M
Moonflower
Guest
We are obliged to attend Mass each Sunday and every other Holy Day of Obligation. Sometimes, though, we just can’t be there. One’s own sickness or the obligations to care for a sick person 1, having given birth within the past 6 weeks, dangerous weather (and other safety hazards), not being able to find a way there – life happens. There is no guilt in missing Mass if the circumstances are out of one’s control (mortal sin always requires not only grave matter and knowledge, but consent of the will).
The rule of thumb concerning Mass availability is that if one is required to travel more than an hour to reach a Mass, one is not guilty of sin by not attending. Nor is one obliged to attend if the only Masses available are offered by formal schismatics or those who mix heresy into the liturgy. If a liturgy is scandalous, heretical, or simply not Catholic, one is obligated to not attend even if it goes by the label “Catholic.” We must be especially wary of taking our children to liturgies that pose a danger to their eternal souls by the priest’s watering down the Faith, making the Sacrifice seem unimportant, engaging in behaviors that confuse or are Protestantized, etc. (for this reason, many traditional Catholics are “home-aloners” – unable to attend Mass in their area and having to make do with the spiritual Communion this page describes).
…Sometimes, too, we just crave Communion with our Eucharistic Lord but have already received Him sacramentally that day.
In all these instances, we are encouraged to make what is known as a “spiritual Communion,” an act expressing what was described by St. Thomas Aquinas as “an ardent desire to receive Jesus in the Most Holy Sacrament and in lovingly embracing Him.” In a spiritual Communion, we, with contrite, humble hearts, ask our Lord to come to us in the same way He would if we were able to receive the Sacrament. This can be done as often as one likes, informally in one’s own words or through one of the traditional prayers which appear below.
What is the value of this practice? The graces received may be as great as – or greater than – those received by some people in the actual Sacrament. Though, of course, the Sacrament itself is inherently greater, our disposition toward the Sacrament affect whether and how we receive its fruits. For example, imagine a woman who is unable to be with her husband but who desires him as contrasted with a woman who has her husband’s presence but doesn’t care for him. Which husband would be more apt to pour out his love for his wife?
The rule of thumb concerning Mass availability is that if one is required to travel more than an hour to reach a Mass, one is not guilty of sin by not attending. Nor is one obliged to attend if the only Masses available are offered by formal schismatics or those who mix heresy into the liturgy. If a liturgy is scandalous, heretical, or simply not Catholic, one is obligated to not attend even if it goes by the label “Catholic.” We must be especially wary of taking our children to liturgies that pose a danger to their eternal souls by the priest’s watering down the Faith, making the Sacrifice seem unimportant, engaging in behaviors that confuse or are Protestantized, etc. (for this reason, many traditional Catholics are “home-aloners” – unable to attend Mass in their area and having to make do with the spiritual Communion this page describes).
…Sometimes, too, we just crave Communion with our Eucharistic Lord but have already received Him sacramentally that day.
In all these instances, we are encouraged to make what is known as a “spiritual Communion,” an act expressing what was described by St. Thomas Aquinas as “an ardent desire to receive Jesus in the Most Holy Sacrament and in lovingly embracing Him.” In a spiritual Communion, we, with contrite, humble hearts, ask our Lord to come to us in the same way He would if we were able to receive the Sacrament. This can be done as often as one likes, informally in one’s own words or through one of the traditional prayers which appear below.
What is the value of this practice? The graces received may be as great as – or greater than – those received by some people in the actual Sacrament. Though, of course, the Sacrament itself is inherently greater, our disposition toward the Sacrament affect whether and how we receive its fruits. For example, imagine a woman who is unable to be with her husband but who desires him as contrasted with a woman who has her husband’s presence but doesn’t care for him. Which husband would be more apt to pour out his love for his wife?