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bben15
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I do not think it is that. They may just not know how to be respectful towards Jesus.I’m thinking they don’t really believe Jesus is present in the church.
I do not think it is that. They may just not know how to be respectful towards Jesus.I’m thinking they don’t really believe Jesus is present in the church.
You are most fortunate if you haven’t noticed the general decline in people’s behaviour in the area of manners, etc. I didn’t say it absolutely was the source of the problem. I suggested it might be a source and I think it is. People are less well mannered and linked to that others, e.g. priests, are less likely to challenge and correct bad manners. It isn’t just seen in churches but everywhere.No. Let’s see if I can explain this.
First, I see far better behavior from a wide cross section of people in a wide variety of places than I do directly before, during and directly after Mass. I suspect others here do as well. If anything, one would expect people to be on their absolute best behavior at Mass and not at the opera hall, library, Protestant church, restaurant, office, school, etc. That doesn’t seem to be the case in my experience. Why is that?
Second even if we accept that “society in general” is becoming more coarse (I’m not really sure that’s the case) why would individuals still not have the social grace to employ their best manners at Mass – particularly those that are more mature?
Another thing that comes to mind are the very strict rules (written or not) that most parishes used to adhere to. You simply didn’t talk inside church. Even whispering was verboten for the most part. You went outside. You dressed in your best, etc. Was the lack of good manners a product of rebelling against this long held culture beginning in the late 1960’s/early 1970’s? Something that took hold and grew because people viewed it as fresh and liberating?
I suspect in 1960 the atmosphere in most Catholic churches was considerably more reverent due in part to the good manners of people than in opera halls, libraries, restaurants, offices, schools, etc. of the same period. I don’t think that’s the case today.
Again, I understand why rude behavior has not been rooted-out at so many parishes. That’s due to a lack of leadership. What I don’t understand is how it got started and why so many Catholics seem to act with such an absence of good manners before, during and after Mass even if the pastor and local bishop are not providing strong leadership?
They should be bringing those manners to Mass with them and a love for Jesus Christ should make them want to exercise their good manners.
Generally speaking, opera does not attract people who are “born free and live free.”
You ask where bad manners comes from? How much time do you have? There are many reasons why manners are disappearing in the United States.
IMO, one of the main reasons is the breakdown of the family, and the lack of a mother and a father who are willing to sacrifice leisure time and patiently train their children to have good manners.
IMO, another reason is the importance in our society placed on the philosophy of “Live Free.” People in the U.S. want to be free to be themselves and do what they want to do when they want to do it. They play loud music, they eat and drink whatever they want (which is one reason we’re all so fat), they stay up too late, they spend money that they don’t have, they drive like NASCAR drivers through their neighborhoods, they voice their opinions and unfriend anyone who disagrees with them.
And above all else, when there are any negatives in their lives, they blame OTHER people or they blame “circumstances outside their control.” It’s always someone else’s fault.
As for older people, keep in mind that many senior citizens were teen and twenties in the 1960s, when the “Do your own thing” philosophy became entrenched in American thinking.
IMO, a lot of people in the U.S. have an “entitlement” or “victim” mentality. They believe that life is hard and other people have treated them badly, and therefore, “I have a right to be happy and do things that make me happy.”
It’s all about the Great Me.
But also, IMO, there are more charitable reasons why older people talk in church. Believe it or not, in this mobile society, we are all more lonely than ever. Many older people spend much of their week alone, never seeing anyone or talking with anyone. It used to be that older people lived in their homes and talked out in their yards, but now, many of the elderly have moved into group homes because their neighborhoods got too dangerous, or they simply couldn’t maintain their properties anymore. Amazingly, a “group” home can be a very lonely place. It’s no wonder that when the older person gets to church and sees their old pals, they are excited and want to connect and talk, talk, talk!
Finally, I think a lot of people just don’t have a clue. I was in a church (playing piano) this weekend where one of the gentlemen was very loud when he chatted with me before Mass. I honestly don’t think he realized it. I tried to smile and nod and not say anything, to try to give him a clue that I would prefer that he tone it down. But he didn’t get it. I think a lot of people in the U.S. have become unskilled in reading social settings, and they tend to just keep talking and acting like they do at home.
There is some truth to that.Perhaps because their hearing is diminished and they think they ARE whispering?
Forced socialization, huh?Oh wait, another-another thing: people have a good and natural iclination for fellowship after Mass. The answer to that is Sunday coffee. At the Ukrainian parish I sometimes attend, the pastor scoots everyone downstairs and locks the door (it’s pretty funny to witness sometimes - he manages to do it without being offensive) so the people do their socializing the the appropriate place.
Wow did you ever hit the nail on the head. My thoughts exactly.Where are the GOOD MANNERS one would expect to find at Mass?
My parents, teachers and mentors spent a great deal of time and effort instilling good manners in my siblings and I. Good manners can routinely be seen exercised in families, schools, restaurants, performing arts venues, at the supermarket, at the office and at many other places one would expect to see the practice good manners.
I don’t see good manners at Mass.
I’m not talking about getting all tied up in knots over specifications from the GIRM, RI and other documents. I’m talking about people acting with good manners based on training they should have learned while growing up.
It doesn’t seem to be age related, although I would have expected it to be. Loud talking before, during and after Mass is probably more common in my parish amongst the elderly than with younger members of the faithful. Walking into the sanctuary and using it as a stage to be seen while chatting with others before Mass is also more common amongst the more mature as well.
I don’t think it’s a matter of the form of the Mass either. I attended a Sunday EF Mass three weeks ago. I asked the person sitting in front of me in a quiet whisper a question about setting my missalette markers. She was kind enough to help me in an even quieter whisper but not until we attracted the wrath of someone sitting 10-20’ away. With fire in his eyes he approached us and gave us a loud, distracting and horribly rude shuuuuuuuuuuuush!
