E
Elzee
Guest
Can someone explain to me what needs to be done after Communion with the remaining consecrated hosts and wine? This is what happnens in our parish,and someone told me it is incorrect.
There are usually 3 glass ‘chalices’ used during communion, including the one the Priest uses at the altar (it is no different than the rest). After Communion, each EM drinks the remaining consecrated wine in his/her chalice in the sanctuary, with their backs to the congregation (Our priest is a recovering alcoholic - don’t know if this matters). They do not wipe out the chalices. They are taken to the sacristy. Don’t know what happens there. The hosts are gathered into one ciborium (is that the right word - gold, flat, 'bow’l with a lid), and a EM walks it over the tabernacle, places it in the tabernacle, genuflects and locks it while our priest sits in his chair in the sanctuary. A friend of mine said several things are wrong here: the use of glass goblets as opposed to unbreakable material, the goblets not being wiped out (but maybe they do this in the sacristy?) and the congregation using the same goblet as the priest (I can’t bring myself to call them chalices since they look like a big wine glasses you could buy in a department store)? Thank you!
There are usually 3 glass ‘chalices’ used during communion, including the one the Priest uses at the altar (it is no different than the rest). After Communion, each EM drinks the remaining consecrated wine in his/her chalice in the sanctuary, with their backs to the congregation (Our priest is a recovering alcoholic - don’t know if this matters). They do not wipe out the chalices. They are taken to the sacristy. Don’t know what happens there. The hosts are gathered into one ciborium (is that the right word - gold, flat, 'bow’l with a lid), and a EM walks it over the tabernacle, places it in the tabernacle, genuflects and locks it while our priest sits in his chair in the sanctuary. A friend of mine said several things are wrong here: the use of glass goblets as opposed to unbreakable material, the goblets not being wiped out (but maybe they do this in the sacristy?) and the congregation using the same goblet as the priest (I can’t bring myself to call them chalices since they look like a big wine glasses you could buy in a department store)? Thank you!