Would you ever text during Mass?

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I use iPieta at Mass sometimes, and I’m sure there are some who might think I’m doing something other than going over the readings or prayers.

However, as one of my friends once said: “your opinion of me is none of my business”. Let people think what they wish.
I like what your friend said. I think that is a true sign of humility. I am afraid that sometimes we (including me) care that we LOOK humble to others. I use imissal and an app for morning and evening prayers I am sure someone has thought I was texting.(which I only do in response to family members and that rarely and never at Mass I am no good at texting;)😉
 
I just have one question - what is more important, your cell phone or God? If you are using it for “business” on a Sunday you would be breaking the conscriptions for the Sabbath! I am amazed how people can’t do without for a single hour. As for an emergency wouldn’t friends and such know you are at mass? Any text or call will be there after mass anyways. If you can’t do without texting using your cell then why do you come to mass in the first place. Sorry to be so “stern” but really, this is our time with community and God - put away the phone!
 
I can’t fathom why the average PIP would need to text during Mass. Very few people can’t be incommunicado for 45-60 minutes.

A doctor on a beeper or cell phone? Sure, our former organist was the only anesthesiologist at the local hospital - more than once his beeper went off during Mass and we had to do the rest of the singing a capella.
 
I can’t fathom why the average PIP would need to text during Mass. Very few people can’t be incommunicado for 45-60 minutes.

A doctor on a beeper or cell phone? Sure, our former organist was the only anesthesiologist at the local hospital - more than once his beeper went off during Mass and we had to do the rest of the singing a capella.
Quite true! For most of us I would think turning the phone off should not be an issue. Even in an emergency, eg house on fire, family member taken to hospital etc recieving a text or call during mass is not going to change those circumstances nor enable us to do something to change the outcome.
 
I leave my phone in the car charging during Mass as I have a tendency to butt dial too much.
 
I generally leave my phone and purse in the car. I can’t think of any reason I would text during Mass.
 
There’s got this 2 guys sitting at the back, one of them taking pictures like they’re in a museum or something. They taken Eucharist, swallowing the wafer/bread offered by the priests and spat it out, then taken the picture of it.
A few days later, I happen to know they published it in a muslim’s magazine, Al-Islam.
It’s like they reject (spit out) Christ and proudly taking pictures of it.
A while later, I found this in my newspaper;
thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2009/7/13/nation/20090713195703&sec=nation
 
I don’t usually take my phone inside. I usually leave it in the car because if I felt it vibrate, I may be too tempted to check it. If I knew there was an emergency situation going on, say if a relative was in the hospital, I may take it in so that I could check a few times and make sure nothing terrible had happened that required me to leave.
 
I don’t usually take my phone inside. I usually leave it in the car because if I felt it vibrate, I may be too tempted to check it. If I knew there was an emergency situation going on, say if a relative was in the hospital, I may take it in so that I could check a few times and make sure nothing terrible had happened that required me to leave.
I think if you had an ongoing emergency prior to mass or were expecting a loved one to die you would be able to forego your Sungay obligation. When my mother was dying from leukimia and was in her last hours I did miss a Sunday mass (she passed away that morning) and my priest and bishop did not see a problem with having done so.
 
I think if you had an ongoing emergency prior to mass or were expecting a loved one to die you would be able to forego your Sungay obligation. When my mother was dying from leukimia and was in her last hours I did miss a Sunday mass (she passed away that morning) and my priest and bishop did not see a problem with having done so.
Sadly, some people’s lives are in a near constant state of chaos. I have a church friend who has one serverely mentally-handicapped daugher, a suicidal son, an absent husband, and a dying mom, all going on sinutaneously. If she waited for a opportune time to go to Mass, she would never go, and an hour spent in the presence of Christ is the only peace she gets. I’m sure she doesn’t turn her cell phone off though, in case she gets one of “those calls”.
 
