Phones and tablets in worship- useful or a potential distraction

Some churches have their liturgies or orders of service online, tablets or phones being used by some ministers leading worship, and some congregations are being encouraged to bring their devices to church to save money on booklets or printed sheets of paper.
This happened in the church I attended today. A discussion afterwards led to some expressions of horror- where would this lead? Sending texts or doing crosswords during the sermon? Checking up on the preacher’s sources?
Useful or potential distraction?
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Comments

  • Both, of course! But yeah, it's a good question to consider.

    I try not to use my phone during worship except when I've got to look up a Bible passage. I'm afraid the people behind me will think I'm farting around when I shouldn't be, and get distracted. The good side of having it available for some of us is that we can set the text size large enough for those of us with poor vision. My church does have a large print bulletin, but many don't, and the phones can help.
  • People have been giving the bible readings from their phones for about a decade at my church and the worship band has iPads with their music and lyrics. The lyrics of the songs have been on screens for about 2 decades. There are far more people following the reading/sermon/taking notes on phones than there are without. This is especially useful for looking at different versions. It seems to have just moved smoothly online without any hiccups.
  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    As a parish we don't. But some folks have an app (Universlis) with the liturgy and they use that to follow the readings.
    But there is a school of thought that believes that scripture readings are to be proclaimed and listened to rather than followed visually.
    We have no screens etc. The primary focus in an RC church should be the lectern where the Word is proclaimed and made present, and the altar where the Sacrament is celebrated. Screens would detract and become another focus.
    So its hymn books for us.
  • SignallerSignaller Shipmate
    edited August 18
    I leave my phone at home when I go to church. It would be a distraction at a time when I want to be apart from everyday trivia.
  • We use Universalis for Morning and Evening Prayer and have an ereader with Universalis in the Sacristy for those occasions when using the current RC Lectionary books is a complete pain (ie, you need all five ribbons and a highly competent priest and readers to do it successfully). These are weekday masses that happen irregularly and infrequently during the liturgical year, where, for pastoral or other reasons, saint-specific readings are required; iirc the last occasion would have been for St Martha, Mary and Lazarus. Weekday masses are the ones where you are more likely to find an elderly priest or server/reader who is faithfully keeping that mass going despite difficulties.
  • FrolloFrollo Shipmate Posts: 13
    As one who's been on tech in churches various for a while: mobile phones close to some microphones can be a source of all sorts of distracting inductions.
  • TrinitarianTrinitarian Shipmate Posts: 7
    I recently read this article, which I think is very good indeed, and resonates with my experiences : https://t.co/drmulMG5ph

    "In a world increasingly being played out online, going to Church should be an immersion in cold water that wakes us out of sleep."
  • MrsBeakyMrsBeaky Shipmate
    edited August 18
    Last time I was back in the diocese of Eldoret, Kenya (where I was based for three plus years) I went to the very rural church of one our clergy friends- tin roof and rough brick walls.
    All the grandparents knew the service off by heart or had battered Kiswahili prayer books but the young people all followed the service on their phones!
  • Bishops FingerBishops Finger Shipmate
    edited August 18
    What will people do if the technology fails big-time, and all of a sudden there are no mobile phones, electricity, or internet?
    :scream:
  • HeavenlyannieHeavenlyannie Shipmate
    edited August 18
    Our church congregation is only 30 years old and the early adoption of phones, iPads, screens, etc, probably reflects the younger demographics of it. I remember the stats just before lockdown showed that about a quarter of our church (of round 400 members) were under the age of 18.
    Also the informality of a charismatic service and lack of tradition.
  • finelinefineline Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    Well, the church I currently go to has started projecting everything onto biggish screens at the front of the church, and we are supposed to read from there. The colour combinations and backgrounds make it very hard for me to look at, because of visual processing difficulties, so I just shut my eyes and don't join in the liturgies, unless they are set ones that I know by heart. I have talked to the vicar about it, she said they may be able to change some things but not others, and I suggested if they emailed the liturgy to me, I could read it from my phone, and she said they could do that. So I think this will be happening. I realise if I do this, some people in the congregation might think I was being rude/distracted, texting and not paying attention, but then that's their issue, not mine. Each person is responsible for their own phone usage.

