Nov 5, 2015
I was taken aback recently when a sixth-grader from our parish school told me as he left the church with his classmates after a school Mass that he thought the Mass that day was "fun." I tried to interpret this in benign terms, thinking that the young man's liturgical vocabulary was still underdeveloped. Yet, I still wince at the thought that Mass is "fun."
Because we live in a society notable for its entertainment and consumer culture, we are easily inclined to see everything in entertainment and consumer terms. It is striking how often the word "entertainment" appears in our language. And we consciously speak of ourselves as entertainment consumers, and we see the process by which entertainment is created as an "industry."
The person with a consumer/entertainment mentality treats the world like a giant supermarket or place of entertainment. In such a climate, people, created things, the gifts and talents of others, relationship, sexuality-all are considered objects of consumption.
When we come to worship, it is easy to bring an entertainment mentality with us. With our cultural outlook, we can think that we go to worship to be served and entertained. (This is especially true in the area of liturgical music.)