Communion mix-up

  • Thread starter Thread starter GoGoDiego
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
VALD and Licit and MUCH better than not giving Holy Communion to those requesting Jesus
this is not licit. The priest should have simply allowed people to receive the Precious Blood alone. You should not dip unconsecrated hosts into the Precious Blood.
 
=ProVobis;13476306]Unconsecrated Hosts are by definition invalid. There seems to be some deception here.
What does DeDefectibus say about one species not being validly consecrated?
There would have been no doubt receiving the Precious Blood would have been valid but why add something invalid to it? Would you add unconsecrated Hosts to consecrated Hosts because you were running out?
I admit to not being a theoligian; BUT

Boththe Consecrated Host & the COnsecrated Wine are the Complete Christ BY THEM SELVES.

So by using Consecrated Wine to dip the host in; does it not too become the COMPLETE CHRIST?

God Bless you,

Patrick
 
*Frankly, if the priest doesn’t have the wits to figure out how to consecrate enough Hosts or Precious Blood for Communion, *

It just isn’t becoming of a Priest to talk this way about another Priest who could be valiantly struggling with a parish situation that is unpredictable. Without a tabernacle, what would he do with a whole lot of consecrated hosts. How is he so certain the Priest doesn’t have any wits?

Provobis, I’m sure there has to be loads of references to correct procedures that don’t come with contemptful opinions about a fellow Priest. Anyway, I believe I registered a legitimate objection to the post. Signing off.
Valiantly struggling is not using unconsecreated bread to convey communion. What the priest did is no different from dipping a Nilla Wafer or Ritz cracker into the Precious Blood. The most charitable explanation is a lack of wits.
 
So by using Consecrated Wine to dip the host in; does it not too become the COMPLETE CHRIST?
And the point of dipping an unconsecrated/invalid host in consecrated wine would be what? What would you gain? Furthermore aren’t you diluting the wine with the moisture from the host possibly making that invalid too? Does it take a chemist to point that out? As I said, all I see is deception here and possibly a precedent set that would be detrimental to one’s faith if not the congregation’s.
 
Of particular note is the citation of Redemptionis Sacramentum 104:

[104.] The communicant must not be permitted to intinct the host himself in the chalice, nor to receive the intincted host in the hand. As for the host to be used for the intinction, it should be made of valid matter, also consecrated; it is altogether forbidden to use non-consecrated bread or other matter.

So I stand corrected. The Church has explicitly commented on such a practice and it is forbidden.
Actually, the Church has reallyexplicitly commented on such a practice:

From Redemptoris Sacramentum:
[96.] **The practice is reprobated whereby either unconsecrated hosts or other edible or inedible things are distributed during the celebration of Holy Mass **or beforehand after the manner of Communion, contrary to the prescriptions of the liturgical books. For such a practice in no way accords with the tradition of the Roman Rite, and carries with it the danger of causing confusion among Christ’s faithful concerning the Eucharistic doctrine of the Church.
 
I admit to not being a theoligian; BUT

Boththe Consecrated Host & the COnsecrated Wine are the Complete Christ BY THEM SELVES.

So by using Consecrated Wine to dip the host in; does it not too become the COMPLETE CHRIST?

God Bless you,

Patrick
Absolutely no. A non consecrated host only becomes Jesus’ Body, blood, soul, and divinity by being consecrated by a validly ordained priest.
 
A while ago, an institutional Mass (meaning to say, the whole school community) was held in my school for the Blessing of the Advent Wreaths of every class. During communion, the Sacred Hosts ran out. He told one of the EMHCs to get the Sacred hosts from the nearby Church and another EMHC to retrieve the remaining sacred hosts in our chapel, thus two servers went to escort the EHMC with a lighted candle. Still the Sacred hosts ran out after that, so the priest told one of the EHMCs to get unconsecrated hosts and intinct it in the chalice with the Blood of Christ and give it as communion. Was the decision of the priest prudent?
The OP notes it was a Mass for the whole school community–blessing the wreaths of each classroom. It seems like it should have been relatively easy to know how many hosts to have ready. It seems the priest tried but should have known better than to use unconsecrated hosts. I think I read somehwere that there is a way to use an abbreviated format to consecrate in a situation like this. Any experts know this?
 
