T
thistle
Guest
No Cathedrals near us.10 Masses on Sundays?!? WOW. Are you in a cathedral parish?
No Cathedrals near us.10 Masses on Sundays?!? WOW. Are you in a cathedral parish?
I know there are parishes out there with one priest working part time and people have to make an appointment for confession, but if you’re in any area with a reasonable number of Catholics and churches around, one isn’t exactly short on confession options. It’s offered at least two days a week at most churches I frequent. You just have to plan to get there, the same way you’d plan to get to any other place that was only open a couple days a week, such as the local farmers market, or the county vaccines clinic, etc.I dont understand why more confession isn’t being offered…
The problem is signifcant on many levels.
Yeah, see my posts in this thread. My parish offered about 20 hours of extra confession time this week. We were busy for most of that.Some of the people posting in this thread seem to have the idea that either no one is going to Confession anymore, or that parishes are rarely offering Confession any more. Neither of those things are true.
Here we have 1500 parishioners and about 10% attendance. It would be lower but we’ve seen an influx of Filipinos over the last couple of years and they keep the numbers up.Socrates92:![]()
Our parish has around 14,000 parishioners and we have around 80% Mass attendance. To accommodate everyone we have 10 Masses every Sunday (first one is at 5.30 am and last one at 8.30 pm).10?!?!? How?
Also on days of obligation apart from Sundays the Sunday Mass schedule is used (so 10 Masses on these days too).
How are they still considered parishioners if they never come to Mass and presumably never do anything else like contribute to the church, etc?Here we have 1500 parishioners and about 10% attendance.
All Catholics who live within parish boundaries are considered parishioners, even if they don’t attend Mass.Phemie:![]()
How are they still considered parishioners if they never come to Mass and presumably never do anything else like contribute to the church, etc?Here we have 1500 parishioners and about 10% attendance.
I can’t imagine that those people would be counted in a parish anyplace I live because usually they go by the parish census (which generally captures people who go to Mass and receive the instructions to fill out the card or the online form) and perhaps by any traceable contributors (like regular online donors) and don’t go counting people into the parish who never come to church or donate.
I’ve always wondered that myself.Right, but how do they know the Catholics are there to count them? How does the parish know Catholics live at 123 Main Street in the parish if said Catholics never come to Mass, never send in a donation in an envelope or via online, never do anything else at church? They could have died, moved, or converted to Islam for all the parish knows.
Tis_Bearself:![]()
I’ve always wondered that myself.Right, but how do they know the Catholics are there to count them? How does the parish know Catholics live at 123 Main Street in the parish if said Catholics never come to Mass, never send in a donation in an envelope or via online, never do anything else at church? They could have died, moved, or converted to Islam for all the parish knows.
This.HOWEVER, IN GENERAL - yes too few attend confession and I think it’s because confession times are not convenient at many parishes. In generations past, families had little to do on a Saturday evening and could go to confession as a family.
Today, there are far too many things going on Saturdays.