I would have do agree that it would be irresponsible to delay Mass to hear a non-emergency confession (though I likely wouldn’t report it to the diocese). People have children and families and tight schedules and the priest should respect that. If I showed up and Mass was delayed by 20 minutes I would likely avoid attending that parish in the future.
Yep, definitely moving in the wrong circles.
Humility!
And stop disrespecting Priests !
Here’s what would happen if Mass was 20 min late, the next Mass would be late, then the next would be about 50 min late,
Because Priests here have to travel.
Or people would not be able to attend daily Mass or risk the sack.
And what about mums with small children , 20 min late is huge. Or infirm elderly
Or sitting in an unheated church in mid winter!
Exactly the point I made earlier. There are people who work on weekends, in low wage jobs without benefits. There are doctors, nurses, and emergency personnel who need to be on duty at odd hours to provide for whatever needs might happen.
I mentioned my current parish being a mission parish. It only provides a single Mass on Sunday, and Father may indeed need to be back at the main parish for the next Mass.
In the meantime, parishioners stick around for fellowship because we have donuts after every Mass. Different families take responsibility each week for bringing the donuts.
Other ministries, for this parish family (including the main parish) include a quilt ministry that provides quilts for the homeless, a Title I school, and leukemia patients. We have a shawl ministry that knits or crochets shawls for those who are grieving the loss of a spouse, and afghans for the homeless.
The closing prayer of the Mass is “Go and serve the Lord.” Our life in Christ does not end with the Mass, but is to be lived daily. It is our failure to live that life on a daily basis that determines whether or not we need the Sacrament of Reconciliation.
We are all called to charity, in its various forms. Many us try to get to Mass as early as possible to prepare for the Eucharistic Celebration. The priest who begins on time honors our waiting, and our preparation.
He honors those who have other obligations, just as we honor God when we come to Mass by not being late or leaving early.
We are all part of the Church. The more involved we become the less time we have to point fingers at what others are doing/not doing, how pious this person is compared to that person. If you can sing, join the choir. When the cantor had a stroke, somebody took his place. A student from the School of the Arts plays bassoon while another plays violin. Do you have a gift for hospitality? Have you offered to help clean or decorate the church before Easter of Christmas?
Perhaps, what our person posting about the benefits of the EF comes from not belonging to a strong Youth Group when younger. I see how my current parish group is active in service activities, and other ways of learning about God’s love. My older brothers, in the days when EF was the norm belonged to CYO.