D
Don_Ruggero
Guest
You are correct. Children should be taught that all the approved methods of receiving the Eucharist are proper. This should be part of their catechesis and verified by examination of the child.Children should be taught that receiving both ways is acceptable.
Would parents be just as guilty as the EMHC if ( if there is no valid excuse) when the parents insist a child receive only one way?
I ask because I know some parents that insist thier children only recieve one way,( without any extenuating circumstances to warrant this…).Or do parents have authority over church teaching about this?
And the decision as to how to receive is properly the child’s decision – not the parent’s. They should not be making that decision for their children.
Now, having said that, as parish priest, I always said on the other hand that the decision about the child receiving from the chalice should be the parent’s and not simply the child’s…if the parent did not want the child to receive from the chalice, the child should not. If the child wanted to receive the Host in the way opposite of the way the parent did, that, however, should be respected.
Parents do an incredible disservice to their child(ren) when they say that one method of receiving is right and another is wrong or that one is preferred and another is not. This is simply wrong.
While a parent could say that the child, while underage, could not receive from the chalice, it would however be terribly incorrect for that parent to say, for example, it was better to abstain from receiving both species on the grounds that receiving only the Host was more traditional. That would also be wrong…even looking only to the theology of sign alone, without the other considerations, shows receiving under both species preferable to receiving under one species.
That is the sort of things that need to be corrected in catechesis and by the homilies of the priest. Both parent and child are each directly under the pastoral care of the parish priest.
In most of the instances where I have seen this sort of thing occur concerning administration of Communion, it is because of a misunderstanding and not because of ill will.
The modality of receiving is, literally, as nothing compared to actually receiving the sacrament. If one is presented with a situation where one has to receive in a non-preferred manner, it is something to offer up, receive the Eucharist, and then find the resolution AFTER the Mass…not in the midst of it.
Presuming, of course, the person is not thereby put in actual danger…such as if the minister is mistakenly trying to give a regular Host to a person in need of a low Gluten Host. That is a different issue.
Ministers attempting to distribute the Eucharist have my absolute sympathy. Today it is getting more complex as one accommodates those in need of low Gluten hosts as well chalices unaffected by cross-contamination for those who cannot tolerate even the low Gluten host and must receive from the chalice alone – and a chalice not exposed to the commingling rite.
For years, I was in an assignment where we had people from everywhere approaching for Communion. In Europe, we have a distinct gesture for non-communicants coming forward in the Communion procession to receive a blessing. The Americans, on the other hand, adopted a gesture which was not infrequently used by Eastern Christians in the posture they assumed when they came forward for Communion at a Latin Rite service…which resulted in the risk of not giving Communion to an Eastern Catholic who should receive or giving Communion to a non-Catholic who was trying to convey they only wanted a blessing. One had to be on one’s toes.
Verbal communication at the Communion station is very difficult. First, you’re not expecting it. Often enough there is music playing in the background. Many of us are older and hear less well. The person is typically speaking softly…and, one can only hope, in a language you can understand.
It is one thing if someone receiving asks me, in French, if I could see their mother in the wheelchair at the back receives Eucharist; gladly. If the request is made in Russian…well, all I can do is shrug my shoulders since I don’t understand Russian.
Finally, my lived reality as a priest is that many more people today receive in the hand than they do on the tongue. Just because something is a norm does not mean that is what most people actually do, as I see every time I am the Presider at a Mass with a congregation.