We just moved and are new parishioners to our church. Today, the Eucharistic Minister denied my children reception of the Holy Eucharist on the tongue (I attended a later Mass). The EM told them he only offers the communion in the hand and made them receive in the hand. My children have always and everywhere received on the tongue.
What is my recourse as I’m quite livid they would EVER be denied the Holy Eucharist? I’m going to address it first thing Monday morning, but need to know if I should speak to the parish secretary, the pastor, and/or the director of EMs. And at what point, if any, do I contact our Diocese.
Peace.
+JMJ+
I am happy for you that, from your subsequent post, you seem to have regained some of your self-composure from your previously “quite livid” state.
You are, of course, free to proceed in any fashion that you wish. I think you would do quite well to understand that the manner in which you proceed will reflect on you AND upon your family. There is great truth in the maxim that an action provokes an equal and opposite reaction…only some times, the reaction is not equal; it can be disproportionate
If you wish to labeled as a troublemaker and as someone to be put on the parish’s watchlist, by all means begin making allegations such as that you children were denied Communion when, in fact, they were not.
Contact immediately the diocese rather than first entering into a dialogue with the parish priest, if you wish, and you will see the result after the diocese contacts the parish priest and he informs them that you did not extend to him the courtesy of addressing the matter to him… As a now retired diocesan official, I will happily tell you, in detail, how such people who acted in such way were regarded and acted toward by me and by others in the chancery.
On the other hand, since you are new to the parish, this gives you an opportunity to make either a very good or a very bad impression upon your new parish priest, who will presumably have responsibility for shepherding you for even years to come. A very good first oppression, I never forgot. On the other hand, a very bad first impression, I never forgot either.
You should address your concern, in a calm and non-livid manner, to the parish priest.
Someone who wished to understand what happened, I was normally always very accommodating toward. Someone who called me at 9:01 a.m. on Monday morning, livid and hostile, demanding their rights, would receive their answer from me.
But Heaven help them if they ever came to me with any situation however small that was in the least within my discretion as parish priest that asked for even the tiniest variance of the law…they found the parish would not bend in their favour under any circumstance, in the slightest manner. They experienced the parish equivalent of the edict of the Lord: “with the measure you use, it will be measured to you.”
Personally, I would not advise you to set yourself on a collision course with the shepherd of yourself and your children.
As for your specific question, I was not there. Neither were you. Neither was any one else on this board. I cannot make any discernment as to why whatever it was that really happened actually happened. Perhaps the minister erred. Perhaps s/he did not.
I famously remember one case in which the young people were making a solemn communion…they had made their first communion months before but the First Communion class was reconstituted to take part in a eucharistic procession. The organisers had the boys and girls wear gloves…which precluded them from receiving Communion in the hand. Whether they wanted to or not was immaterial…they had to receive on the tongue. Otherwise, their gloves would become sacred linen for having touched the Sacred Species.
Of course, none of them understood that but that did not matter.
Similarly, once a person commits to receiving Communion by intinction, they must receive by one means only.
Without knowing the specifics, it is beyond fruitless for me as a priest to offer commentary on something of which I am completely uninformed in any meaningful way.