F
familyof4
Guest
This occurs at my home parish, and pretty much every parish I’ve ever been to. The problem, as described by the vicar at my parish (who is attempting to get people to not come up for blessings if they are unable to receive the Eucharist) is multi-faceted.All small children at every parish I’ve ever been to accompany their parents for communion and all receive a blessing. What other option does a parent have? I think it’s wonderful that they get a blessing. Yes everyone gets a blessing at the end but there is something special about the priest placing his hand on my child’s head in blessing.
Here are a couple of things to consider: 1) If you are receiving the Eucharist from an extraordinary Eucharist minister, do you expect to get a blessing from them? By what authority can they bless an adult or a child? 2) Each time a blessing is given, is a hand being placed on the head of the person? Not every person who is at church is going to have a clean head or forehead-- and then the priest or EM is going to touch a person, then touch the Eucharist. 3) As sweet as the idea of blessing a child is, it is not part of the rubrics, and leads to the potential that they might decide it’s time for their 1st Eucharist. Our vicar told me that more than one distraught mom has told him that their child “mistakenly” received communion.
There are a lot of well meaning people who have decided to do things that seem right, but actually are not part of the mass. Making the gestures of spreading the hands towards the priest, standing with the Orans posture (hands up during the Our Father), holding hands and raising them during the Our Father… none of these are actually part of the mass. They seem nice, but each time we decide to change the rubrics, we are losing something. There are very specific meanings to all parts of the mass. Each gesture, each bow, each kneeling sequence has meaning.