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TiggerS
Guest
Entirely valid, Brother, as your own personal opinions and concepts. view of Catholic laity in parish and Church life and the way we and it should be going, the direction it should take.Maybe you missed it, but we were talking about the fact that there are wonderful things that that laity can contribute to the Church and that Canon Law makes provisions for such contributions through associations, secular institutes and societies of apostolic life. The problem that many lay people have is that they can’t seem to agree on how to live the Gospel or how to approach a particular need in the wider Church or in their local community.
All too often, the people who are doing the greater amount of communicating are not focusing on the need and the possibilities for the laity, but on details that in the end, turn out to be distractions.
On the other hand, there are many lay people who do wonderful things for the Church, but they are out there either alone or loosely connected to others in some kind of team that needs more cohesiveness.
I’ve seen people who are terrific youth ministers, religious educators, pro-life workers, Catholic educators and retreat ministers. When the activity is done, they each go their way. What they seem to need is a sense of community, more than a few hours of apostolic work and then home. Everyone needs to belong to some kind of community.
These people would be significantly strengthened if besides doing CCD on Sunday mornings (an example) they also had other activities that included their families, prayer time, recreation, on-going formation and that these things happened consistently rather than sporadically. Very few parish communities arrange for these to be ongoing relationships. The focus is placed more on doing than on being. I believe that many lay people are looking for that sense of community.
In the old days, most Catholics lived in very closed neighborhoods, almost Catholic ghettos. They not only went to Church together, but they worked in the same factories, baby-sat for each other, sat on the stoop in the summer and just talked, watched the kids play on the street in front of their homes or the dads would go bowling on Thursdays, etc.
As the lay Catholic is dispersed through suburbia, this sense of community is lost. Lay participation in Church life is often reduced to volunteering a few hours per month and Sunday mass. People are left feeling hungry for more.
The younger generation does not realize what it’s hungry for, because it did not live in those days of the “Catholic ghetto”. What he’s really hungering for is that Catholic community where people not only engage in a certain apostolic activity, but also feel Catholic.
When we look at groups like Opus Dei, which has many lay people or SOLT with has mission teams of priests, brothers, sisters and laymen or some of the secular institutes, we see the difference between those people and the majority of the people in the pews on Sunday.
It’s not a matter of the laity not having a place in the Church or not having dignity. It’s a matter of needing to get organized in ways that will give the lay person a sense of being Catholic, contributing to the ministry of the Church and including their families, not just one member of the family who steps out to do volunteer work at some Catholic apostolate.
There is a need for these forms of associations, because of the decline of the old Catholic neighborhoods where people spontaneously formed communities that integrated the entire family.
Another association that comes to mind is Schoenstatt (sp?). They have many things going on that include the entire family in the life of the Church and they fill an important part in the life of the Church.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF![]()
Our parish this year is embarking on a number of diocesan programs that will be formation programs for parishioners - and this is the way that our parish feels that it should be going according to the concepts and opinions, views, of our parish leadership. These programs do include steps, it is hoped, towards reinforcing a real sense of community both in the parish and towards outreaching beyond the parish. It will be a trial and review process to see what is working and what may not be working. It’s probably going to have quite a few problems and concerns as things get underway, much as the changes to religious life post V2 may have caused problems and concerns. We can either look on all this with a negative and defeatist, pessimistic, attitude, or we can look on it all as a challenge to achieve diocesan and parish goals with a readiness to ‘change gears’ if necessary. We intend with God’s Grace to “put our hand to the plough” (Luke 9) and not look back, but keep going forward in whatever direction seems necessary.