5 Surefire Ways to Get Involved at Your Catholic Church
Are you struggling to feel a part of your parish? Do you walk into Mass only feeling like your fellow Catholics are passing acquaintances? Tried different activities with no luck?
Here’s the bad news: It took me 3 years at my parish before I really felt like I belonged.
The good news: I think I’ve figured out the keys to success!
After three years of actively trying to get involved and really get to know others at my parish, here are my 5 surefire tips to help you feel at home (hopefully quicker than I did ;-):
- Get active and involved – The first step is on you; you have to make the effort and be willing to keep trying until you find the right thing. Don’t give up after your first activity or two or three or four are not a success. Keep on, keepin’ on! If I can do it for three years, so can you :). Showing up at Mass is NOT enough to get to know others.
- Choose small group activities – You are not likely to get to know people well by attending big events like parish missions, Mass or even being one of 100 Eucharistic ministers. While these are all wonderful — and Mass, critical — things to participate in, they are not necessarily the activities that lend themselves to making friends. Select intimate book groups, small committees, small group outings, discussion groups and Bible studies.
- Look for activities that require interactivity – Can you help with food prep for the Seder Meal where you’ll interact with others in the kitchen, go on a volunteer outing to the local food pantry, participate in a study group that requires discussion? This is how you’ll start to become more than just a face to these people.
- Go on a retreat – If your parish has a retreat, such as Christ Renews His Parish, DO IT! Over a retreat, where you spend many hours with the same folks, you’ll develop a rapport and special camaraderie with some (not all) of the attendees. I highly recommend Christ Renews His Parish (CRHP) specifically, which has an ongoing component after the retreat. CRHP is designed to give you a group of people that you get to know REALLY well and whom you can count on to be a support group for you within your parish. CRHP is not available at all parishes but inquire if it is available at yours.
- Learn people’s names – Once you meet someone, make an effort to commit their name to memory. Whenever you see them or give them peace at Mass, USE THEIR NAME. Make a point to ask them how they are doing, or how the weather is treating them, or how their kids are getting along in school. Continue to break the ice until it’s broken! Plus, everyone likes to hear their own name 🙂 (that’s an old Dale Carnegie trick).
Now, with those tips in mind, I’m going to tell you how it all finally turned around for me. Once I became interested in Catholicism several years ago, I began going to daily Mass quite often. I saw the same people over and over but never got to know them, because Mass is just not the place for chit-chat or in-depth discussions.
Last Lent, thanks be to God, it all changed. The wonderful Catholic evangelist Hector Molina led our parish mission. I was SO excited, having heard him on Catholic Answers on EWTN radio, that I wanted to attend everything he participated in. While he was visiting, he agreed to attend coffee after daily Mass to socialize with any interested parishioners, so you’d better bet I was there everyday. This ended up being only a small group of about 8-10 people (what a shame that so many missed out on his wisdom), and through these intimate, one-on-one discussions with Hector, where we all asked deeply personal and nagging questions about Catholicism, the ice broke. Suddenly, I had 8-10 new people I knew by name and knew something about them personally!
Around this same time, a woman who worked for our parish, whom I knew in passing because we had children the same age, invited me to coffee to ask for some public relations advice, since that is my profession. In meeting with her, I offered my time to help with several projects she had going on at church and as a result of those, met a few women, who I also could call by name.
I also finally signed up to participate in CRHP that Lenten season, and that was the final turning point. Not only did I get to know the personal stories of the women leading the retreat, but I met 8 other wonderful women who attended with me. We continued to meet weekly for a long while and now meet every so often but I continue to interact with many of them on a more frequent basis. Now I feel comfortable enough to call on them for anything I need, to ask them to meet for coffee or just to ask advice or lend an ear.
Another great activity I joined last fall was an educational study where we weekly watched the video series Epic on early Church history, and then broke into small groups to discuss afterward. This is the most like-minded group I’ve found within my church to date and is the activity I most look forward to. More friends made :). I’ve also gotten involved with RCIA and gotten to know that team of parishioners and many new Catholics, as well as agreed to teach 5th/6th grade religious education class where I’ve met yet another amazing woman who co-teaches with me.
Now, I have the problem of being asked to help out more often than I can, but I’ll take that any day. And I know SO many people at Church. This, literally, all in the course of a year. You can do it, too!
I must point out that over those three years, I signed up for many things at church that just were not a fit for me. Please know it’s OK to realize something just doesn’t work and move on to something else. You will hit upon the right thing eventually and the dividends will be marvelous!
What tips do you guys have for getting involved at your parish? How did you do it? What didn’t work?
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Lyn – This is something I knew, but am having difficulty getting to do. Thank you for sharing the tips. I’ve recently moved from my hometown of 25 years, close-knit family and church to another city with my new husband. I was a lector, faith-formation instructor, a member of the Altar Society, a Finance Committee member – quite an active member at my old parish! Now, I just feel disoriented in my new city, now 6 months pregnant with our first child, very introverted, and unemployed. My husband and I have attended mass, but it does not feel at home to me just yet. I want to give this parish my heart, but I don’t have the “ganas” to do it yet. I’m not sure how that translates into English, but I think I can interchange “strength, desire, or hunger” for “ganas.” I ask that you and your readers pray for me – Please ask the Lord to grant me strength to be strong for my new little family and to open my heart to the possibilities that God has for me to serve Him once more. Thank you.
Hi Christina-
Thanks for commenting! I am an introvert too so I do understand how that makes this even more difficult. The small group idea is definitely most helpful to introverts. I know if you put me in a room at a big church event I will feel paralyzed. I would also say that it just takes time — all things in time. I think it will just take a while before this new church begins to feel more like home to you no matter what you do. But meeting some wonderful people would certainly help speed that along :). Being a new mom is also a good way to connect with another moms in the church. Perhaps there is a mom’s group you could get involved with. I know that a mom’s group about saved me after I had my first child. It’s so helpful to be around others going through the same thing you are and just have that moral support and people to ask advice of. I will certainly pray for you!
[…] Most parishes offer plenty of opportunities in the way of serving. Here are my 5 surefire ways to help you get involved at your parish. Pray, discern and speak up! I’ve read God provides many graces for those who assist at Mass. […]
Great ideas! I’m a choir director, and I suggest you consider joining your parish choir! All choirs are different, of course, but you may find a human and spiritual support team, as well as a way to praise God with your whole self, keep your mind sharp, express your emotions, and contribute to your parish by helping others worship God. My choir is family to me–their joys are my joys, their sorrows are my sorrows, and their families are my family. Please check out your parish choir!
Hi Angi-
That’s an excellent idea! I know we have a very close-knit choir community at our parish as well. Thanks for sharing!
Love this post and this blog. It was a blessing to find you on twitter
Wonderful! Thanks so much Jeanette! God bless!
I am not sure how I can get involved. I am sensitive to loud sounds and my parish plays loud music at most of its events. So, I do not go because I know it will result in an autistic meltdown due to sensory overload. What would you suggest for someone like me?
Hi Crystal,
I’m not sure what to recommend to you here other than try and find a parish that perhaps uses softer music. I know I’ve been to parishes that have masses with just guitar music for example. You might also try going to daily mass. At our parish, at least, there is no music at the daily mass. Other than that, I’d suggest reaching out to your parish, and perhaps your priest, and ask them what options you have at that parish and they might be able to direct you to some resources. I hope you can find something that works for you!