    People can just as easily do puzzles and send notes to each other in the sermon without a phone. I can't be the only person who did this as a kid. And plenty of adults used pen and paper to write notes - they could have been drawing a caricature of the preacher for all I know! Plus it's also possible to be distracted/absorbed by your own thoughts and images inside your head. I was more in a world of my own before smartphones.

    I miss the days of following Bible passages in my Bible, or a Bible on the pew. Though, maybe that's not a thing of the past, but more about what type of church one goes to. In those days, if I was bored in the sermon, I would flick through my Bible and read different things, or flick through the hymn book and memorise my favourite hymns.
  • What will people do if the technology fails big-time, and all of a sudden there are no mobile phones, electricity, or internet?
    :scream:

    I suspect in that case being able to follow the service may be the least of anyone worries. Though you could always take after Moses and use a tablet of stone...
  • fineline wrote: »
    I miss the days of following Bible passages in my Bible, or a Bible on the pew. Though, maybe that's not a thing of the past, but more about what type of church one goes to. In those days, if I was bored in the sermon, I would flick through my Bible and read different things, or flick through the hymn book and memorise my favourite hymns.
    We have Bibles in the pews; each pew section, which can seat four comfortably, has three hymnals and one Bible. That sort of set-up seems to be pretty common in churches of my denomination in these parts. I rarely see people following the readings in the pew Bibles, though a few do. I’ve always found it very difficult to read and listen at the same time, so I’ve never tried to follow along with the readings. I totally get that we’re all wired differently in that regard.

    A number of churches where I am now seem to print bulletins that include the full texts of the readings, as well as music and texts for the hymns. This can lead to bulletins for one service that are upwards of 20 pages long. I can’t help but think that’s environmentally problematic. Reading from tablets and phones can be a counter to that.

    That said, I’m one of those people who thinks how we do things conveys messages about what we’re doing. Does reading the Scripture readings from a printed-off sheet of paper that will be thrown away or recycled after the service send a different message from reading the Scripture readings from a nicely-bound and clearly permanent book? What message is sent when we read from a small screen?

    I don’t know that there are right or wrong answers. At the least, “right” or “wrong” may vary with context. But I think the questions are important.


  • fineline wrote: »
    Well, the church I currently go to has started projecting everything onto biggish screens at the front of the church, and we are supposed to read from there. The colour combinations and backgrounds make it very hard for me to look at, because of visual processing difficulties, so I just shut my eyes and don't join in the liturgies, unless they are set ones that I know by heart. I have talked to the vicar about it, she said they may be able to change some things but not others.
    We use a screen - but we provide a few paper copies for folk to use, if they wish. It's hardly rocket science!

  • HeavenlyannieHeavenlyannie Shipmate
    edited August 18
    Fineline’s church should be able to make the images on the screens accessible, it isn’t complicated (I teach online and my slides have to be accessible to students with a wide variety of needs). If UK based, perhaps they need reminding of their obligations under the Equality Act in relation to disability.
  • Nick Tamen wrote: »
    fineline wrote: »
    I miss the days of following Bible passages in my Bible, or a Bible on the pew. Though, maybe that's not a thing of the past, but more about what type of church one goes to. In those days, if I was bored in the sermon, I would flick through my Bible and read different things, or flick through the hymn book and memorise my favourite hymns.
    We have Bibles in the pews; each pew section, which can seat four comfortably, has three hymnals and one Bible. That sort of set-up seems to be pretty common in churches of my denomination in these parts. I rarely see people following the readings in the pew Bibles, though a few do. I’ve always found it very difficult to read and listen at the same time, so I’ve never tried to follow along with the readings. I totally get that we’re all wired differently in that regard.

    A number of churches where I am now seem to print bulletins that include the full texts of the readings, as well as music and texts for the hymns. This can lead to bulletins for one service that are upwards of 20 pages long. I can’t help but think that’s environmentally problematic. Reading from tablets and phones can be a counter to that.

    That said, I’m one of those people who thinks how we do things conveys messages about what we’re doing. Does reading the Scripture readings from a printed-off sheet of paper that will be thrown away or recycled after the service send a different message from reading the Scripture readings from a nicely-bound and clearly permanent book? What message is sent when we read from a small screen?