I do think it has something to do with one’s “place” on a parish hierarchy though. Many “permanent” readers, adult servers and EMsHC seem to treat the church and the Mass almost as if it was their own private club.
Why the lack of social grace and plain old manners?
Want to see someone with good manners? Watch someone from another faith (or no faith at all) sitting through their first Mass or attend a Protestant faith service sometime.
Manners are dependent things, not absolute. Each of you perceive the other as rude, according to the standard each of you know.I don’t think it’s a matter of the form of the Mass either. I attended a Sunday EF Mass three weeks ago. I asked the person sitting in front of me in a quiet whisper a question about setting my missalette markers. She was kind enough to help me in an even quieter whisper but not until we attracted the wrath of someone sitting 10-20’ away. With fire in his eyes he approached us and gave us a loud, distracting and horribly rude shuuuuuuuuuuuush!
Naw. There was something wrong with that person. He was seriously on edge waiting for what he perceived to be rude. The sicko thing is that he reacted to what he saw (me asking the person for help) and not what he heard (quiet whispers.)Manners are dependent things, not absolute. Each of you perceive the other as rude, according to the standard each of you know.
I think it likely that some people who are in groups who talk before an event feel some imperative to talk to the others before the event, lest they be anti-social and rude. Yes, some folks put “before mass” as a special event with its own rules, but there is no reason to figure they are aware of that, especially if their experience is with mega churches.
Also, with the elderly, they are often driven by others to mass at a set time and spend the rest of their day in the home. They are likely grabbing what little socialization that they can.
All of what you offered applies to ALL of society. Yet the often poor manners I experience at Mass seem fairly unique given the importance of the event in which they are exercised. In other words, people usually don’t act with such poor manners while attending important events (whatever they might be) in their own worlds.Generally speaking, opera does not attract people who are “born free and live free.”
You ask where bad manners comes from? How much time do you have? There are many reasons why manners are disappearing in the United States.
IMO, one of the main reasons is the breakdown of the family, and the lack of a mother and a father who are willing to sacrifice leisure time and patiently train their children to have good manners.
IMO, another reason is the importance in our society placed on the philosophy of “Live Free.” People in the U.S. want to be free to be themselves and do what they want to do when they want to do it. They play loud music, they eat and drink whatever they want (which is one reason we’re all so fat), they stay up too late, they spend money that they don’t have, they drive like NASCAR drivers through their neighborhoods, they voice their opinions and unfriend anyone who disagrees with them.
And above all else, when there are any negatives in their lives, they blame OTHER people or they blame “circumstances outside their control.” It’s always someone else’s fault.
As for older people, keep in mind that many senior citizens were teen and twenties in the 1960s, when the “Do your own thing” philosophy became entrenched in American thinking.
IMO, a lot of people in the U.S. have an “entitlement” or “victim” mentality. They believe that life is hard and other people have treated them badly, and therefore, “I have a right to be happy and do things that make me happy.”
It’s all about the Great Me.
But also, IMO, there are more charitable reasons why older people talk in church. Believe it or not, in this mobile society, we are all more lonely than ever. Many older people spend much of their week alone, never seeing anyone or talking with anyone. It used to be that older people lived in their homes and talked out in their yards, but now, many of the elderly have moved into group homes because their neighborhoods got too dangerous, or they simply couldn’t maintain their properties anymore. Amazingly, a “group” home can be a very lonely place. It’s no wonder that when the older person gets to church and sees their old pals, they are excited and want to connect and talk, talk, talk!
Finally, I think a lot of people just don’t have a clue. I was in a church (playing piano) this weekend where one of the gentlemen was very loud when he chatted with me before Mass. I honestly don’t think he realized it. I tried to smile and nod and not say anything, to try to give him a clue that I would prefer that he tone it down. But he didn’t get it. I think a lot of people in the U.S. have become unskilled in reading social settings, and they tend to just keep talking and acting like they do at home.
I don’t agree. i’ve been seeing the same sort of boorish behaviour at the movies and in restaurants.Several have posted excuses for bad manners (changing society, being hard of hearing, wanting to visit, the Protestants talk just as much, etc.) but few have really addressed my question: why the bad manners at Mass and not everywhere else?
I have not. This is especially true when those in attendance consider the event to be important – be it a meal at a nice restaurant or a Protestant prayer service.I don’t agree. i’ve been seeing the same sort of boorish behaviour at the movies and in restaurants.
I would be astonished if one couldn’t find what is often called bad manners in either form of the mass. Both forms have *people *attending. In both places someone will go sick and cough all over every inch of the pew, kids will put gum under the pew, someone will take it upon themselves to glare at you for how you have chosen to arrange yourself in the pew (the middle, the end, whichever one it is that irks them), or someone will fail to silence the technology device on their person. Maybe they’ll even double-park in the lot. Accept them as small opportunities for sanctity, if you can. I usually fail, but they tell me a person can do it.It just goes to show that the lack of exercising good manners in church is certainly not dependent on the form of the Mass.
Me too. Nothing specific to mass, other than a failure to see that some want it quiet before mass.I don’t agree. i’ve been seeing the same sort of boorish behaviour at the movies and in restaurants.
I too believe this is the cause. Bad manners are just the new “norm” in society in general. Of course its going to happen at Mass as well because people are just plain bad mannered lately.Sometimes I think that what happens in Catholic churches isn’t about the Catholic Church but a reflection on what is happening in society in general. This topic is a prime example. I don’t think a lack of good manners in Catholic churches is anything to do with catholics. I believe it’s what’s happening in society in general. There is an increasing lack of manners, politeness and courtesy in general. I just think this is spilling over into places of worship.