That DOES make a difference.
: If the arms are held such that they form an X across the chest, much like the subdeacon’s stole in the byzantine usage, then that is just normative for many Eastern Catholics…
If, on the other hand, they are more like an equal sign (=), that’s a different matter. Not the height of irreverence, but definitely not a good posture, either.
Crossed can mean either. Folded generally can’t…
Even in Roman parishes, I stand in line, arms crossed across my chest in an X, until about two or three back from the minister (extraordinary or ordinary) of Holy Communion, then bring my hands down to avoid confusing them.
From another thread by( thereseozi) I’ve been reading the posts, in the different forums, where people are arguing over how to receive Holy Communion and it breaks my heart to see this. I’m even afraid to comment for fear that I will be attacked since it’s happened before. Why fellow Catholics do this to each other, and treat each other uncharitably, I don’t know. But anyways, I wanted to share the following information:
This excerpt is from the book, " 7 Secrets of the Eucharist " by Vinny Flynn; Introduction by Fr. Mitch Pacwa, S.J.; published by MercySong, Inc. in collaboration with Ignatius Press, pg. 12-13:
"Pope Benedict XVI also discusses this issue of how to receive, emphasizing that, instead of arguing about whether it’s better to receive kneeling or standing, in the hand or on the tongue, we need to focus on the spirit of reverence with which the early Fathers of the Church received Communion.
"First urging priests to ‘exercise tolerance and to recognize the decision of each person,’ he goes on to ask everyone ‘to exercise the same tolerance and not to cast aspersions on anyone who may have opted for this or that way of doing it.’ What is important is reverence:
“It is quite wrong to argue about this or that form of behavior. We should be concerned only to argue in favor of…a reverence in the heart, an inner submission before the mystery of God.”
Notes, Sources and References, page 111-112:
" ‘It is quite wrong to argue about this or that form of behavior.’ Pope Benedict XVI, God is Near Us, p. 71. The pope goes on to urge that instead of arguing about the outer forms or rituals of receiving Communion, we 'should be concerned only to argue in favor of a ‘reverence in the heart, an inner submission before the mystery of God who puts himself into our hands.’
“He admonishes us ‘not to forget that not only our hands are impure but also our tongue and also our heart and that we often sin more with the tongue than with our hands.’ He explains that, by coming to us in Communion, ‘God takes an enormous risk…allowing not only our hand and our tongue but even our heart to come into contact with him. We see this in the Lord’s willingness to enter into us and live with us, within us, and to become from within the heart of our life and the agent of its transformation’ (p.71)”