    I don’t know that there are right or wrong answers. At the least, “right” or “wrong” may vary with context. But I think the questions are important.


    I get a bit stressed about the paper used in our English service, but remind myself that a) we have visually impaired people who need it--phones won't do for some of them; and b) we re-use those as much as we can (two services). I also think of the elderly people we have who can't hold the weight of a hymnbook. That's really the primary reason for the paper, plus our music director's tendency to choose half the hymns from some place other than the hymnbooks we possess.
  • finelinefineline Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    fineline wrote: »
    Well, the church I currently go to has started projecting everything onto biggish screens at the front of the church, and we are supposed to read from there. The colour combinations and backgrounds make it very hard for me to look at, because of visual processing difficulties, so I just shut my eyes and don't join in the liturgies, unless they are set ones that I know by heart. I have talked to the vicar about it, she said they may be able to change some things but not others.
    We use a screen - but we provide a few paper copies for folk to use, if they wish. It's hardly rocket science!

    It's not rocket science, but it's not what this church does. It's a tiny church, the vicar is vicar of several churches, we have a different person preaching on different Sundays, and they each use different sources, and some of the songs are just played from YouTube - it could be tricky to coordinate. Though yes, that is what a lot of bigger churches do, and it would be handy if this one did.
  • BroJamesBroJames Purgatory Host
    If there are reasons why they can’t, or it’s difficult for them, perhaps they could email the presentation to you, or send you a link so you could do a printout for yourself, or tweak the look of it on your own tablet or smartphone so it works for your needs.
  • finelinefineline Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    BroJames wrote: »
    If there are reasons why they can’t, or it’s difficult for them, perhaps they could email the presentation to you, or send you a link so you could do a printout for yourself, or tweak the look of it on your own tablet or smartphone so it works for your needs.

    Yes, that's what I have suggested and they're going to do for now, and so I will be using my phone in the service.
  • It's great that they can do that. My son is presently the one who handles service bulletin layout and production for the English congregation, and he's been trying to accommodate individual needs as well--and I know how that can go, especially when the (music/preacher/what have you) is late with their materials! Just in case they manage to flub it up, I hope you can remind them--I'm watching LL struggle with remembering all the components, and he's grateful when someone tells him he forgot to send them X or whatever.
  • I attended an Orthodox Divine Liturgy in a monastic setting recently where the monks shared an i-Pad for particular prayers and readings.

    I was quite surprised at this because ... surprise, surprise ... some Orthodox bishops have issued edicts and structures against the use of readings from phones and other electronic devices.

    The stated reason for this isn't, as one might expect, because we are Luddites - although that can apply - but on the grounds of legibility.

    The argument runs that the eye can scan over texts on screens and miss things more easily than on paper. Some would argue otherwise, of course.

    Without wishing to appear at all critical of settings like @Heavenlyannie's church, I'd certainly find that amount of tech distracting in a worship context.

    But then I'd say the same about worship-bands and the like although I would have been comfortable with that 25 or 30 years ago.

    I do know Orthodox priests who do use tech during sermons to some extent and they seem to use PowerPoint and so on the same as anyone else if speaking in a conference context or giving a lecture.

    But I do find phones and screens distracting in a worship setting but that doesn't mean that should apply to anyone else.

    There is a 'thing' within Orthodoxy where we aren't meant to sit in judgement on what anyone else does in worship - and I'm trying not to do so critical old git that I am ...

    But it does bug me when I see people chatting or checking their phones when we are going forward to receive communion.

    Is outrage!

    I don't object to informal ways of 'doing communion' in settings where that feels appropriate or is part of the tradition.

    Don't take this the wrong way, @Heavenlyannie but your church will have built up its own traditions over the last 30 years. As soon as we have a set format, and all churches have those, we have a tradition.

    All churches have liturgies, whether they are formalised or more informal and apparently spontaneous.

    That's just a fact of life and nothing to worry about.

    Anyhow, it still amuses me whenever I attend a conference or ecumenical event where a Coptic or Orthodox monk looking like they've walked out of the 10th century will reach inside their cassock and come out with some smart piece of IT-kit like anyone else.
  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    We seem to be ignoring the possibility of them being a useful distraction.

