T
Tantum_ergo
Guest
I’m sure there are plenty of people who welcome this. And–there are plenty who don’t.Greeting people is courtesy in action, not an attempt to form a full blown relationship.
Go to any decent hotel and someone greets you and they may open the doors.
The obvious objection is “the Mass isn’t a hotel”. That’s true, but kindness can be practiced everywhere. When people come to our homes we open the door and greet them. The Church is the Body of Christ, I think it is good for people to greet one another. Our parish has greeters hold open the doors and simply say “good morning”. Before the start of Mass we are asked to greet one another. It’s simple and quick.
Thing is, I’ve never known (this is my personal experience and that of my family’s, obviously others’ experiences can differ) anybody ‘follow up’ from this. You’ll get a quick ‘hello’ (no name) from the person next to you or in the pew in front or behind, while meanwhile around the church people are flashing ‘peace signs’, waving, giving hugs. . . So, what does that say? The people who know each other greet each other warmly, and those of (sadly usually MY) a certain generation will flash the peace sign (I guess I’m glad they’re not flicking their Bics) indiscriminately, and those who are less ‘extroverted’ feel like they’re once again the last ones being picked at the playground, or the wallflowers at a dance.
FORCED or COMPULSORY ‘fellowship’ doesn’t work. The fact that there may be a sizeable number or majority of people who are ALREADY IN FELLOWSHIP may make it SEEM that this kind of gesture is a roaring success at 'Being Church" (gag), because hey, everybody’s doing it, everybody’s having fun, and if you aren’t, you’re a fuddy duddy. Not THEIR fault that people don’t feel ‘welcome’. . .
IMO (and it’s just an opinion, please), this kind of gesture is a phony attempt to portray as parish as 'we are all one and we care about every individual" rather than actually having the priest go out and MEET people, or having the ‘social committee’ actually INVITE people to come and get involved, or just having somebody from the parish ASK if there’s something you really enjoy about the Faith and then going from there, gently let the person choose their involvement level and then ‘more’ or ‘less’ as circumstances dictate.
In the parishes I have been (and it’s mostly been in the tundra/least religious area), the ones where we had ‘meet and greet’ before Mass and the liturgy was all about ‘meal’ and ‘fellowship’ and 'where WE want to be in life" (the idea that Christ has any idea for us being totally unexplored), were the ones in which nobody–not the priest, not the greeters, not the people in the pews–ever went BEYOND a ‘hello’ IN THE CHURCH BEFORE MASS.
The ones where the liturgy was Father Z “Say the Black, Do the Red”, where we came in, prayed quietly, etc. . . THOSE were the parishes where, when you showed up for Mass, you had smiles directed at you, so you know people saw you, but you weren’t ‘pushed’. By the 3rd or 4th time you attended Mass, people would say, as you walked out to the parking lot, things like, “Nice day. . .hope we’ll see you again next week”. . .by the time you’d been going a couple of months, you’d be addressed by name and there would be at least 5 or 6 families whose names you knew as well. By the time you were there 6 months, you’d have meet these people and more not just at church, but in town. . .shopping, walking. . .and you’d have conversations. By the time you were there a year, YOU’D be one of the people noticing a ‘new’ person and greeting them with a "Nice day. . .hope we see you again next week.’
You had a real community because it wasn’t based on games. And yet, when the new priests (sadly, in this neck of the woods they are still usually in the 50 and over range), one of the first things that gets pushed onto the congregation is “MEET and GREET”, let’s tweak the liturgy, let’s change things for the sake of change because obviously if you’re still doing things the way that the previous priest did, you’re STAGNANT. Only change --the ‘new’ priest’s cool ideas etc–will help you 'be Church". . .and so the madness continues.