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otjm
Guest
You are assuming that most people have read the document; most people are not even aware it exists.I’m guessing it’s because they’ve been desensitized as to the gravity.
You are assuming that most people have read the document; most people are not even aware it exists.I’m guessing it’s because they’ve been desensitized as to the gravity.
GIRM 279: The sacred vessels are purified by the priest, the deacon, or an instituted acolyte after Communion or after Mass, insofar as possible at the credence table.
- As the Communion procession was ending, the Blood being distributed by EMHC were brought to the “prep” area (where all the instruments/tools used in Communion are stationed before Mass) and the Blood was poured into one chalice and then left there. It remained there until after the Mass was completed, and a group of parishioners, including several of the EMHC, gathered in a prayer circle. They then proceeded to pass around the chalice and they drank until it was completely gone and then the chalice was taken to be cleaned. I was simply stunned and waited to make sure that the Blood was properly disposed of and witnessed this. I know this is an egregious liturgical abuse since Christ is not being properly reposed of. Where in the GIRM does it address this?
GIRM 162:* Extraordinary ministers should not approach the altar before the priest has received Communion, and they are always to receive from the hands of the priest celebrant the vessel containing either species of the Most Holy Eucharist for distribution to the faithful.*
- EMHC were grabbing the chalices and ciboriums from the altar after they had been given Communion.
GIRM 73: * It is praiseworthy for the bread and wine to be presented by the faithful. They are then accepted at an appropriate place by the priest or the deacon and carried to the altar. *
- The gifts were brought up to the altar by the gift bearers who lifted them up (maybe said a quiet prayer, couldn’t tell), and then put them on the altar. After this had been done the priest then came up to the altar and the gifts. He did not receive them from the gift-bearers.
You went once to another parish and saw these things, and now you are ready to write a letter to the bishop?Need some help in finding citation sources and confirmation from those more knowledgable. I went to another parish a couple weeks ago and saw multiple abuses in the liturgy and need to write a letter to the Bishop about it so it can get corrected.
I would great appreciate help in references to the GIRM or other Church document so I can fully cite my letter. (or if I’m wrong and some aren’t abuses, I want to make sure I correct it before sending).
Here are the abuses I saw:
There were other problems I had with the Mass, especially the irreverence and the dress of the readers, altar servers, and EMHC. But I don’t think these are abuses like the above items.
- As the Communion procession was ending, the Blood being distributed by EMHC were brought to the “prep” area (where all the instruments/tools used in Communion are stationed before Mass) and the Blood was poured into one chalice and then left there. It remained there until after the Mass was completed, and a group of parishioners, including several of the EMHC, gathered in a prayer circle. They then proceeded to pass around the chalice and they drank until it was completely gone and then the chalice was taken to be cleaned. I was simply stunned and waited to make sure that the Blood was properly disposed of and witnessed this. I know this is an egregious liturgical abuse since Christ is not being properly reposed of. Where in the GIRM does it address this?
- EMHC were grabbing the chalices and ciboriums from the altar after they had been given Communion.
- The gifts were brought up to the altar by the gift bearers who lifted them up (maybe said a quiet prayer, couldn’t tell), and then put them on the altar. After this had been done the priest then came up to the altar and the gifts. He did not receive them from the gift-bearers.
If anyone can help with giving some reference to the appropriate parts of the GIRM or other documents, I would greatly appreciate it.
A bit off topic, Interesting, I regularly go the poorest part of Tanzanian, right ‘next door’, so to speak. I very rarely see men in shorts at all, at Church or not.In a small mission parish in the poorest part of the Congo where that is the best that anyone has why, yes, that is OK with me. Again, it depends on the circumstances.
Take a breath, please.
I do not know where you would get this idea based on what I have posted. None of the actions you describe match what the situation described in the OP. Suffice it to say, you are completely off-base about my understanding of self communicating.It would appear, by your understanding of the definition of self-communication, that if an EMHC were to hand the cup to a communicant and they drink, they would be self communicating; likewise, at the end of Communion, if the EMHC were to receive the remaining Blood, they would be self communicating; and likewise, anyone who receives the Host in the hand. I think you have the definition wrong.