    Shall I show myself out?
  • CaissaCaissa Shipmate
    They can also be useful in providing accessibility for people with a disability.
  • No @KarlLB - I can think of occasions where they would indeed be a welcome distraction!

    And yes @Caissa that is certainly also the case.

    I'll start a new thread about distractions in our own necks of the woods and not other people's ...

    Context is everything.
  • What will people do if the technology fails big-time, and all of a sudden there are no mobile phones, electricity, or internet?
    :scream:

    I suspect in that case being able to follow the service may be the least of anyone worries. Though you could always take after Moses and use a tablet of stone...

    Yes, that thought occurred to me, too.
  • finelinefineline Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    Caissa wrote: »
    They can also be useful in providing accessibility for people with a disability.

    That is what my example is about. It will provide a more accessible alternative for me. And potentially others. Also one can adjust font size and type on one's device, which you can't on a paper copy.

    Another usage I can think of: there are two women who are always whispering in the service, gossiping, and I find it rude and distracting. Since they clearly want to do this, and are going to do it, if they could text each other instead, that would provide them with an alternative that doesn't distract other people.
  • We used to have a guy in the choir who would use an iPad rather than the hymnal, because he found it easier to read and hold. It worked for him, and didn't cause a distraction to other people, so there's no problem with it.

    We have a few people who like to take copious notes during the sermon. They all use pens and notebooks, but I can certainly imagine they might have a fellow traveller who takes notes on a phone.

    I think being distracted by your phone is to a reasonable extent a choice. You can put your phone in do-not-disturb mode so it won't show you notifications for incoming texts, or you can choose to ignore them. You can browse TikToks and play games, or you can choose to not do that.

    (A long time ago, a group of colleagues and I used to while away the time in boring meetings doing the crossword in a skype group chat. Someone would scan in a copy of the Guardian cryptic crossword, and we'd solve it together.)
  • MarsupialMarsupial Shipmate
    We don’t normally use digital devices at our place - though I think we did suggest it to some attenders once as a last resort when we ran out of programs. (The program is made available online for those watching the livestream so in principle someone attending in person could follow it on their phone.) The downside is that we go through a lot of paper. (The alternative would be to have people juggle a lot of books and though we used to do that 30 years ago the sense is that we can’t do that now if we expect visitors to have a fighting chance of following the liturgy - which is complex enough as it is.)

    I find digital devices distracting and I don’t think they work well with the contemplative atmosphere our liturgy is trying to foster. That seems to be general consensus among those who attend the service though I’m sure others’ mileage may vary.

    I suppose a related question is about how useful people find livestreams. I admit that I rarely watched our livestream during Covid - I felt our liturgy just really didn’t translate well into a livestream format. But we continue make a livestream available now and normally get at least a few people watching in real time - mostly now I suspect for reasons of geography more than epidemiology.
  • fineline wrote: »
    Caissa wrote: »
    They can also be useful in providing accessibility for people with a disability.

    That is what my example is about. It will provide a more accessible alternative for me. And potentially others. Also one can adjust font size and type on one's device, which you can't on a paper copy.

    Another usage I can think of: there are two women who are always whispering in the service, gossiping, and I find it rude and distracting. Since they clearly want to do this, and are going to do it, if they could text each other instead, that would provide them with an alternative that doesn't distract other people.

    How would you encourage or 'enforce' them to text one another instead?

    Our priest would tell them to shut up, not the most tactful or effective approach of course.

    Who would tactfully take these two aside and suggest they text one another, even assuming that they are tech-savvy enough to do so?
  • fineline wrote: »
    Caissa wrote: »
    They can also be useful in providing accessibility for people with a disability.

    That is what my example is about. It will provide a more accessible alternative for me. And potentially others. Also one can adjust font size and type on one's device, which you can't on a paper copy.

    Another usage I can think of: there are two women who are always whispering in the service, gossiping, and I find it rude and distracting. Since they clearly want to do this, and are going to do it, if they could text each other instead, that would provide them with an alternative that doesn't distract other people.

    How would you encourage or 'enforce' them to text one another instead?

