F
flarz
Guest
I recently moved and now attend a church with no kneelers. Everyone stands during the Eucharistic Prayer and Consecration, which feels wrong to me. Would sitting be a more reverant posture?
The back of our parish is seats in the hall. They open up accordian walls and poof, there’s 300 more seats, but no kneelers.Personally, if I attended that parish, I would kneel on the floor for the Consecration as well as after receiving Communion.
~~ the phoenix
For years my parish stood during the consecration. About 2 years ago there was a letter from the Archbishop to our pastor stating that we were to kneel to be in accord with recent Vatican statements. They installed many new kneelers and now it has become a much more reverent event. Standing always seemed a little disrespectful to me…so I would likely find myself kneeling anyway.I recently moved and now attend a church with no kneelers. Everyone stands during the Eucharistic Prayer and Consecration, which feels wrong to me. Would sitting be a more reverant posture?
Standing is actually the traditional way the Eastern rite Catholics pray and we stand during the Rite of the Eucharist in the Chaldean rite. Don’t worry about feelings, they come and go. Both are reverent.I recently moved and now attend a church with no kneelers. Everyone stands during the Eucharistic Prayer and Consecration, which feels wrong to me. Would sitting be a more reverant posture?
Wow!!It is also not at all uncommon in those countries for people to crawl from the confessionals to a space in front of the tabernacle to say their penance after confession, or for some personal devotion to crawl up the steps into the church and all the way to the Altar, prostrating themselves several times along the way. Don’t see much of that in the U.S. do you?
Come to think of it, they actually do that in New Orleans also at the St. Roch Chapel where they have had numerous cures over the years. Oh well, New Orleans always was a different sort of place than the rest of the country at large…
In two churches here in town that had/have temporary worship spaces, the people stood/stand during the E.P. However, there is one church here that does have a permanent building in which the congregants sit in individual seats and the people sit during the E.P. even when the floor is plushly carpeted and there are small cushions that can be removed from the bottom of the seat in front of each seat. I believe that our bishop insisted that they install kneelers to bring them into postural compliance.GIRM 2002, Chapter 2, #42
In the Dioceses of the United States of America, they should kneel beginning after the singing or recitation of the Sanctus until after the Amen of the Eucharistic Prayer, except when prevented on occasion by reasons of health, lack of space, the large number of people present, or some other good reason. Those who do not kneel ought to make a profound bow when the priest genuflects after the consecration. The faithful kneel after the Agnus Dei unless the diocesan Bishop determines otherwise.
With a view to a uniformity in gestures and postures during one and the same celebration, the faithful should follow the directions which the deacon, lay minister, or priest gives according to whatever is indicated in the Missal.
This is exactly what I have done, when finding myself in a church that has no kneelers.Personally, if I attended that parish, I would kneel on the floor for the Consecration as well as after receiving Communion.
~~ the phoenix
I also do a profound bow before receiving communion, but me and my family are the only ones who do so. Everyone else does a barely perceptible nod, or nothing. I thought a bow was required, but I think someone said a nod is all that’s required. I also feel wrong taking communion in the hand, but I think that’s just a personal hang-up I have.I usually don’t genuflect, as I was told by Fr B that a deep bow was properly reverent
I think that the US Bishops actually said that a nod of the head was sufficient. Pretty sad situation.I also do a profound bow before receiving communion, but me and my family are the only ones who do so. Everyone else does a barely perceptible nod, or nothing. I thought a bow was required, but I think someone said a nod is all that’s required. I also feel wrong taking communion in the hand, but I think that’s just a personal hang-up I have.
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