T
twosweetgirls
Guest
I read that on another thread, and am confused about it. Can you explain?
Because the purpose of the Mass is not the reception of Holy Communion (although it is strongly encouraged to receive it whenever it is possible) but the worship of God first and foremost. Every Catholic is required to assist at Mass on Sundays and holy days of obligation because Mass is the corporate worship of the whole Church (on Sundays, the Lord’s Day, in commemoration of the Resurrection, and on holy days, in commemoration of particular mysteries of the faith): our presence at the corporate (corpus = body) worship of God by the Church, which is the Mystical Body of Christ, is our duty to God!I read that on another thread, and am confused about it. Can you explain?
The Mass is not first and foremost a tool for Eucharistic piety or adoration. Eucharistic piety is a noble thing of course, and one of the most solemn moments of the Mass finds us adoring the Body and Blood of Christ, but that is not the primary end of the liturgical act.
Neither is the Mass primarily a vehicle for the reception of the Eucharist – though frequent and worthy reception of the Eucharist brings with it many important graces of course. The Mass is not even primarily about our own sanctification.
I suggest reading this brief essay, from which I pulled the above quote.To comprehend the essential nature of the Christian liturgy bears minding the nature of the Jewish Temple liturgies and their sacrificial offerings and how that imperfectly foreshadowed the Christian liturgy and Sacrifice of Christ. The Christian liturgy is first and foremost an act of rendering due worship to God the Father through the perpetuated sacrifice and offering of God the Son. It is this sacrificial nature of the liturgy and the worship of God the Father that particularly drives the liturgical act. It is important that we have this proper understanding of the primary end of the Mass for all else flows from this.
Catholics *are *required to receive communion, yearly during “Eastertide”- the days between Ash Wednesday and Trinity Sunday, inclusive.I read that on another thread, and am confused about it. Can you explain?
I don’t get it. . . ?You can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make him drink.
Matthew
it is mandatory, once a year during the Easter Season, for the faithful. For the priest, it is mandatory that he receive under the forms of both bread and wine at every Mass.I read that on another thread, and am confused about it. Can you explain?
we would have to see that in writing with a sourceProple forget that “excommunication” meant precisely “excluded from communion.”
There is an ancient canon that says that not receiving communion for three successive Sundays excommunicates you.