    Our priest would tell them to shut up, not the most tactful or effective approach of course.

    Who would tactfully take these two aside and suggest they text one another, even assuming that they are tech-savvy enough to do so?

    Traditionally that's the province of the Church Wardens isn't it ? (Or similar figures).
  • finelinefineline Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    fineline wrote: »
    Caissa wrote: »
    They can also be useful in providing accessibility for people with a disability.

    That is what my example is about. It will provide a more accessible alternative for me. And potentially others. Also one can adjust font size and type on one's device, which you can't on a paper copy.

    Another usage I can think of: there are two women who are always whispering in the service, gossiping, and I find it rude and distracting. Since they clearly want to do this, and are going to do it, if they could text each other instead, that would provide them with an alternative that doesn't distract other people.

    How would you encourage or 'enforce' them to text one another instead?

    Our priest would tell them to shut up, not the most tactful or effective approach of course.

    Who would tactfully take these two aside and suggest they text one another, even assuming that they are tech-savvy enough to do so?

    I wouldn't. I was suggesting it here in a tongue-in-cheek way. It's not my role, they're a law unto themselves, and they have a bit of (well, a lot of!) a chip on their shoulder about the changes in the church, so they would get very vocally offended if any of the preachers said anything. I have considered turning round and looking pointedly at them, but I don't, because I think they are also quite vulnerable. They seem to see it that it's them against the church, and that no one cares about them, but I make an effort to chat to them, and they seem to see me as a friend.

    Though if they decide they want the liturgy emailed to them, I might find a way to suggest in a friendly way they could text each other too if they want to chat. I'm not sure how tech savvy they are though - they are older, not very bright, and they may not even have smartphones.
  • fineline wrote: »
    Caissa wrote: »
    They can also be useful in providing accessibility for people with a disability.

    That is what my example is about. It will provide a more accessible alternative for me. And potentially others. Also one can adjust font size and type on one's device, which you can't on a paper copy.

    Another usage I can think of: there are two women who are always whispering in the service, gossiping, and I find it rude and distracting. Since they clearly want to do this, and are going to do it, if they could text each other instead, that would provide them with an alternative that doesn't distract other people.

    How would you encourage or 'enforce' them to text one another instead?

    Our priest would tell them to shut up, not the most tactful or effective approach of course.

    Who would tactfully take these two aside and suggest they text one another, even assuming that they are tech-savvy enough to do so?

    I'd do it. It's not that hard to say, "Hey, I notice that you often have to communicate during the services, and I can see that it's making it hard for some other people to concentrate. How about using a text message the next time you've got something urgent you need to say to each other?"

    There's no need to say "gossip" at all. Give them a charitable cover for what they've been doing so far, and suggest the alternative. Yes, they may start gossiping about YOU (or me), but at least they've been alerted that people are bothered by it.
  • MarsupialMarsupial Shipmate
    fineline wrote: »
    Caissa wrote: »
    They can also be useful in providing accessibility for people with a disability.

    That is what my example is about. It will provide a more accessible alternative for me. And potentially others. Also one can adjust font size and type on one's device, which you can't on a paper copy.

    Another usage I can think of: there are two women who are always whispering in the service, gossiping, and I find it rude and distracting. Since they clearly want to do this, and are going to do it, if they could text each other instead, that would provide them with an alternative that doesn't distract other people.

    How would you encourage or 'enforce' them to text one another instead?

    Our priest would tell them to shut up, not the most tactful or effective approach of course.

    Who would tactfully take these two aside and suggest they text one another, even assuming that they are tech-savvy enough to do so?

    Traditionally that's the province of the Church Wardens isn't it ? (Or similar figures).

    At the risk of tangenting, I think it’s primarily a pastoral issue. With the wardens in a supporting role if necessary.

  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    At the risk of further tangenting - I'm always perplexed by the concept of people taking notes during sermons. What do they do with them? How do they use them in the future? Do they index them or something so they can look in the back of their notebook and say "ah, yes, Baptism of Jesus - the pastor covered that in June 1982 - let me find my notes!"?
  • KarlLB wrote: »
    At the risk of further tangenting - I'm always perplexed by the concept of people taking notes during sermons. What do they do with them? How do they use them in the future? Do they index them or something so they can look in the back of their notebook and say "ah, yes, Baptism of Jesus - the pastor covered that in June 1982 - let me find my notes!"?
    Some people do nothing with them later; they take them because the act of taking notes helps them listen and remember.

