Do bishops have authority to prohibit Communion on the tongue?

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No Cleric, not even a Cardinal can make alterations to what’s in the Missal at his personal judgement.
Again, this is completely false. The GIRM explains that there are certain non-essential parts of the mass which can be changed at the pastor’s discretion and the bishop’s approval for pastoral reasons. The Roman missal, contrary to popular belief, is not absolutely universal. There are small changes from bishop conference to bishop conference, approved by the Vatican. It is not absolute.

The U S GIRM specifically states:
  1. The Diocesan Bishop, who is to be regarded as the High Priest of his flock, from whom the life in Christ of his faithful in some sense derives and upon whom it depends, must promote, regulate, and be vigilant over the liturgical life in his diocese. It is to him that in this Instruction is entrusted the regulating of the discipline of concelebration (cf. nos. 202, 374) and the establishing of norms regarding the function of serving the Priest at the altar (cf. no. 107), the distribution of Holy Communion under both kinds (cf. no. 283), and the construction and ordering of churches (cf. no. 291). It is above all for him, moreover, to nourish the spirit of the Sacred Liturgy in the Priests, Deacons, and faithful. [emphasis added]
 
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I doubt children are taught about receiving on the tongue any more. It may be that the two methods ought simply to be made equivalent options.
Children in our First Communion prep classes are taught COTT. In fact the priest wants them all to receive that way at their first communion. Our priests are working to get many to receive on the tongue rather than the hand but of course it’s always a choice.

While I’m not going to join the debate on which is better, more reverent, more holy, more whatever, I myself prefer to receive on the tongue. It will be strange to receive in the hand but I will be obedient to my bishop’s request.
 
which scenario actually occurred?
Sorry I wasn’t thinking much there on the moment. The scenario was as Bishop Schneider explains, my point only pointing to the fact the fingers were not involved but with not so good a description on my behalf. It was actually even more reverent than my faulty description when I wasn’t thinking much about the exact mechanism, Thankyou for pointing that out as the Bowing is very important there.
 
There are small changes from bishop conference to bishop conference, approved by the Vatican.
Yes, that is true. And the Vatican for example already granted a change when allowing certain bishops to have communion in the hand as an exception to the rule in their dioceses, otherwise this would not have been allowed anywhere. Bishops can therefore either ban or allow communion in the hand despite what the missal says. However, the issue of communion on the tongue was certainly not put under their authority, but that is on the contrary the norm throughout the universal church.

The bishop can decide to have communion under two or one kind. He could even until a few years ago even establish whether somebody could stand or kneel. However the issue of communion on the tongue does not come under a bishops jurisdiction of authority but remains a universal norm untouchable by diocesan authority.
 
Exactly. Many bishops are merely asking people not to recieve on the tongue. This is misguided, since there is no evidence that it creates a greater health risk, and on the contrary some evidence that it makes no difference. Some bishops have attempted to ban Communion on the tongue. That is, to borrow a phrase, ultra vires. Beyond their powers.
 
However the issue of communion on the tongue does not come under a bishops jurisdiction of authority but remains a universal norm untouchable by diocesan authority.
No matter how many times you say this, the fact of the matter is that that the bishop has the ultimate authority of the ordinary magisterium within a diocese. Even the Pope acknowledges this when popes have outright refused to sit in the bishop’s cathedra when he visits a diocese. Only extraordinary magisterial authority overrides a bishop’s ordinary authority. The curia is meant to support the expression of the Pope’s extraordinary magisterial authority but, outside direct papal statements, they still only teach with ordinary magisterial authority. The draft for the new constitution of the Roman Curia explicitly states that the curia’s purpose is supplementary to both the Pope and the local bishop. The ultimate authority for legislating local pastoral norms lie with the bishop.
 
That’s just it though, this is not a local pastoral norm but a norm of the universal church.
 
But the bishop isn’t legislating for everyone, just the people of the diocese for a specific reason. That is the very definition of ‘pastoral norms’.
 
Exactly. Many bishops are merely asking people not to recieve on the tongue. This is misguided, since there is no evidence that it creates a greater health risk, and on the contrary some evidence that it makes no difference. Some bishops have attempted to ban Communion on the tongue. That is, to borrow a phrase, ultra vires. Beyond their powers.
I don’t believe anyone is saying that Person A is at risk receiving on the tongue. I believe the issue is when Person B receives on the tongue and the Host is accompanied by a bit of saliva from Person A that remains on the fingers of the person distributing Communion. As someone in that position, my observation is that very few extend their tongues far enough to mitigate that risk. Perhaps some COTT lessons could be conducted. Perhaps the person distributing could be allowed to request a safer “target” before the Host is given.
 
The thing is Peter, there are sadly some in the church (even clergy) who want to reduce the papacy to almost nothing, a bit like the monarchy of England which is only a figurehead bound by a vote of others. The concept of such supreme authority from Rome does not fit well with the new ideologies and ways of the last few decades. What some are sadly aiming for is for the church to become like Eastern Orthodoxy.

