at Mass was when I was a kid and Sister made sure no one “got lost” on the walk between school and church.
 
The few times that I have visited Protestant churches with friends, I have noticed that they are very obsessive about getting everyone to fill out their attendance pads that they have in the pews. (I didn’t fill out anything) Why is this?
Because they want to hound you to the end of the earth until you make an altar call and get saved.

You will be visited, called, and called again if you fill out one of those cards.
 
At the very least, it sounds like a very detailed method of “taking attendance”.

Ick!

Melanie
 
As a general rule, I don’t think there is anything ominous about these. They are just a way to initiate contact between visitors and the pastoral staff of the church. Lots of people amble in and out of these churches but are too shy to speak to anyone. About six months ago we went to a Wed evening praise service at the local United Pentecost church. I wanted to show my Mormon fiance what these pentecostal worship styles are about. The nice folks there gave us both cards to fill out, which we did, with all correct information, but we never received a phone call or so much as a postcard from them afterward.
 
I wouldn’t worry about the cards.

If you are looking for a church, you WANT to get a call from the pastor or from a church representative so that you can ask questions and get more details about the church.

Often the cards are used by the church to do something nice. We’ve had cookie baskets, candy, fruit baskets, and other gifts delivered to us by churches that we visited. No obligation. We’ve never been bothered or harassed.
 
The few times that I have visited Protestant churches with friends, I have noticed that they are very obsessive about getting everyone to fill out their attendance pads that they have in the pews. (I didn’t fill out anything) Why is this?

The last time I saw anyone take attendance at Mass was when I was a kid and Sister made sure no one “got lost” on the walk between school and church.
Why do you feel this is a bad thing?
 
Where did I say I thought this was a bad thing, ALLFORHIM? I simply made an observation and posed a question.
 
Frankly I think this is NOT a bad idea for Catholics to think about…

Perhaps to have a little pad where a person wishing to contact or be contacted by the parish can fill it out and drop it in with the offetory…

I have been known to throw “thank you notes” to the pastor into the collection basket with my offering… He always seems to get them. Maybe this would also work for those who want to leave a note for the priest, deacon, or some other member of the parish staff to contact them…
 
Frankly I think this is NOT a bad idea for Catholics to think about…

Perhaps to have a little pad where a person wishing to contact or be contacted by the parish can fill it out and drop it in with the offetory.
I always thought that was what the Registration forms were for?
I have been known to throw “thank you notes” to the pastor into the collection basket with my offering… He always seems to get them. Maybe this would also work for those who want to leave a note for the priest, deacon, or some other member of the parish staff to contact them…
I’ve done this, too. 🙂
 
My church does something like this, but its for parents, showing regular Mass attendance so that the priests will be able to vouch for them as practicing Catholics (in good conscience) for consideration for entry to a Catholic school.
 
I always thought that was what the Registration forms were for?
Well YES and NO…

It might be the case that a person does not want to register, but needs to make it known that he needs to talk to a priest… I guess that is the idea behind my thinking…
 
The few times that I have visited Protestant churches with friends, I have noticed that they are very obsessive about getting everyone to fill out their attendance pads that they have in the pews. (I didn’t fill out anything) Why is this?
40.png
ASimpleSinner:
Frankly I think this is NOT a bad idea for Catholics to think about…

Perhaps to have a little pad where a person wishing to contact or be contacted by the parish can fill it out and drop it in with the offetory…

It might be the case that a person does not want to register, but needs to make it known that he needs to talk to a priest… I guess that is the idea behind my thinking…
It is very different to have a note pad so in case a person would like to contact or be contacted by the parish. But what the OP is talking about, is having EVERYONE fill it out. This is not just to send a note to the Priest, this is for information for the church.

I once attended, after being ill informed, a Baptist service. They also wanted everyone to fill it out. The paper asked name, address, phone number and who brought you. I pretended to write and gave no real information. Another Catholic gave their information and ended up with a home visit from the Baptists. 🤷
 
It is very different to have a note pad so in case a person would like to contact or be contacted by the parish. But what the OP is talking about, is having EVERYONE fill it out.
I agree. When I was a Protestant, they had a form that got passed around and **everyone **filled it out. The same old everyone who was there every week. It did have a spot to check if you were a guest or a member. My grandma checked member and had me check guest for myself, because I was not a “member” I guess until I was confirmed or old enough or something (which never happened).
 
We do this at the Methodist Church where I belong. They are NOT intended in any way as a device to try to make converts! On the contrary, their main purpose is to give members a chance to ask to speak with the pastor (you put a check mark if you do), & to find out if there are any members who have been long absent, that they may have someone see if they have :eek: joined another church without telling anyone. (It happens!)
If visitors are looking for a church, they can write that down, also, of course, but we are not trying to poach on other churches!
Also, at our church, there is a custom to take the pads into a side room that Sunday, & to pray for each person who attended,* by name*.

