Maybe this is just my experience, but having been to many parishes in my life since certain roles have been opened up to women or laity in general, I see a majority of EMHC as women, a majority of readers, a majority in the choir, and probably 50/50 female altar servers, organist/music leaders, and people bringing up the bread and wine.
And yet, for some reason, going down the aisles with the collection basket seems to be the only lay role that remains in practice the exclusive province of men.
Any thoughts on why this is?
First, they do exist, my parish sometimes has an elderly female.
Second, a quick note: The collection baskets are typically handled by the ushers, the same people who help people find seats when the church is packed. It’s not a different group. Just wanted to make that clear.
In general, I think there are two main reasons why you don’t see many female ushers:
- In my experience, this ministry is simply not one many women are interested in doing. At weddings, ushers are ALMOST exclusively men, and I think the mindset generally carries over from Weddings to regular masses.
- Additionally, historically, the usher job evolved from the Porters, who were responsible for security during mass. They were also responsible making sure the unbaptized & non-Catholics left once the Mass of the Eucharist began.
In SOME parishes, the historic security part of the job is still part of the ushers’ job. These parishes tend to prefer using current/retired policemen, military, EMTs, etc as their ushers. Others don’t actively look for emergency personnel, but still expect the ushers to be involved during an emergency (disorderly conduct, active shooter, someone attacking the priest, fire, medical, theft of Eucharist, etc).
Then, you have some parishes, (where they have plenty of empty seats) simply viewing this job as collecting the offerings, counting the # of people at mass, and handing out bulletins - nothing about security at all. But historically, the job was more about security.
I hope this helps.