I answered it. It is a tradtion of our Church. And we are obedient to our spiritual father. I understand that some Eastern Catholic Churches hold to the tradition also. It is very spiritually nourishing and ascetical for my wife.
Once again you have avoided answering. Who is this spiritual father who declares new mothers to be unworthy to approach the Holy Eucharist? What did he write and when? What is the basis for this teaching, other than a re-imposition of the Mosaic law which was abolished by the New Covenant?
You’re just giving the same answer Tevye gives at the beginning of Fiddler on the Roof: We don’t know the reason, but we’ve always done it this way.
- “Because of our traditions, we have kept our balance for many, many years. Here in Anatevka, we have traditions for everything: how to how to eat, how to sleep, how to wear clothes. For instance, we always keep our heads covered, and always wear a little prayer-shawl. This shows our constant devotion to God. You may ask, how did this tradition start? I’ll tell you. I don’t know. But it’s a tradition. And because of our traditions, every one of us knows who he is, and what God expects him to do.”
There’s nothing wrong with beautiful ceremonies, particularly when spiritual refreshment is the end result. The welcoming back of one who has been away is profoundly powerful.
The pronounciation that someone is deemed sinful and unworthy when no sin was committed is a problem. Continuing to condemn non-sinners as being unworthy, even temporarily, because it’s traditional to do so is a problem.
I once heard a holy priest explain it this way. “A woman giving birth is in contact with the holy process of creating life. That makes a sinful human ritually unclean.”
Also, It is in remembrance of the Most Holy Theotokos and St Joseph bringing the infant Jesus to the temple when He was 40 days old, in accordance with Jewish observance.
If creating life is the reason, and life begins at conception, why is it only birth that makes a woman ritually impure? Why not her entire pregnancy?
For that matter, why doesn’t the father who did half the work in conceiving the child also have to be purified before being received back into communion?
The Holy Theotokos and St. Joseph were obeying Jewish law, because Jesus had not yet abolished the law with the New Covenant. There was no Holy Communion yet for them to participate in. There was only the mandates for temple sacrifices.
The belief in the Eucharist is so profound in the early Church that they will not let someone who has active bleeding to receive the Eucharist because they believe that your blood contains the blood of Christ as well, and spilling that will be sacrilege.
OK, that’s one I never heard before. It sounds like an unverified anecdote rooted in superstition, rather than an authentic teaching by the Fathers. Effectively what you’re saying here that a dying man could be refused Holy Unction because he was bleeding, and his blood would touch the ground. Which church father gave that teaching? Once again I find no hint of this idea in my collection of ECF writings.
Tell me, what do you do with a cup of the Precious Blood if it is becomes contaminated and undrinkable, perhaps when a sick person sneezed into it? Do you not spill it out onto the fresh earth? Would that be any more of a sacrilege than giving the Precious Blood to a dying man whose own blood is flowing out onto the ground?
I knew the Jews did not let diseased people enter the temple, and that the hemhorraging woman was considered condemned because she had abnormal bleeding. When touching Jesus cured her active bleeding, does it make sense to deny the Precious Blood to someone else actively bleeding?
If it was good and produced saints in the past, why can’t it be good today? Part of it is that we shouldn’t be so prideful that we think we know any better. There are a lot of atheists today because of that pride, because of our scientific knowledge they feel they do not need God anymore. So Mickey is right, it is a form of asceticism today, a humility in submitting to the wisdom of the Fathers in the past.
Once again, which Fathers and what did they say? If a teaching was based on supersitition, misunderstanding, and unverified anecdotes, it could still produce saints. What I’m seeing here is vague unverifiable references, virtuous in application but questionable in origin.
It is not prideful at all to discern between unverified anecdotes and authentic teaching. Truth fears no challenges and will always be proven right. Humility is in accepting what is true, even though you don’t understand it…