P
palmas85
Guest
Sir Knight said:*
Actually, when it comes to matters of faith, as a Catholic, you do have to agree with him.
Definitely not.
- But if using them allows for more individuals to receive the Body of Christ, isn’t that a good thing? As a matter of fact, isn’t that a better course of action than not taking the option and seriously limiting the number & frequency of ill & homebound Catholics who would receive Christ in holy Communion?
Now, let’s do the math and address your assertion that the priests of the parish are “more likely not willing to make the side trips.” Including myself, there are 34 EMHC in our parish who minister to the homebound. I, personally, have 6 people that I bring communion to regularily. I’m one of the new’er EMHC, so my list is mostlikely smaller than EMHCs that have been doing this longer. But let’s assume that all of us have 6 people on our list. That translates into 204 people. For a parish that have 3200+ families covering about 500 square miles, it isn’t unusual to have 200-300 sick and homebound parish members.
- I don’t see why the priest couldn’t take care of this himself. Or, at most, the priest and the deacon.
- 3200+ families translates into a lot of individual members. Taking into account that many people from NY and NJ retire in PA, we may indeed have a higher percentage of elderly than normal. Additionally, we are located in a rural community and our parish covers a rather large geographic area. I live ten miles from the church and I have homebound people that I minister to that live even further. Assuming 10-15 miles in each direction from the church and our parish covers about 500 square miles.
Getting back to the six people on my list. Two of them receive communion once a week – making it 8-10 visits a month for the two of them. Let’s count that as 9 as an average. One person receives communion from me only once a month on first Fridays so it brings the number up to 10. And the other three receive communion from me every other week making it 6-9 visits a month for them. Let’s count that as 8. Those 8 plus the previous 10 add up to 18 visits that I made a month on average.
Averaged out weekly, that comes out to about 4.5 visits per week. Let’s be conservate and say 4 just to keep the math simple. Each visit takes about 30-45 minutes. 5-10 minutes to distribute communion plus 5-10 minutes of small talk for some of them while 10-20 minutes of small talk for others … since they are home bound, we are often the one of the few humans that they interact with and they just want to talk. Factor in round trip travel time, and each visit is about 45-60 minutes. Four visits a week at 45-60 minutes a visit translates into about 3.5 hours a week.
Assuming the other EMHCs in my parish devote the same amount of time, that translates into 119 hours a week. Since we’ve been rounding down the entire time, let’s just round this number up to 120 hours a week to keep the math simplier.
On average, 120 hours a week is spend within my parish distributing communion to the homebound. If there were no EMHCs in my parish devoted to bringing communion to the homebound, our two priests would have to spend 60 hours every week delivering communion leaving them almost no time to do anything else.
Something would have to suffer somewhere. Either the people could not receive as often as they would like or all of them could not receive or other parish functions would have to suffer.
After looking at the raw data, if you do not see the positive benefit of having EMHCs bringing communion to homebound, then I no longer know what to say.
- Link.
Actually, I don’t have to agree with him, and I don’t even have to like what he says. I have to obey him and accept what he says in those circumstances. Thats all, Obey. I learned in the military it is possible to obey and not agree.
The link you provided said exactly what I thought it would. They MAY be used, with the laity as a last choice I might add, in certain rare circumstances. It said nothing about throwing open the doors and inviting the whole congregation in to take on the duty.
That being said, you have illustrated a good example of when they MAY be necessary. I applaud that because it is the very first example I’ve seen that seems valid. That is of course assuming your figures aren’t inflated, :ehh: . As an aside I asked one of the Extraordinary ministers at my parish approximately how many house call they make. Thirty to fifty or so a week. Thats for the whole group. Not each one.
But I do appreciate your example and see the value for that purpose…
Now if you could only give me one for the crushing numbers at the altar