    My wife is that way. She’ll sometime make note of specific phrases, points or ways of saying things that wants to remember. The bulletin with her notes may hang around for a week or so, during which she may look at it from time to time, then it goes in recycling.


  • finelinefineline Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    When I was studying, writing notes in lectures helped me focus and take in what the lecturers were saying. I don't do well with auditory processing, but if I convert it to something visible, I absorb it and remwmber it, even if I never refer to it again. So I can see how it might be helpful in a sermon, if you consider the sermon valuable enough.
  • MarsupialMarsupial Shipmate
    A friend who is also a parishoner at our place always takes notes of sermons - I've never asked why but I suspect focus is the issue. I've never taken notes of sermons but like @fineline I find it very helpful in other contexts. They have to be handwritten though - probably in part because I'm a poor typist relatively speaking but also I find that typewritten notes tend to produce a quasi-transcript rather than a processing of what was heard.
  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    edited August 19
    That might be it. It didn't occur to me as my brain just thinks - notes - permanent record - for what purpose? I can imagine doing it typing but not handwriting - handwriting for me is laborious, slow and difficult - borderline dysgraphia. I often can't read my own handwriting once I've forgotten what I wrote.
  • NenyaNenya All Saints Host, Ecclesiantics & MW Host
    KarlLB wrote: »
    At the risk of further tangenting - I'm always perplexed by the concept of people taking notes during sermons. What do they do with them? How do they use them in the future? Do they index them or something so they can look in the back of their notebook and say "ah, yes, Baptism of Jesus - the pastor covered that in June 1982 - let me find my notes!"?

    I always take notes by hand during the sermon, partly to remind myself so that I can report on the "What was the sermon about today?" thread here. If it's been a particularly meaningful sermon for me I will transfer some of the thoughts into my current journal. If I'm not taking notes during a talk it is seldom a good sign. I remember a story told years ago by one Jeff Lucas - a name probably known to some here - of how he stood up to speak and someone in the front row was sitting with an open notebook and pen poised expectantly. Five minutes into the talk he capped his pen, put both it and the notebook away and sat with arms folded for the rest of the time. That made a strong statement and was pretty distracting!

    I am, however, a compulsive note-taker and it simply comes naturally to me to write things down. I was always the one who took the minutes at work: I actually enjoyed doing it and no one else wanted the job.
  • ashleyashley Shipmate Posts: 8
    I started note-taking after realising over a long period of time, my wife and I were seemingly getting very different messages from each other even though we were mostly in the same sermons! I don't actually look back at them that often, but if we find ourselves getting in a "he said what?!!" type discussion, we can actually pin it down to a specific day and possibly listen back to the recording, rather than it being something that I vaguely remember happening at some point.
  • PuzzlerPuzzler Shipmate
    Our last vicar’s sermons always followed the same pattern, with the inclusion of long and short anecdotes pinpointing the kernel of her message. I never took notes, but probably one sentence would suffice.
    Now we are in vacancy we are hearing many sermons of -ahem- dubious value, with the occasional goodie.

    The late Mr Puzzler preached good sermons. Well prepared and scripted, but you wouldn’t necessarily have known that as, whilst not ad libbed, they appeared spontaneous. I didn’t manage to extract them from his laptop, but I still have paper copies. I don’t know what to do with them. But that is a tangent of a tangent, so to bring it back:
    An online version of a sermon after it has been preached could be sent to those with tablets/ phones?
  • Many churches now put a recording (audio or video) of their sermons onto their websites. Some provide transcripts as well; I prefer these as it's much quicker to read than to listen, however I recognise that some will say that sermons are primarily an auditory (and communal) experience.

    Again, slightly off the point!
  • SpikeSpike Ecclesiantics & MW Host, Admin Emeritus
    This week I’m singing in a cathedral with a visiting choir. The cathedral authorities have been very clear that we aren’t allowed to use phones or tablets for our music. Apparently it’s down to copyright reasons.
  • I know of a priest in this diocese who uses a tablet when conducting services, but he has a severe visual impairment - to the extent that only a few words can fit on the screen at any one time!

