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I have been thinking and praying about this photo since Ash Wednesday when I took it. Lay ministers treating the Most Blessed Sacrament in repose and the sanctuary of my parish church with indifference or worse. This is not merely a personal preference. It’s objectively unacceptable behavior.
I sent my pastor a courteous email with the photo attached, requesting that we please restore the respect and solemnity we once showed the Blessed Sacrament and the sanctuary. He has not replied and I wonder it he will?
Rather than asking about this specific incident, I’d like to ask a more general question. In all sincerity, why do so many Catholic pastors (and perhaps pastors of non-Catholic religious groups?) fail to take action on problems they have the authority and resources to actually solve?
To begin, it’s not possible that he (and the last several pastors that came before him) does not know about this, or many other eminently solvable problems in my parish. It’s also not the case that his workload does not allow him sufficient time to address such problems at least in a reasonable time frame.
Why don’t pastors take action? The only potential reasons I could come up with are:
I would really love to know why Catholic pastors seemingly ignore problems they have the ability to solve?
NOTA BENE: The sacristan in the photo tending to the sacred vessels was silently working her ministry. Her presence makes the photo all the more revealing. She is one of the kindest, most able, most reverent and most conscientious Catholic ministers (clergy or lay!) I have ever come in contact with.
I have been thinking and praying about this photo since Ash Wednesday when I took it. Lay ministers treating the Most Blessed Sacrament in repose and the sanctuary of my parish church with indifference or worse. This is not merely a personal preference. It’s objectively unacceptable behavior.
I sent my pastor a courteous email with the photo attached, requesting that we please restore the respect and solemnity we once showed the Blessed Sacrament and the sanctuary. He has not replied and I wonder it he will?
Rather than asking about this specific incident, I’d like to ask a more general question. In all sincerity, why do so many Catholic pastors (and perhaps pastors of non-Catholic religious groups?) fail to take action on problems they have the authority and resources to actually solve?
To begin, it’s not possible that he (and the last several pastors that came before him) does not know about this, or many other eminently solvable problems in my parish. It’s also not the case that his workload does not allow him sufficient time to address such problems at least in a reasonable time frame.
Why don’t pastors take action? The only potential reasons I could come up with are:
- He truly doesn’t believe there is a problem. He believes that everything is honky-dory, because his own belief in the Real Presence and his own set of personal manners are wanting.
- He feels it’s positive to become more relaxed and less formal in the presence of Jesus Christ in the Most Blessed Sacrament.
- He simply does not care.
- He’s lazy. He doesn’t want to deal with it.
- He kinda likes the irreverent/loosey-goosey atmosphere. It shows there is “change” underway in the Church.
- He realizes there is a problem but he’s not about to let any traditionalists/fundamentalists tell him what to do.
- He feels it’s none of the laity’s business and he resents being asked about it.
- He values his independence when it comes to parish politics as he knows the bishop will never get involved.
- He actually enjoys the tension/misery it produces.
- This problem is actually already on his hit list and he’ll get to it in due time. (We have been waiting decades for problems like this to be solved.)
- He doesn’t want people going to the bishop to complain if he clamps down, no matter how diplomatically.
- He doesn’t want to negatively impact the weekly plate offering if he clamps down, no matter how diplomatically.
- There’s something broken inside of him. He actually appreciates a public lack of respect being shown to the Blessed Sacrament.
I would really love to know why Catholic pastors seemingly ignore problems they have the ability to solve?
NOTA BENE: The sacristan in the photo tending to the sacred vessels was silently working her ministry. Her presence makes the photo all the more revealing. She is one of the kindest, most able, most reverent and most conscientious Catholic ministers (clergy or lay!) I have ever come in contact with.
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