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The chalice is never distributed in the parishes I’m familiar with in our archdiocese. Certainly never at the cathedral. We still use the altar rail… and yes this is the Ordinary Form.
Are you in the USA perchance?The chalice is never distributed in the parishes I’m familiar with in our archdiocese. Certainly never at the cathedral. We still use the altar rail… and yes this is the Ordinary Form.
That’s sorta what got me thinking about this subject. My archdiocese uses 26-28 chalices to distribute the Precious Blood at its cathedral. Worse, it pours the Precious Blood from flagons into the chalices – a hard liturgical abuse. The whole process isn’t very reverent. The more I thought about it, the more negatives of offering the Precious Blood in many situations came to mind. It was interesting to learn here that many parishes don’t offer the chalice (for good reason it would seem) and even if they do, many do not avail themselves to it.You are correct, there are advantages and disadvantages to a way a parish or diocese distributes the Eucharist. It appears there are differences that may be geographical. In my diocese it is common to receive both body & blood.
In the basilicas and churches I visited in Italy and France, the blood was not offered to the laity.
If offered I will generally receive both, but if offered one or the other I will know I have received the body, blood, soul & divinity of our Lord.
Do you know how incredibly disrespectful your statement is?
- Have the priest man up and do the dishes.
That’s actually very cool to hear! It used to be sickening to watch a dozen people descend on the sanctuary before the recession was even out the door. The battle cry was “we gotta do the dishes!” The process was done with such little care – particularly the purification. The sacred vessels would get beaten against the sink because people were in such a hurry to get out the door. The din in the sacristy was alarming.I know, or certainly hope, you did not mean to be disrespectful, but we are talking about blessed sacred vessels, not “dishes”. If my pastor heard anyone use that flippant phrase he would toss them so far out of the Sacristy it would take them months to find their way back. If you were an EMHC and said that, it would be the last time you distributed too. It is rude not just to priests but is beyond the pale to treat purifying sacred vessels as akin to cleaning up after dinner.
The issue is with this priest. I used a term that could be considered irreverent to prove a point. Good priests do NOT just shove off their duties to EMHC’s, period. Nearly all of the OP’s declarations in his posts point to an incompetent priest who does not wish to pastor his people.Xanthippe_Voorhees:![]()
Do you know how incredibly disrespectful your statement is?
- Have the priest man up and do the dishes.
I know, or certainly hope, you did not mean to be disrespectful, but we are talking about blessed sacred vessels, not “dishes”. If my pastor heard anyone use that flippant phrase he would toss them so far out of the Sacristy it would take them months to find their way back. If you were an EMHC and said that, it would be the last time you distributed too. It is rude not just to priests but is beyond the pale to treat purifying sacred vessels as akin to cleaning up after dinner.