    He does, as you might expect, know a lot of the C of E Eucharistic liturgy by heart, but the Gospel reading (for example) sometimes moves at a slightly slower pace than might otherwise be the case IYSWIM.

    I can't offhand recall whether or not he uses the tablet whilst preaching.

    Our Place's previous priest used a tablet when reading Morning Prayer, which we held every weekday. We used the Franciscan Office, but the book does take a bit of handling, and required careful placing of ribbons before the service began - I think the tablet was simpler, and, in any case, this priest also had poor eyesight which found the smallish print hard to read.
  • MarsupialMarsupial Shipmate
    Nenya wrote: »
    KarlLB wrote: »
    At the risk of further tangenting - I'm always perplexed by the concept of people taking notes during sermons. What do they do with them? How do they use them in the future? Do they index them or something so they can look in the back of their notebook and say "ah, yes, Baptism of Jesus - the pastor covered that in June 1982 - let me find my notes!"?

    I always take notes by hand during the sermon, partly to remind myself so that I can report on the "What was the sermon about today?" thread here. If it's been a particularly meaningful sermon for me I will transfer some of the thoughts into my current journal. If I'm not taking notes during a talk it is seldom a good sign. I remember a story told years ago by one Jeff Lucas - a name probably known to some here - of how he stood up to speak and someone in the front row was sitting with an open notebook and pen poised expectantly. Five minutes into the talk he capped his pen, put both it and the notebook away and sat with arms folded for the rest of the time. That made a strong statement and was pretty distracting!

    I am, however, a compulsive note-taker and it simply comes naturally to me to write things down. I was always the one who took the minutes at work: I actually enjoyed doing it and no one else wanted the job.

    I remember talking to a parish priest who in his curate days had a habit of taking notes of sermons he was hearing. He said he dropped the practice after one day when he had stopped taking notes at some point during the sermon and the preacher had taken it as a commentary on the quality of his sermon.

  • fineline wrote: »
    When I was studying, writing notes in lectures helped me focus and take in what the lecturers were saying. I don't do well with auditory processing, but if I convert it to something visible, I absorb it and remwmber it, even if I never refer to it again.
    I’m the opposite. I generally can remember what I hear quite well. But I can’t listen and write at the same time; I can do one or the other, but not both. Once I start writing, I quickly start missing what’s said next.
    Spike wrote: »
    This week I’m singing in a cathedral with a visiting choir. The cathedral authorities have been very clear that we aren’t allowed to use phones or tablets for our music. Apparently it’s down to copyright reasons.
    Interesting. I’m not sure what the copyright issue would be if the appropriate rights have been obtained for the music on the tablet or phone. Perhaps they don’t want to have to worry about whether that’s the case?

    Do they similarly make clear that photocopied scores are not allowed?


  • PuzzlerPuzzler Shipmate
    We used photocopied scores but were assured the correct permissions were in place, though they were not shown, which is technically a breach, I understand.
  • Yes, the correct permissions need to be seen. Our Place used to use Taize chants (words and music) for a monthly service, so I made certain that copyright was acknowledged, and printed on the service sheet. IIRC, we paid a very small annual fee.
  • Many churches now put a recording (audio or video) of their sermons onto their websites. Some provide transcripts as well; I prefer these as it's much quicker to read than to listen, however I recognise that some will say that sermons are primarily an auditory (and communal) experience.

    Again, slightly off the point!

    Given modern technology, it might be interesting to ask what an AI-generated summary of your sermon recordings would look like.
  • TubbsTubbs Admin Emeritus, Epiphanies Host
    What will people do if the technology fails big-time, and all of a sudden there are no mobile phones, electricity, or internet?
    :scream:

    Rev T puts his order of service and sermon notes on his iPad. Except when he's doing a wedding or a funeral. Then he uses paper. Just in case.

    I take my Kindle to church as it's got my Bible on. I need the bigger print. The font in the our pew Bibles is too small and the large print Bibles are jealously hoarded by those who got there first.
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