M
midori
Guest
I’m in the Diocese of Fort Worth. I’ve been here long enough to be on my third bishop, but have lived in other Texas diocese (Dallas, Austin, Galveston-Houston) and in diocese in other states as well.
I’m in the habit of going to lunchtime Mass in a certain church when I do errands in that city. Previously, when the priests were unavailable during the week (ie, all the priests in the diocese are called on a retreat at the same time), we would do a communion service. But the last few times that situation occurred, I noticed they opted to do a Liturgy of the Hours prayer service, and that was it.
Today, our priest told us that our Bishop wanted to reemphasize that communion services weren’t allowed. Except for extreme circumstances (ie, if you’re very sick and have communion brought to you at home, or if the priest can’t make Saturday Vigil), communion only takes place within the context of a Mass. Aha! That made the other parish’s change make sense.
I had never encountered that before. Are communion services that out-of-the-ordinary? Are they that controversial? Obviously, the Mass is far better than a communion service, and is preferable whenever possible for the 99% of the time it’s available. But it seemed like an odd thing to just do away with wholesale, especially when the times I’ve encountered them, it’s because every priest in the diocese has been called on retreat, or another parish has borrowed our priest for a penance service, rather than a priest being unwilling to serve the usually-scheduled Mass.
I’m in the habit of going to lunchtime Mass in a certain church when I do errands in that city. Previously, when the priests were unavailable during the week (ie, all the priests in the diocese are called on a retreat at the same time), we would do a communion service. But the last few times that situation occurred, I noticed they opted to do a Liturgy of the Hours prayer service, and that was it.
Today, our priest told us that our Bishop wanted to reemphasize that communion services weren’t allowed. Except for extreme circumstances (ie, if you’re very sick and have communion brought to you at home, or if the priest can’t make Saturday Vigil), communion only takes place within the context of a Mass. Aha! That made the other parish’s change make sense.
I had never encountered that before. Are communion services that out-of-the-ordinary? Are they that controversial? Obviously, the Mass is far better than a communion service, and is preferable whenever possible for the 99% of the time it’s available. But it seemed like an odd thing to just do away with wholesale, especially when the times I’ve encountered them, it’s because every priest in the diocese has been called on retreat, or another parish has borrowed our priest for a penance service, rather than a priest being unwilling to serve the usually-scheduled Mass.