Quite true! For most of us I would think turning the phone off should not be an issue. Even in an emergency, eg house on fire, family member taken to hospital etc recieving a text or call during mass is not going to change those circumstances nor enable us to do something to change the outcome.
True often enough, although if I found out during Mass I would want to leave to attend to the relative or the burnt down house. As for musicians lining up their next gig or finding a replacement or whatnot - well, to me that doesn’t rate as anywhere near important enough to be texting during Mass about it. The world is not going to screech to a grinding halt if someone has the wrong hymn number or one musician (or even all the musicians) are absent
 
I try not to even talk to my family sitting next to me in the pew, let alone text to someone who is not at Mass!

One thing for those musicians texting each other to think about is that cell signals can interfer with the sound system, so if you are texting and Father’s mike starts acting up, it’s your fault! 😃
 
I just have one question - what is more important, your cell phone or God? If you are using it for “business” on a Sunday you would be breaking the conscriptions for the Sabbath! I am amazed how people can’t do without for a single hour. As for an emergency wouldn’t friends and such know you are at mass? Any text or call will be there after mass anyways. If you can’t do without texting using your cell then why do you come to mass in the first place. Sorry to be so “stern” but really, this is our time with community and God - put away the phone!
I don’t know if you were responding to my using the word “Business”…but if you were, perhaps you missed my “business”

My “business” is a music director. SO I suppose I’m breaking the prescriptions of the sabbath by going to work and playing music for mass. Right.

I
 
I always thought that if I had forgotten to turn off my cell phone and it rang during Mass, that I would answer it and say “Yes Lord all those sinners are here!”
Or

“Yes Lord all us sinners are here!” 👍
 
Our parish readers started including a new announcement before Mass: “Please do not text during Mass.”

Wow.

Would YOU ever text during Mass? Are there legitimate reasons why someone would text during Mass?

I need some perspective here. Thanks!
I wouldn’t even consider bringing my phone into Mass. I lock it in my car. No matter what happens in my family or their lives, one hour is not going to matter.

Lorrie
 
When it comes to things like texting during mass etc. It makes me so miss the church services I once knew. There are so many times when I wish we didnt have the technology we have today… I wish people would leave their cell phones in the car or at home when they are at church.
 
Quite true! For most of us I would think turning the phone off should not be an issue. Even in an emergency, eg house on fire, family member taken to hospital etc receiving a text or call during mass is not going to change those circumstances nor enable us to do something to change the outcome.
I agree, I think that cell phones have over-inflated our own feelings of self-importance. I remember when they didn’t exist. If you were in Church and your family had a crisis they got a hold of you on your home phone and left an answering machine message that you got when you came home. Everyone cites doctors, etc, but how many of us REALLY need the cell phone? Lock it in your car and one hour later you can check it and return calls. If there is an emergency I need the grace that Mass can give me. I hate phones, and 99% of the time my ringer is off. I just check it a few times a day and good enough.

Lorrie
 
Fortunately I’ve never witnessed anyone texting during Mass, though I’m sure it happens.
I use iPieta at Mass sometimes, and I’m sure there are some who might think I’m doing something other than going over the readings or prayers.

However, as one of my friends once said: “your opinion of me is none of my business”. Let people think what they wish.
I don’t have a problem with accessing spiritual resources on a phone, and after a few Sundays I would probably make the connection that this is what you’re doing, but the first time I saw it, it would be a major distraction. It would probably occupy my attention for most of the Mass. Now I have an obligation to focus on the Mass and not be watching my neighbor, but per St. Paul my neighbor also has an obligation to not put stumbling blocks in my path. I would humbly propose you contemplate switching to resources in book form out of respect for the weakness of others.
 
i would NEVER text in mass - 1 hour out of 168 hours we get a week - God gets my undivided attention
 
I’ve never seen texting at either of my parishes. If I see someone walking out of church with a cell phone, I assume they came to mass, knowing that there was an ongoing crisis which might flare enough to force them to leave. I appreciate their dedication to assist in as much of the mass as possible and their commitment to respecting the congregation enough to, even in crisis, take communications outside. I can count the number of times this has happened on one hand.
Now cell phones going off in church is another matter. We have reminders to please turn them off posted on all the doors; it’s a work in progress.👍
 
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