Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please not mine!! I hate how the church is all crowded with random looky-loos on Christmas. It'd one thing if you actually respected our faith and were interested in learning more. But it's s flying spaghetti monster this and pray the gay away that all year and then I have to stand holding my wiggling three year old for an hour on Christmas b/c you need to relive your childhood or something.
Try to welcome them. If they have young kids or are older, give them your seat. If they are kids/grandkids coming for their yearly Mass obligation with the grandparents, smile, welcome them and make room.
Christmas and Easter are both wonderful times to welcome the lost lambs back into the fold. Celebrate the fact that your church is standing room only. It shouod be packed to the rafters every week, not just Christmas, Easter or following terrible events like after 9/11. See those crowded pews as a time of joy and celebration, and make those folks feel welcome so that they might feel a connection and return to church.
You had me until this: "It should be packed to the rafters every week, not just Christmas, Easter or following terrible events like after 9/11." Why should church be packed if there nothing compelling enough for people to come? It's like saying the Kennedy Center should be packed every night even when the performances are average - or below par. Or that restaurants should be packed even if people aren't hungry or the food isn't good. Please consider that not all special occasion churchgoers are lost lambs. They may be just people coming for a good show and you should be nice to them no matter why they are there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please not mine!! I hate how the church is all crowded with random looky-loos on Christmas. It'd one thing if you actually respected our faith and were interested in learning more. But it's s flying spaghetti monster this and pray the gay away that all year and then I have to stand holding my wiggling three year old for an hour on Christmas b/c you need to relive your childhood or something.
Try to welcome them. If they have young kids or are older, give them your seat. If they are kids/grandkids coming for their yearly Mass obligation with the grandparents, smile, welcome them and make room.
Christmas and Easter are both wonderful times to welcome the lost lambs back into the fold. Celebrate the fact that your church is standing room only. It shouod be packed to the rafters every week, not just Christmas, Easter or following terrible events like after 9/11. See those crowded pews as a time of joy and celebration, and make those folks feel welcome so that they might feel a connection and return to church.
Anonymous wrote:Please not mine!! I hate how the church is all crowded with random looky-loos on Christmas. It'd one thing if you actually respected our faith and were interested in learning more. But it's s flying spaghetti monster this and pray the gay away that all year and then I have to stand holding my wiggling three year old for an hour on Christmas b/c you need to relive your childhood or something.
Anonymous wrote:St. Charles Borromeo in Clarendon. 5:00 PM Mass. Be sure the kids behave. Warn them that the lights will be dimmed to almost darkness until the Celebrant enters, at which point the lights will be raised and all may pray collectively to commemorate the Solemnity of the Nativity of Our Lord Jesus Christ.
Anonymous wrote:I think every children's/family liturgy you try to attend on Christmas Eve will be mobbed. We needed to get to ours over an hour early for a seat.
Anonymous wrote:Cedar Lane UU Church in Bethesda at 4 or 6 pm.