Actually, the Church has reallyexplicitly commented on such a practice:

From Redemptoris Sacramentum:
RS 96 relates somewhat, but article 104 specifically addresses the question of intinction with unconsecrated bread. Joe 5859 quoted it in post number 10.
 
The OP notes it was a Mass for the whole school community–blessing the wreaths of each classroom. It seems like it should have been relatively easy to know how many hosts to have ready. It seems the priest tried but should have known better than to use unconsecrated hosts. I think I read somehwere that there is a way to use an abbreviated format to consecrate in a situation like this. Any experts know this?
Canon 927 forbids that in the strongest terms – “not even in times of extreme necessity”.
 
this is not licit. The priest should have simply allowed people to receive the Precious Blood alone. You should not dip unconsecrated hosts into the Precious Blood.
Perhaps the idea behind dipping the altar-bread into the chalice was simply to make the Precious Blood ‘go further’? Dipping would use up less than what would be taken per sip.

On other words, it was an attempt by the priest not to deprive the students of Holy Communion, a pastoral decision taken hastily with the best intentions.

Don’t we give people credit for good intentions any more? (And before posters start reminders about spiritual communions, perhaps the priest knew that his students weren’t familiar with that or wouldn’t understand that they could do this instead of receiving from the chalices in front of them).
 
Perhaps the idea behind dipping the altar-bread into the chalice was simply to make the Precious Blood ‘go further’? Dipping would use up less than what would be taken per sip.

On other words, it was an attempt by the priest not to deprive the students of Holy Communion, a pastoral decision taken hastily with the best intentions.

Don’t we give people credit for good intentions any more? (And before posters start reminders about spiritual communions, perhaps the priest knew that his students weren’t familiar with that or wouldn’t understand that they could do this instead of receiving from the chalices in front of them).
I make no assumptions on the priest’s intentions. You offer a very reasonable explanation for what may have transpired.

That said, being as we are removed from the specifics, we can only state what the Church rules in such matters: the practice is not allowed. The priest’s culpability in the matter is not something I can know, nor is it something I need to know or want to know.
 
Or hand in hand with charity towards others.
The Poles use unconsecrated bread in their communion exchanges during Christmas. There is no effort made in deceiving anyone of the Real Presence. What could be more charitable than that?
 
Perhaps the idea behind dipping the altar-bread into the chalice was simply to make the Precious Blood ‘go further’? Dipping would use up less than what would be taken per sip.
Same thing could be accomplished by diluting the Precious Blood with water, no? But what would that do to the validity of the Real Presence?
 
Same thing could be accomplished by diluting the Precious Blood with water, no? But what would that do to the validity of the Real Presence?
If you are seriously asking, I’m afraid I don’t know, Logically, the amount of water added would have to be less than what would make the contents lose the appearance of wine, which would be easier to gauge wth red wine than with the almost-white wine used inour parish.

But is it a rhetorical question? You are not suggesting that Precious Blood gets diluted from having an unconsecrated Host dipped in?
 
If you are seriously asking, I’m afraid I don’t know, Logically, the amount of water added would have to be less than what would make the contents lose the appearance of wine, which would be easier to gauge wth red wine than with the almost-white wine used inour parish.

But is it a rhetorical question? You are not suggesting that Precious Blood gets diluted from having an unconsecrated Host dipped in?
As I said before, it shouldn’t take a chemist to tell us that moisture from the host, if nothing else, gets introduced into the wine before it gets consumed. We also know that the Precious Blood does lose its validity at some point. This is not a suggestion. Where or when exactly does wine lose its “appearance,” I haven’t the slightest idea. Light bends at a different angle for a liquid, for one thing. So until we get a ruling, I think it’s wise for me not to say anything more on validity, except that I doubt we’ll ever get a ruling because, as others have pointed out, the Church is essentially telling us “Just don’t do it.” That means it’s illegal and therefore a sacrilege to knowingly receive under these conditions, thus negating any possible sacramental graces IMO.

.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top