Kielbasi:
You’re probably right.
But receiving communion has definitely got the thumbs up from the Magesterium as a viable option, and if the priest and the other Catholics in the parish are all doing it, folks ought to be humble enough to conform, regardless of their own personal preferences to show unity with the others.
Well, a lot of things seem to have received the “thumbs up” from the Vatican in the recent years - like having girls dress up like mini-priests (“altar girls”), inviting pagans to pray to their demons (cf. Psalm 95:5) for some secular humanism “peace”, moving child-molesting priests from parish to parish, and giving the red-hat to heretics (e.g. Mahoney). If the Vatican is against these things, then they have a poor way of showing it. Are we to keep silent and “conform” in these areas?
Of course, we should hope and expect some changes with our new Holy Father, but that doesn’t change the fact that the “Communion in the hand, standing” received allowance around the same time the aforementioned assaults on our Faith did. And we have lost our backbone as Catholics if we change our views as often as a new Pope ascends the throne. If we do this we are merely confirming what the world already thinks viz. the Pope isn’t the steward of the Faith and her traditions, but the owner and definer of them.
~
Now onto “Communion in the hand, standing.” Of course, this was the ancient practice in the Church. No knowledgeable person disputes this. It worked well at one time. But, then again, so did the shoes I wore when I was a boy. Do I try to dig those shoes up and start wearing them again, thinking they are going to get me places like they used to? No. I’d be foolish to try such a thing. Sometimes we just “outgrow” certain things and need to move on to different things that are better suited for our new needs. Now apply this to Communion in the hand, standing. Have we as a Church and world outgrown it? Yep. Just like my childish shoes would give me blisters if I managed to get them on again, Communion in the hand, standing, is going to give you irreverence and unbelief if used now.
Does secular modern man (particularly in the West) need
more standing or does he need
less ? In a culture that has launched an all-out assault on the sacred does he need to be putting God in his own mouth or should he have the priest do it? Have Catholics grown more or less reverent since the traditional Communion practice was, de facto, replaced by the new? We all know the answers to these questions, so why are we defending the indefensible? Are we going to plead “unity” when the Church is all but going to hell? Let’s hope not.
I know that there are many devout Catholics who communicate in the hand. I’m not judging them nor saying that Communion in the hand is a sacrilege, because it’s not. But exceptions don’t make the rule. More people have lost faith and reverence as a result of this change than they have gained it. In today’s climate of heresy and people’s desire to find loopholes to push their agenda through, do we need to leave them a wide avenue in “Communion in the hand, standing”? No. Common sense and experience shows us that its more harder, nigh impossible, for people to see the Holy Eucharist as a symbol or real, but only as a sign of “community”, when people are kneeling at the altar rail waiting for an ordained priest of God to place the Corpus Christi in their mouth. Communion in the hand, standing, has been abused to further the aforementioned heretic beliefs, and will continue to be abused, unless it is buried like the “old shoe” it really is.
(I know that good priests can encourage the people to be reverent, but let’s really ask ourself if the priest’s homily has to act as an antidote to a practice that is a weak expression of the sacred, in the first place. Shouldn’t the ritual itself speak much more eloquently than any priest? Let’s face it, priests aren’t always going to care, but Mother Church should!)
Maybe in the perfect world, the two forms could exist side-by-side, but we aren’t in that world. Until we are we need to go back to the traditional practice. And, besides, St. Thomas Aquinas had some heavy warnings about “change for the sake of change” in his Summa Theologica. In Section I-II, question 97, article 2, he said that no positive law should be changed unless a greater good will result from it, because devotion is lost whenever previous discipline is mitigated. In humble respect for this great doctor of the Church, let’s heed his words and quit being so eager to change, or support changes, to the mitigation of previous liturgical traditions.
In Christ,
Adam