B
benedictgal
Guest
You don’t need to take that tone.I guess I should tell my priest and whole parish the same thing.
As a communion-recieving Catholic, there is absolutely no change in the mass for you.
Yeah, I get it. I should turn back now before I decide to start aborting babies.
Ed, I respectfully disagree with your assertion that there is no change for those of us who receive Holy Communion.
There is a change in the Mass when a priest or a bishop starts adding rituals and rubrics to the Holy Sacrifice on his own authority. That is called adding a personal idiosyncracy in the Mass thinking that it will improve the Holy Sacrifice. It is wrong to do that, especially since one doesn’t have the authority to do that. The regulation of the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass belongs to the Holy See, not to anyone else.
It affects me and others who hold the same viewpoint because it violates our right to have the Mass celebrated in the manner prescribed by the Church. Redemptionis Sacramentum states that:
12.] On the contrary, it is the right of all of Christ’s faithful that the Liturgy, and in particular the celebration of Holy Mass, should truly be as the Church wishes, according to her stipulations as prescribed in the liturgical books and in the other laws and norms. Likewise, the Catholic people have the right that the Sacrifice of the Holy Mass should be celebrated for them in an integral manner, according to the entire doctrine of the Church’s Magisterium. Finally, it is the Catholic community’s right that the celebration of the Most Holy Eucharist should be carried out for it in such a manner that it truly stands out as a sacrament of unity, to the exclusion of all blemishes and actions that might engender divisions and factions in the Church.32
This right also extends to your friend who is seeking entrance into the Church. He has the right to be properly catechized so as to have an authentic Sensus Fidei (sense of the Faith) that is not clouded by misguided gestures that have no real meaning.[13.] All of the norms and exhortations set forth in this Instruction are connected, albeit in various ways, with the mission of the Church, whose task it is to be vigilant concerning the correct and worthy celebration of so great a mystery.
The blessing in lieu of Holy Communion is not found anywhere in the liturgical documents of the Holy See. Therefore, it has no basis for existing.