Father Malachi Martin reveals well this plot in fact who worked with Pope John Paul II. None of these things would’ve happened 100 years ago, and no bishop then would’ve attempted such a thing.

I’m sure that nobody in this page thinks like that, but there are some that do.
That is, to borrow a phrase, ultra vires. Beyond their powers.
 
So here is the question.

If your bishop has said to receive in the hand. And you attend Mass, what are you going to do?

If the priest won’t offer it on the tongue, what is your response? Do you just stand there? Do you walk away? Do you say something?

Assuming you are not at an EF mass.
 
Speaking for myself, and knowing that the priest has already said before communion what the bishop has said, if the bishop has suggested it, and I’m in a state of grace, I see the following options as the possibilities which best befit an obedient Catholic:
  1. Receive in the hand.
  2. Refrain from receiving.
While one could theoretically approach the priest in line and indicate “please let me receive on the tongue’, this could present the appearance of disobedience even if it is not actually disobedient as virtually all statements in the US only ‘suggest’ COTH, and do not require it under pain of sin. But since it could APPEAR disobedient and since it would create upset among the priest and other parishioners, most Catholics would choose not to come up and try to ‘force the issue’.

So there remains either reception in a way which one normally does not choose as a preference in one’s personal relationship with Christ, or to sacrifice reception, making a spiritual communion, and offering up instead.

Since a lot of people get their knickers in a twist over the idea that preferring one option to another means that the preferred option is GOOD and the not preferred BAD, a lot of people may choose to receive in the hand in order to present the appearance that this reception is ‘just as good’ as COTT. That’s not necessarily a bad or wrong decision, either, depending on how strong one’s preference is.

As a matter of fact, when I received the Eucharist on Sunday, where my bishop had requested CITH and I normally receive on the tongue, I DID actually receive in the hand on that date, because I had been determining how I would handle this scenario, and I decided that while in the next few Sundays before Easter I would in fact refrain from receiving and ‘offer it up’, I wished to have the nourishment of the Eucharist to ‘start me off’ on this.

I think many people will do this. If they particularly need the comfort of the Eucharist on a Sunday they will receive even if it is not the way which they prefer based not on “them” but on their discernment of what God wishes FOR them to do in ‘normal circumstances’, and on others, they will offer sacrifice again based on their discernment of what God wishes for them to do in these strange and different circumstances.

I do think that people do forget that the reason a person chooses something like reception of the Eucharist is based on what they believe God wants THEM to do, and not on what they might want to do.

Most of us want to be looked upon as good, nice, etc. So it takes some humility to stand up and do something we feel God calls us to do , whether it’s receiving on the tongue, being a woman wearing a hat, or something that isn’t what the majority do, because so often we’ll get criticized like hades because of it!
 
I do think that people do forget that the reason a person chooses something like reception of the Eucharist is based on what they believe God wants THEM to do, and not on what they might want to do.
I think the disconnect is with this: that what God wants us to do can somehow be different than what the Church permits. It cannot be.
 
AUTHORITY IN THE CHURCH II (1981)
The Section on Jurisdiction begins at #16.
“17. Each bishop is entrusted with the pastoral authority needed for the exercise of his episcope . This authority is both required and limited by the bishop’s task of teaching the faith through the proclamation and explanation of the word of God, of providing for the administration of the sacraments in his diocese and of maintaining his church in holiness and truth (cf. Authority I , para. 5). Hence decisions taken by the bishop in performing his task have an authority which the faithful in his diocese have a duty to accept. This authority of the bishop, usually called jurisdiction, involves the responsibility for making and implementing the decisions that are required by his office for the sake of the koinonia . It is not the arbitrary power of one man over the freedom of others, but a necessity if the bishop is to serve his flock as its shepherd (cf. Authority I Elucidation , para. 5). So too, within the universal koinonia and the collegiality of the bishops, the universal primate exercises the jurisdiction necessary for the fulfilment of his functions, the chief of which is to serve the faith and unity of the whole Church.”

AUTHORITY IN THE CHURCH I (1976)
Under II Authority in the Church
"5. The Holy Spirit also gives to some individuals and communities special gifts for the benefit of the Church, which entitle them to speak and be heeded (e.g. Eph 4:11,12; 1 Cor 12:4-11). Among these gifts of the Spirit for the edification of the Church is the episcope of the ordained ministry. There are some whom the Holy Spirit commissions through ordination for service to the whole community. They exercise their authority in fulfilling ministerial functions related to ‘the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, the breaking of bread and the prayers’ (Acts 2:42). This pastoral authority belongs primarily to the bishop, who is responsible for preserving and promoting the integrity of the koinonia in order to further the Church’s response to the Lordship of Christ and its commitment to mission. Since the bishop has general oversight of the community, he can require the compliance necessary to maintain faith and charity in its daily life. … "
 
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I’m sorry, I don’t see how that fits with my post? Nothing that I stated had a person doing what they felt God asked of them that was different from what the Church permits. . .so. . .
 
