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Churchman25
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Is it ok to tell a priest not to give someone the host you know has been committing grave sins but has been receiving anyway?
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No one knows another’s conscience. You don’t know if they’ve been to confession or whether there are circumstances that reduce their culpability. For all you know that may not actually be sinning at all - we should certainly never presume sin.what was trying to say is that if I knew someone who was committing grave sins and was receiving unworthily, telling the priest so it stops happening.
Some might find it hard to defend someone telling the priest when a prospective communicant is a manifest public sinner, and the sin is something that is mortal in the objective order (one of the three conditions), but still, I have to wonder how this was seen traditionally, i.e., prior to the reign of John XXIII, or even prior to the 20th century. Does anybody know?I have known quite a few priests.
A kind one likely would tell you it is NOYDB.
not so kind one (and i have known several) might verbally “rip your head off and spit down your throat”, as the saying goes.
No priest has the authority, based on what someone “tattles” (which may be true or not) to refuse Communion to another person.
Priests often, though not always, had a lot more personal knowledge of what was going on in their parishes at that time and kept in touch with their parishioners. In many places, the same families were part of the parish for generations; in places where there were many immigrants, such as parts of USA during certain eras, the immigrants would be coming to the parish for help of all kinds including spiritual.but still, I have to wonder how this was seen traditionally, i.e., prior to the reign of John XXIII, or even prior to the 20th century. Does anybody know?
Very good answer, exactly the kind of information I was looking for.HomeschoolDad:![]()
Priests often, though not always, had a lot more personal knowledge of what was going on in their parishes at that time and kept in touch with their parishioners. In many places, the same families were part of the parish for generations; in places where there were many immigrants, such as parts of USA during certain eras, the immigrants would be coming to the parish for help of all kinds including spiritual.but still, I have to wonder how this was seen traditionally, i.e., prior to the reign of John XXIII, or even prior to the 20th century. Does anybody know?
If a priest became aware through community gossip or through a family member coming to him for help, that someone might possibly be doing sinful things, then the priest would often seek out the alleged sinner and have a talk with them. It might end with the person going to confession. Or it might end with the priest telling the person that he needed to repent and confess before receiving Communion. Or it might end with the priest concluding that there wasn’t any problem and that the person who told him there was, was either mistaken or nosy. In any event it would be based on the priest having a personal one-on-one with the alleged sinner, not on the fact that somebody else spread a story.
I suspect there was also a good bit of social pressure that if you were out getting drunk and carousing lewdly on Saturday night, you knew not to turn up for Mass on Sunday looking all fresh and like you could go right up to Communion. Also, remember that there was usually confession going on before Masses and even during Masses, so somebody in that situation could conceivably go get back in a state of grace immediately, and more or less in front of all his neighbors who would see him popping into the confessional in the worship space. Some parishes still have confession right before Mass and some even during Mass.
Nowadays when people are very transient, may be attending parishes other than their own, and priests are ministering to much larger parishes of folks they mostly don’t know, it’s not really possible for priests to be tracking down people and confronting them, and likely the priest might not even recognize a good many of the people who turn up at his church on a Sunday. It’s not like olden times. If you want this situation to improve, then pray for vocations and maybe one day we will have enough priests again so that one priest won’t be needing to minister to 2000 people.
Uhhh…that’s not exactly how the saying goes.“rip your head off and spit down your throat”, as the saying goes.
Okay, let’s review the OP’s question:I am probably going to get incinerated for this — come rack! come rope! — but if I were the priest, quite honestly, I’d appreciate being told.
The OP was not talking about the owner of a bawdy house or an abortion clinic, and I would submit that neither of them are going to darken the doors of the church, so let’s get back to the topic at hand.Is it ok to tell a priest not to give someone the host you know has been committing grave sins but has been receiving anyway?
True - but I believe the powers that be would not approve of the saying as I learned it.Uhhh…that’s not exactly how the saying goes.
Oh, but I do think that it is entirely possible someone committing sins of this magnitude would try to receive communion, possibly going to a nearby town where they’re not known on sight. There are not a few teachers (and they could be priests, or they could be laity) who will tell people that “you can do whatever you want to, as long as your conscience tells you that it’s okay — conscience is supreme!”. I knew of such a teacher. He was misleading entire classes. I challenged him — “even abortion?”. He said “yes, even abortion”. So how is it so farfetched to think that a Catholic abortion clinic owner would tell himself “this is a good thing to do for women, I am right and Rome is wrong, this teacher told me I am fine with God as long as I’m in good conscience — and I am — but I don’t want to cause a riot in my home parish, so I’ll go over to the church in Nextown where I won’t be recognized”. Ditto for the madam who says “I’m providing a needed public service for men, I am right and Rome is wrong, this teacher told me I am fine with God…” — you get the idea. I happen to be at the church in Nextown and I recognize the abortionist or the madam. Others can do what they want, but I’m going to speak up. (Of course, the priest might be justified in asking me “and how do you know she is a madam?”…) If the priest cauterizes me, that is his problem, not mine. Wouldn’t bother me a bit. I’d just walk away knowing I’ve done the right thing. After all, I, too, am “in good conscience”.The OP was not talking about the owner of a bawdy house or an abortion clinic, and I would submit that neither of them are going to darken the doors of the church, so let’s get back to the topic at hand.
Two words: Joe Biden.No priest is going to refuse Communion to the “sinner” in a Communion line. Ain’t gonna happen. That is not the place where confrontations are made.
If I were the priest, I would. I have to think there are priests in the world who would do likewise.So where is the priest going to do this? Pull the sinner out of the group of people leaving Mass and say “You and I need to have a chat?” Yeah, not likely.
They may be, but I’m not. I am in the sixtieth year of my earthly life. Sixty-first, if you count in utero (and we should).And I suspect the OP is a bit on the young side.
The OP is not talking about any one specific person, category of sinner, or set of circumstances. It’s a general question.Again, the OP is not talking about Biden, and I doubt there is a priest out there who does not know who Joe is.
“Effeminately”? Eh?I understand the desire to protect the Eucharist - Jesus - from blatant disrespect; I also suspect Jesus is effeminately capable of doing so without our “help”.