D
djrakowski
Guest
My wife and I are investigating Catholicism for the first time. We’re currently members of an evangelical church, and have lots of questions.
I’ll start with this one: my 5 year old son has a number of physical impairments. Chief among those is a set of food intolerances that includes gluten. I’ve seen that certain Catholic authority figures have ruled that a eucharistic host that doesn’t contain wheat invalidates the communion for the person receiving it. How does the church address such situations as my son’s, for whom even the most minute amounts of gluten cause severe disgestive upset? Would my son not be permitted to commune in a Catholic church?
I’ve seen discussions that indicate that persons with such disabilities may be permitted to receive the wine only as a valid communion. My son must also not have alcohol. What happens in that case? My understanding leads me to believe that he would never be permitted to commune with the faithful, and then would never be a full member of the Catholic church.
This is an issue that greatly concerns me, and if my son were to be prohibited from receiving communion on the basis of an inborn, genetic inability to process these food products, I could not possibly become a Catholic.
I’m not interested in the individual interpretations of priests and laypeople, only the official teaching of the church.
Thanks in advance for your answers and understanding,
Dan
I’ll start with this one: my 5 year old son has a number of physical impairments. Chief among those is a set of food intolerances that includes gluten. I’ve seen that certain Catholic authority figures have ruled that a eucharistic host that doesn’t contain wheat invalidates the communion for the person receiving it. How does the church address such situations as my son’s, for whom even the most minute amounts of gluten cause severe disgestive upset? Would my son not be permitted to commune in a Catholic church?
I’ve seen discussions that indicate that persons with such disabilities may be permitted to receive the wine only as a valid communion. My son must also not have alcohol. What happens in that case? My understanding leads me to believe that he would never be permitted to commune with the faithful, and then would never be a full member of the Catholic church.
This is an issue that greatly concerns me, and if my son were to be prohibited from receiving communion on the basis of an inborn, genetic inability to process these food products, I could not possibly become a Catholic.
I’m not interested in the individual interpretations of priests and laypeople, only the official teaching of the church.
Thanks in advance for your answers and understanding,
Dan