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OraLabora
Guest
I wonder if the law permitting or rather requiring that communion on the tongue be allowed to all who request it wasn’t intended primarily for the benefit of people from a parish or location where such is the normative practice, who happen to visit a parish or location where communion in the hand is the norm, so that they not be made to feel uncomfortable.The context of my post was offering a reason why the OP’s priest might have banned communion on the tongue. He had not given us any information about that and was asking if he should leave the parish over it. I said in another post about my anecdote that I didn’t know if the priest was right or wrong in what he did, I was just explaining why he did it. The OP did say that one of the issues in his parish was with some traditionalists and it’s just a fact that some of them are a problem. Not all of course.
How does the Church deal with the problem of authors of discord within a parish? It’s a hard call for a Parish priest in the heat of a situation. We all know that there are some groups of traditionalists that want to outlaw communion in the hand altogether as a sacrilege along with lots of other VII reforms (as with the group that came to my parents parish). How are priests to address those hostile sorts? Jesus spoke of strict ‘letter of the law’ types as bringing death, not life.
I suspect the law did not foresee people using COTT as a way to push an agenda in a parish. My guess is that if the priest were faced with the odd person in the communion line requesting COTT, he would have no issues with it. But if a large group came up for communion en bloc requiring COTT, he could perhaps have an problem with people using the Eucharist to promote their agenda, and rightly so. Doing so would be far more irreverent towards Our Lord than receiving in the hand. The Eucharist is a supreme gift to us and should never be used to push an agenda. Using it to push an agenda is in fact scandalous.
We have no idea if this is what has been going on here, whether the priest’s method of dealing with it is appropriate, or whether or not he has his bishop’s approval. It may be that the observance of the letter of the law is in fact allowing a scandal to happen, and the spirit of the law may require that to preserve the Eucharist from the irreverence and scandal of a few promoting an agenda, a temporary restriction is necessary.
Basically, I’m giving the priest the benefit of the doubt here. He may of course be totally off track but we simply don’t know his motives other than he appears to have some issues with traditionalists in the parish. Whether it is just a personal animosity or people causing scandal to promote an agenda, we have too little information and only one side of the story.