K
kleary
Guest
Well for one they didn’t have nice neatly cut round wafers of bread back then. Maybe they all had to come to a more fuller understanding of things. We see definite progress in the early Church to get away from the in the hand practice. And I do find condemnation of the practice in the early church.Then why did these Apostles allow communion in the hand in the early Church? Or why wasn’t it condemned? You’re argument of them being bishops and so allowed to receive in the hand is far weaker?
Communion in the hand was never a universal custom or practice in the history of the Church. Popes St. Sixtus (115-165 A.D.) and St. Euchtyian (275-283 A.D.) both forbade the faithful from receiving communion in the hand; St. Basil (330-379 A.D.) permitted this practice only in times of persecution; St Leo the Great teaches, “one receives in the mouth what one believes by faith.” Eventually, communion in the hand was forbidden universally because, as Paul VI states, “with the passage of time as the truth of the eucharistic mystery, its power, and Christ’s presence in it were more deeply understood the usage adopted was that the minister himself placed the particle of the consecrated bread on the tongue of the communicant” Memoriale Domini, 8].
Ken