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Maximilian75
Guest
Completely absurd! that’s an utter and complete outrage!
As a priest, I am very supportive of civil laws directed against disruptive people in our assemblies. I have no hesitancy the ask for the full powers of the State to intervene against those who come to create a disruption – and that they be prosecuted to the fullest possible extent of the law.A Canadian court case
I kneel for communion. Am I highly disturbed? How should I be neutralized?highly disturbed people. Such people need to be effectively neutralised.
I like how you have formulated this expression. Thank you for giving me a smile, @godisgood77Seriously, the Don is always spot on in my view
You weren’t arrested or charged with anything. The point is, there may be a lot more to this story than meets the eye. I also noted this was thirty-five years ago. St. John Paul addressed this problem since then making all this moot.I kneel for communion. Am I highly disturbed? How should I be neutralized?
I should hope you are not highly disturbed. If you are, you should be removed by the police, under threat of violence against you if necessary. If you would not cooperate with them, you should be placed under arrest.I kneel for communion. Am I highly disturbed? How should I be neutralized?
That is indicative that these are people who were acting maliciously.As a result of this liturgical change, there had been an ongoing dispute between appellants and their parish priest and other members of the congregation. A diocesan directive, describing in particular the manner communion was to be administered and received, was regularly read at services and twice during mass on the day in question.
I wouldn’t say it was ridiculous at all. Changes in protocol are sometimes made, and it really isn’t that radical of a change at all.Don’t you think it’s ridiculous though – in the early 1960s, people were required to kneel, then a few short years later, were forbidden to kneel?
Do you not understand that we are NOT talking about the United States? We are talking about a country, Canada, whose Head of State unites in her own person State and Church.a gross overreach of the separation of Church and state… completely absurd.
I had a priest tell me he could offer communion more quickly with altar rails. This makes sense to me since the priest would just go down the line rather than waiting on someone to step up, make an act of reverence and then receive.The very small Episcopal church I attended before I converted had an altar rail and we knelt for communion. It took much longer than it would have standing Catholic-style, and it would add a significant amount of time onto the Mass for a large parish. My parish has 2 communion lines, one with a priest and one a deacon, and it still takes a while even with people standing. I’m not in a hurry, but I could see it adding a good 15-20 minutes on to have one line go up and kneel, not to mention taxing our elderly pastor with all the walking back and forth.
I’m not jumping into any controversies here, but was removal of altar rails ever mandated by anyone? I mean, in my diocese, every church I’ve ever been in has an altar rail. Same in the next diocese over (which is actually an archdiocese). I don’t think I’ve ever been in a church, in my life, where the altar rail had been removed.The demolition of Catholicism in ohhhhhh so many ways began with the MANDATED [but not from Rome] removal of the Communion Rails. I was in church when it happened to my parish and I actually cried.
Well, if you read the case notes from the Court, that you posted, you see that this was an on-going conflict.Why couldnt the priest have given them Communion and then discussed it outside of the context of the Mass?
There is a crying baby in the church. The religious service is disrupted. Should the baby and mother be arrested?No religious service of any sort should ever be disrupted and the State should exercise its power to prevent people from doing so.
Under what circumstances should this have ever gone to civil court?I should hope you are not highly disturbed. If you are, you should be removed by the police, under threat of violence against you if necessary. If you would not cooperate with them, you should be placed under arrest.
It is quite clear that this was not a simple occurrence.