Kissing a Bishop's ring

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I just want to know if anyone out there has kissed a bishop’s ring. I have observed this practice twice but I just need to know that I am not the only one observing this custom. If you are from the Detroit archdiocese please post a response in here.
 
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CathMass:
I just want to know if anyone out there has kissed a bishop’s ring. I have observed this practice twice but I just need to know that I am not the only one observing this custom. If you are from the Detroit archdiocese please post a response in here.
I do…but then my Bishop reverences my hand too…last time, he knelt before me and did it…after Christmas mass… :eek:
 
Nope, but I’ve exchanged cheek-to-cheek kisses with a bishop!
 
Yes, I’ve kissed all my bishop’s rings or their hands.
 
Dear CathMass,

When I was on WYD, our very orthodox priest, Fr Paul, explained the reason behind kissing the ring of the Bishop and that we should still continue that practise. The next morning all of us youth woke up and at breakfast came up to the Bishops with us, kissed their rings and said, “Goodmorning your Grace.” (We also had great bishops with us. As well as our great Cardinal Pell who had the whole seminary staff quit because he dared to institute Marian and Eucharistic devotion as well as the Divine Office!!!)

God Bless
 
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CathMass:
I just want to know if anyone out there has kissed a bishop’s ring. I have observed this practice twice but I just need to know that I am not the only one observing this custom. If you are from the Detroit archdiocese please post a response in here.
Several years back, our former parish had the Bishop Gumbleton come to give a talk.

I was all set to kiss his ring as a sign of my respect for the Episcopal Office, but he wasn’t wearing one :mad:
 
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CathMass:
I just want to know if anyone out there has kissed a bishop’s ring. I have observed this practice twice but I just need to know that I am not the only one observing this custom. If you are from the Detroit archdiocese please post a response in here.
In my Latin Rite parish, I’m pretty sure the bishop would freak if someone tried to kiss his ring.

On the other hand, when the bishop of my Byzantine/Ruthenian Catholic parish visited, the entire parish stood in a line waiting to be introduced to him by our pastor where each of us then kissed his ring.
 
When you kiss a Bishop’s ring, you should genuflect on the LEFT knee, because the right knee is reserved for Christ.

If you are going to ask for a blessing, then you should then go down onto both knees.

I assume that if you met the Pope, you would genuflect on the right knee, because the Pope is the Vicar of Christ.

Also, if you meet a Bishop, ask if his pectoral cross has a Relic of the True Cross in it. Ask to kiss the pectoral cross.
 
GoLatin said:
When you kiss a Bishop’s ring, you should genuflect on the LEFT knee, because the right knee is reserved for Christ.

If you are going to ask for a blessing, then you should then go down onto both knees.

I assume that if you met the Pope, you would genuflect on the right knee
, because the Pope is the Vicar of Christ.

Also, if you meet a Bishop, ask if his pectoral cross has a Relic of the True Cross in it. Ask to kiss the pectoral cross.

WRONG, WRONG, WRONG!

No one genuflects on their left kneed. If it was called for in the past, it’s not called for today.

When a deacon or priest goes down on both knees before a bishop before proclaiming the Gospel, it’s not because he is acknowleding the bishop.

Catholics only genuflect (on one or both knees depending on the situation) to God – not even the Vicar of Christ receives this.
 
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AltarMan:
WRONG, WRONG, WRONG!

No one genuflects on their left kneed. If it was called for in the past, it’s not called for today.

When a deacon or priest goes down on both knees before a bishop before proclaiming the Gospel, it’s not because he is acknowleding the bishop.

Catholics only genuflect (on one or both knees depending on the situation) to God – not even the Vicar of Christ receives this.
Agreed.

From the Catholic Encyclopedia:

The liturgical rules for genuflecting are now very definite.

All genuflect (bending both knees) when adoring the Blessed Sacrament unveiled, as at Expositions.
All genuflect (bending the right knee only) when doing reverence to the Blessed Sacrament, enclosed in the Tabernacle, or lying upon the corporal during the Mass. Mass-servers are not to genuflect, save when the Blessed Sacrament is at the altar where Mass is being said (cf. Wapelhorst, infra). The same honour is paid to a relic of the True Cross when exposed for public veneration.
The clergy in liturgical functions genuflect on one knee to the cross over the high altar, and likewise in passing before the bishop of the diocese when he presides at a ceremony. From these genuflexions, however, an officiating priest, as also all prelates, canons, etc., are dispensed, bowing of the head and shoulders being substituted for the genuflexion.
On Good Friday, after the ceremony of the Adoration of the Cross, and until Holy Saturday, all, clergy and laity alike, genuflect in passing before the unveiled cross upon the high altar.
 
I thought is was because of the relic in the ring?

Years ago after a pro-life Mass our bishop entered the vestibule to greet us…I kissed his ring…He said, “Ah…I see you still believe in Indulgences”…? This was 35 years ago…
 
I’d like to get a better handle on the issue of genuflecting while kissing the bishop’s ring, as it’s something I’ve often wondered about…

Mike, since your citation of the Catholic Encyclopedia mentions that altar servers do not genuflect to the tabernacle during Mass, am I right in assuming you’re talking about the (New) New Catholic Encyclopedia?

GoLatin, do you have anything to back up your take on genuflecting, or is it just what you’ve been taught is the traditional way of doing things?
 
Matthew P Baldw:
Dear CathMass,

When I was on WYD, our very orthodox priest, Fr Paul, explained the reason behind kissing the ring of the Bishop and that we should still continue that practise. The next morning all of us youth woke up and at breakfast came up to the Bishops with us, kissed their rings and said, “Goodmorning your Grace.” (We also had great bishops with us. As well as our great Cardinal Pell who had the whole seminary staff quit because he dared to institute Marian and Eucharistic devotion as well as the Divine Office!!!)

God Bless
So what is the explanation?
 
No, I shook his hand. That’s gonna cost me some purgatory time, I’m sure. But it is what it is. :nope:
 
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Annunciata:
I thought is was because of the relic in the ring?

Years ago after a pro-life Mass our bishop entered the vestibule to greet us…I kissed his ring…He said, “Ah…I see you still believe in Indulgences”…? This was 35 years ago…
BTW (meant to say 32 years ago).

I found this…
Bishops wear rings as a symbol of their covenant love and loyalty between them and the Church and of his marriage to his see (diocese). Kissing the ring of a bishop is a sign of one’s belief that the bishop is a successor of the Apostles and united with the Pope. It is a gesture of acceptance of the Apostolic Authority of the bishop and of willingness to obey the bishop who takes the place of Christ in his Diocese. (“New Catholic Encyclopedia,” Volume XII, “Rings”, McGraw-Hill).
assumptioncatholicchurch.org/Fr.Fred’s_Q&_A_Box.htm
 
When my church parish consecrated our new church in 1967, I was chief altar boy. I went down on bended knee and kissed the ring of Apb. Hannan. Many years later as a choir member at our cathedral, I attempted to kiss the ring of Bp. Ott but he told me that he was the servant of the servants of God. Bp. Ott was a very humble man and has been an inspiration to me for years.
 
I kissed the Bishop’s ring when I made my Confirmation at age 10, but I didn’t want to. I remember my Dad giving me a long lecture about that. All I could think of was all the kids in front of me kissing the ring and leaving their germs behind.
 
I am going to meet a Cardinal soon, what is the proper etiquette for him?
 
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