At least in my home Parish, they are a vital means by which regularly scheduled service’s can continue to run; as the Parish Priest or his assistant (leaving soon) visit between 2 and 4 times a month. The distance involved makes it prohibitive and costly to the Diocese for very frequent trips.
We also have an Acolyte that visits during the ‘favourable’ times of year, from his home Parish, who will generally take on this role, and assist our Priest during the Mass.
When the Acolyte is not present, we have two women who can serve, which is not favourable in the eyes of some, I suppose, but this has happened for over 20 years now - under guidance of at least 5 Parish priests, including some from different orders. I doubt there is a doctrinal issue on this, based upon this observation.
However, I recently attended a youth event back in the city, and the parish we attended for Sunday Mass certainly “overuses” the EMHC.
Unlike a conventional Church where there are two lines of pews, this Church had the usual two, PLUS an additional pew to each side. Even though most people attending would be “regulars,” the lines to those distributing Communion were… Confused.
There were 4 people distributing Hosts, as best I could see. Plus the two serving Priests that morning, and another 2 distributing the Blood of Christ. To save disrupting the “order,” of those there, I did not receive the Blood of Christ that Sunday, and promptly returned to my seat.
Instead of this confusing layout, if the two Priests simply distributed Hosts (I know it varies depending on the size of the congregation), you would have two uniform lines and far more simplicity, at least in my opinion.
I was surprised, given the congregation was about 100, maybe somewhere near 130 people. They also have 3 Sunday Masses, so there must be a relative abundance of EMHC’s in that Parish…
