B
BSHoop96
Guest
Which is exactly what I did. I asked my priest because I felt unsure about it. That’s when he gave me the info which I put in Post #70. He said he would speak more of it in RCIA. I didn’t mention this in the post because we are talking about blessings in the communion line but I asked him about the hand holding & it was the same.I am familiar with the argument from silence in the GIRM. Were one to include something that obviously ought to be in the GIRM, then such an argument might hold. But there are many things that are not included.
For example, when the issue of holding hands during the Lord’s Prayer comes, this argument is always used. People who object to it state that one should clasp their hands or bow in prayer. Yet that posture too is not listed. The Girm does not state that one should hold the hands to the side. Is that forbidden? The GIRM does not list that as an option.
Actually that was never started by the magisterium either. People keep incorporating things that were not in the Mass. Again, the GIRM cannot list everything. How did they know these things would be added? People should not be inserting things into the Mass. Where will it stop?
So to the topic of those not able to receive communion. What should they do? **Stay in the pew and make an act of spiritual communion? **That too is not in the GIRM. So those who suggest that as an option are just as guilty of taking an action not in the GIRM. How many communion lines? Three? That is not in the GIRM.
Actually that’s a great option. My priest also said praying for unity among all Christians or some such intention would be good.
I know this sounds ridiculous, but that is the natural result of the argument from silence of the GIRM. The rule about excluding things not in the GIRM should only apply to where the GIRM structures the Mass carefully and any such omission is obvious.
The order of communion reception and how the procession is to occur is scarcely touched, save for the way music is incorporated.
**That is why I think jmcrae has the best idea. If Rome defers to the celebrant for such matters, so should we. **
FYI_
usccb.org/liturgy/current/revmissalisromanien.shtml