When I see the “obseessive”, though…I don’t like that part of it. We don’t want anyone to feel that he or she is obligated to sign if they don’t want to!!
 
The few times that I have visited Protestant churches with friends, I have noticed that they are very obsessive about getting everyone to fill out their attendance pads that they have in the pews. (I didn’t fill out anything) Why is this?

The last time I saw anyone take attendance at Mass was when I was a kid and Sister made sure no one “got lost” on the walk between school and church.
Yes, and therefore the RCC relies on baptismal statistics to estimate membership, which results in wildly inflated numbers. Protestant churches go by who is actually in the pews on a Sunday morning.

In other words, in terms of practicing church attenders the Southern Baptists may be considerably larger than the Catholic Church in the U.S.–which I find a very scary thought!

Edwin
 
When I was visiting various Protestant churches prior to being baptized/confirmed Catholic in 1994, I absolutely hated when I would see those little pads. And some of them even had little ribbons or badges for guests to wear!!! :eek: Talk about putting the spotlight on someone!!

I don’t think I ever filled one of those things out - at least not with enough info for them to really know who I was.

~Liza
 
The few times that I have visited Protestant churches with friends, I have noticed that they are very obsessive about getting everyone to fill out their attendance pads that they have in the pews. (I didn’t fill out anything) Why is this?

The last time I saw anyone take attendance at Mass was when I was a kid and Sister made sure no one “got lost” on the walk between school and church.
I’ve never come across this in any Protestant church I’ve been to
 
:rolleyes: This is the lst time i heard such a cases about attendance pads…no such thing in all the churches in my country.
 
Again, I say you’re all making too much out of it!!

You sound like the Protestants who believe that the Vatican keeps a big list of non-Catholics and uses that list to keep non-Catholics from getting jobs, admission into colleges, adequate treatment in (Catholic) hospitals, and even as a death list!

I’ve seen a lot of those pads that have a space to check “NO, I do not wish to be called.” I’m sure there are some churches that abuse these pads, but nowadays, they have to be extremely careful because people are quick to press charges for “harassment.” If I thought I was being hounded by a “cult”, I probably would press charges and get a restraining order.

But that’s not why most Protestant churches use those pads.

One of the really nice things about them is that they help you get to know the people sitting around you. As you fill out the pad, you see the names of the people who filled it out before you, and you now can put names/faces together and know who someone is and where they live–heck, they might even live down the block from you! Cool!

As you pass the pad back down, you can learn the names of all the people in the pew with you, and after church, you can say, “Hi, Bob Brown!” and he can say, “Hi, Jane Smith!”

I don’t see anything wrong with this. I see a great deal of good in it. It gives people a tool to get to know names, not just faces. Our Christian and Missionary Alliance church used to call them “Friendship Pads.”

And no one forces anyone to fill out the pad. If you have a conspiracy mentality, you can just pass it on down and smile at the person next to you. No one will hit you over the head with a big black Bible if you leave it blank.

Again, I think it would behoove Catholic churches to seek more tools for helping people get to know each other. The methods that I’ve seen our large Catholic church use are :
  1. Coffee and donuts after the 9:30 mass (but not the other masses)
  2. Ladies salad luncheon
  3. Church picnic, featuring a keg
  4. Church pancake breakfast
  5. Church spaghetti supper
  6. Church corned beef and cabbage dinner
  7. Church fish fry
  8. Church soup and bread lunch (to raise awareness of the hungry and poor )
Do you get the idea?! It’s all about FOOD! And if you don’t like sitting around and eating with strangers (I don’t), you don’t go to these things.

So why NOT come up with some new tools for helping people put names with faces? I’m not saying Catholic Churches should use the Friendship pads, but I wouldn’t have a problem if they did.

In one of the churches that I was a member of for ten years, a dear lady came up with a great way to learn names. She carried a notebook around, and whenever she said “Hi” to anyone that she didn’t know (and she looked for people she didn’t know), she would ask if she could write their names down in her notebook. She would also write down any details about that person, e.g., babies and their names, a pregnancy, what their occupation was, which sports team they were rooting for in the March Madness tourney (we lived in North Carolina, so it had BETTER be one of the local teams!).

Then the next week, she would approach people and say, “Hi,” call them by names, and ask them about their babies, their pregnancy, their job, or their sports team (or whatever she had written down).

She was absolutely delightful, and her notebook was filled with almost everyone in the church. She also used it to pray for all the people she met, not just general “bless them” prayers, but specific prayers about their babies, pregnancies, jobs, or even sports teams!

Again, I see nothing wrong with using tools to get to know people.

And frankly, I don’t have any problem with a Baptist pastor visiting me! Bring 'em on! I’m a converted ex-evangelical who spent my childhood in a Baptist church, and I love opportunities to talk to Protestants about why I left Protestantism to become a Catholic! (Bwoo ha ha!)
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top