S
SnorterLuster
Guest
I’ve been mulling this thread for a couple of days now and I have a thought or two that may partly explain not where the men are, rather why they aren’t in Church.
I think most men like to push themselves. We see it in sports and recreation. If it is good to jog a mile, then push yourself and see if you can do five miles. The sweat and the pain prove that the activity is worthwhile. Kind of the “no pain-no gain” type of thinking.
Sometime in my lifetime (60 years), the Church decided that being a Catholic should not be hard. Instead of a religion of pain and sacrifice we became a religion of feel good and accommodation. For instance, the Church no longer required us to sacrifice to receive Communion. Oh, I know there is a one hour fast, but when I was a kid, we had to fast from midnight. And it was tough to go without breakfast and my morning coke to receive our Lord. Men like that sacrifice. They like knowing they are doing something hard. It satisfies a need to prove to yourself and to others that you are “man” enough to take it. Receiving Holy Communion is of course special by its very existence, but our sacrifice to receive seems to add to the specialness. It drew us closer, we felt that we were sacrificing as a price of admission to share in Our Lord’s sacrifice on the altar.
Women of course had to follow the same fasting rules and because of their lower body weight, surely had a harder time. As I remember those days, the women in my family generally only went to Communion if we went to a very early mass. If we went to 11:30 Mass, it was mainly the men who were able to keep the fast.
Another change was, at least in my parish, the reorganization of the parish organizations. For instance there was a men’s club that organized the parish carnival, supplied muscle to projects of the parish, supported little league sports and things of that nature. They also had monthly “smokers” where the men (and the priests) would gather to smoke cigars, have a drink and shoot the bull. Cards might be played, the problems of the world solved, and support offered to those guys having problems. No women or children. Just a time to be with other men in an unstructured atmosphere enjoying each others company. Part of the parish community.
Sometime in the 1970s the parish council decided that all parish groups had to be open to both genders. It was the death knell for the men’s club. Luckily the Knights were exempted and they survived I think, but the Men’s Club soon disbanded when the first women started showing up for the smokers. It was just a few years before the parish carnival was cancelled because even if the ladies could & did organize it, they lacked the muscle and skills to build the booths and get the thing set up and taken apart. The parish little league teams transferred to the YMCA as the Catholic league fell apart. Before the changes, the men did things the way they wanted to. It might not have been the fastest or easiest way, but it was the way they wanted it and they enjoyed doing the job. After the changes, the men became just handymen, doing things that the committees wanted them to do. Needless to say the various committees found themselves with fewer and fewer men volunteering to work on the various projects.
My point is, the men started drifting away when nothing was asked of them or their (name removed by moderator)ut valued. Like the society around us, the Church in the U.S. anyway, became female friendly without considering the differences between the personalities of men and women. As a generalization, women want consensus and no conflict; men want decisiveness and competition.
I think most men like to push themselves. We see it in sports and recreation. If it is good to jog a mile, then push yourself and see if you can do five miles. The sweat and the pain prove that the activity is worthwhile. Kind of the “no pain-no gain” type of thinking.
Sometime in my lifetime (60 years), the Church decided that being a Catholic should not be hard. Instead of a religion of pain and sacrifice we became a religion of feel good and accommodation. For instance, the Church no longer required us to sacrifice to receive Communion. Oh, I know there is a one hour fast, but when I was a kid, we had to fast from midnight. And it was tough to go without breakfast and my morning coke to receive our Lord. Men like that sacrifice. They like knowing they are doing something hard. It satisfies a need to prove to yourself and to others that you are “man” enough to take it. Receiving Holy Communion is of course special by its very existence, but our sacrifice to receive seems to add to the specialness. It drew us closer, we felt that we were sacrificing as a price of admission to share in Our Lord’s sacrifice on the altar.
Women of course had to follow the same fasting rules and because of their lower body weight, surely had a harder time. As I remember those days, the women in my family generally only went to Communion if we went to a very early mass. If we went to 11:30 Mass, it was mainly the men who were able to keep the fast.
Another change was, at least in my parish, the reorganization of the parish organizations. For instance there was a men’s club that organized the parish carnival, supplied muscle to projects of the parish, supported little league sports and things of that nature. They also had monthly “smokers” where the men (and the priests) would gather to smoke cigars, have a drink and shoot the bull. Cards might be played, the problems of the world solved, and support offered to those guys having problems. No women or children. Just a time to be with other men in an unstructured atmosphere enjoying each others company. Part of the parish community.
Sometime in the 1970s the parish council decided that all parish groups had to be open to both genders. It was the death knell for the men’s club. Luckily the Knights were exempted and they survived I think, but the Men’s Club soon disbanded when the first women started showing up for the smokers. It was just a few years before the parish carnival was cancelled because even if the ladies could & did organize it, they lacked the muscle and skills to build the booths and get the thing set up and taken apart. The parish little league teams transferred to the YMCA as the Catholic league fell apart. Before the changes, the men did things the way they wanted to. It might not have been the fastest or easiest way, but it was the way they wanted it and they enjoyed doing the job. After the changes, the men became just handymen, doing things that the committees wanted them to do. Needless to say the various committees found themselves with fewer and fewer men volunteering to work on the various projects.
My point is, the men started drifting away when nothing was asked of them or their (name removed by moderator)ut valued. Like the society around us, the Church in the U.S. anyway, became female friendly without considering the differences between the personalities of men and women. As a generalization, women want consensus and no conflict; men want decisiveness and competition.