R
Reuben_J
Guest
You are right and I want to support this post.Maybe more people just need to be better instructed on what is appropriate. I always understood that conversation was fine in the narthex, but upon entering the church itself you need to hush and put any distractions from God aside (such as phones, etc). And I think by and large most of our parishioners follow this rule. But there are people who don’t. I recall clearly when my Dad died last month I went to the Church to pray for his soul and I was distraught- there was just myself and another woman in there, and she was sitting in a pew, talking on her phone, while I was trying to pray. She was all the way in the back, I was in the front, and I could still hear her conversation clear as a bell. It was distracting and I resented that I couldn’t pray for my Dad in peace without having my thoughts pulled to her conversation.
Mass is a worship and silence is required. This is what it should be, before and after the mass, but especially before.
When we break this rule, it will cause angst to someone else. Unfortunately, it is quite common that people do not observe silence before mass that it necessitates reminders now and then.
Sometimes it cannot be helped and that there may be distraction like when we have small children and of course we have to put up with them. But for adults to speak loudly would be really out of place.
Even if we need to talk, we must still be conscious that this is a mass, and perhaps to tone down our volume. I always feel very thankful when I saw people whisper when they talked in church.
In GIRM, we do away with ‘commentators’ during the mass who would tell us when to stand up or sit down. Our liturgist told us that Catholics should be very familiar with the order of the mass that it is not necessary to tell them all these; they should know what to do next.
Similarly, we should know about being silent too and not unnecessarily make any noise in the church.