Slightly off topic but… in my time as an EMHC I do not remember giving communion on the tongue and touching a persons mouth. I might have but I don’t remember doing so; but every time I gave communion in the hand, I touched their hand.

Patrick
AMDG
My experience as an EMHC is that it’s far easier for me to avoid contact when I put the host in the hand versus the tongue. Honestly, I don’t see how an EMHC can make contact with their fingers with the communicants hand unless they’re careless or deliberately trying to do so. It’s so easy to avoid contact I simply don’t understand how you made contact every time you gave communion in the hand. You must not having been doing it the right way.

In regards to placing the host in the tongue that’s not too difficult if the communicant is shorter than me (or if they’re kneeling) and I can look down to their tongue and place the host carefully without touching their tongue. It’s much harder if they remain standing and are taller than me, especially if they start moving away before I lifted my hand away from their mouth.
 
I do think that people do forget that the reason a person chooses something like reception of the Eucharist is based on what they believe God wants THEM to do, and not on what they might want to do.
You wrote:
I do think that people do forget that the reason a person chooses something like reception of the Eucharist is based on what they believe God wants THEM to do, and not on what they might want to do.
The Church permits communion in the hand, which means God permits communion in the hand. It seems clear, then, that what God wants THEM to do, as you put it, is to eliminate scruples and receive Christ in any approved manner.
 
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No, with respect, nothing of the kind.

If I believe that God wishes me to receive in one way in preference to another good way, I may receive that other way (I believe you’ll notice I said in fact I did so at the Mass) OR that I may choose not to receive.

There is absolutely no Church teaching that I must receive the Eucharist at every Mass, even if I am in a state of grace.

Why is there such a push to shame or coerce people into going against their conscience when the person can absolutely be obedient to God by simply refraining from receiving the Eucharist at a given Mass?

Isn’t it equally possible that God is saying, "You feel called to receive me in one way, but temporarily at this time and place it is being ‘suggested’ that you receive the other way. Are you willing to let yourself be told you are scrupulous, disobedient, not listening to Me, even when you are not insisting indeed on receiving Me on the tongue but instead are offering the sacrifice of spiritual communion instead, or are you wishing for the praise and approbation of those telling you, "Stop doing it in a way which is perfectly valid but not the way most of us do it today. Don’t think that God is asking this of you. Listen to the world instead. We can even ‘quote Scripture to our purpose’. . .

I don’t think anybody here is trying to be anything but ‘kind’, but it is coming across as, “If you don’t do things OUR WAY, you’re defying God and wrong.”
 
You know, I wonder if this is coming from the fact that for ages now, everyone receives (almost literally, except those who are not in a state of grace and withstand the pressure to receive and instead remain in their pews as an example to others, or those who need a low gluten host but one is not available, or one who has just swallowed their chewing gum etc etc. and remain in their pews). communion pew by pew, especially where it is controlled by ushers etc, it’s almost unthinkable that anyone would not receive Communion when in a state of grace.
 
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No, with respect, nothing of the kind.

If I believe that God wishes me to receive in one way in preference to another good way, I may receive that other way (I believe you’ll notice I said in fact I did so at the Mass) OR that I may choose not to receive.

There is absolutely no Church teaching that I must receive the Eucharist at every Mass, even if I am in a state of grace.

Why is there such a push to shame or coerce people into going against their conscience when the person can absolutely be obedient to God by simply refraining from receiving the Eucharist at a given Mass?

Isn’t it equally possible that God is saying, "You feel called to receive me in one way, but temporarily at this time and place it is being ‘suggested’ that you receive the other way. Are you willing to let yourself be told you are scrupulous, disobedient, not listening to Me, even when you are not insisting indeed on receiving Me on the tongue but instead are offering the sacrifice of spiritual communion instead, or are you wishing for the praise and approbation of those telling you, "Stop doing it in a way which is perfectly valid but not the way most of us do it today. Don’t think that God is asking this of you. Listen to the world instead. We can even ‘quote Scripture to our purpose’. . .

I don’t think anybody here is trying to be anything but ‘kind’, but it is coming across as, “If you don’t do things OUR WAY, you’re defying God and wrong.”
I don’t believe people mean to shame you. I, at least, do not. Receiving the Blessed Sacrament is a gift – such a tremendous gift that it’s extremely difficult to understand why one would not want to receive as often as possible when in a state of grace.

Your earlier statement was correct: “people do forget that the reason a person chooses something like reception of the Eucharist is based on what they believe God wants THEM to do, and not on what they might want to do.” The thing is, God does want us to receive. And it seems to be people who are only COTT who are choosing to do what they want to do instead of what God desires.

Of course, this is my reading of the situation. That doesn’t mean it’s infallible.
 
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