Rome has made it 100% clear that every Latin Catholic anywhere in the world - in any parish, any diocese and at any mass - always has the right to receive kneeling. The appropriate clarifications from Rome have been posted elsewhere on this thread. At my cathedral in my archdiocese both standing and kneeling are considered norms and as I outlined in my previous post both are accommodated at all masses. When I attend mass in other dioceses / parishes where kneeling is not the norm, I have no issue standing… but it is absolutely, without a doubt wrong for a priest to REFUSE holy communion to someone for adopting a posture that is universally allowed.
The desire to kneel is scoffed at as Pelaganianism… what about physically grabbing the faithful and imposing standing with tyrannical rigidness… how is that OK? Forcing standing, one of two postures allowed by the Church, is the very definition of “over emphasis of formalism”.
No one in this thread condemned the practice of receiving communion while standing. There is also no indication that the individual in the OP’s account condemned this practice. The issue here is an individual was REFUSED Holy Communion for electing a posture that Rome has deemed universally acceptable. Its not only traditionalists who get obsessed over external forms…liturgical “liberals” can be just as obsessed over their pet issues as traditionalists are.
Thank you.
Indeed, I have not condemned the practice of receiving communion while standing. I receive this way myself.
But my message did concern how laity are treated if they choose to kneel.
We are an international parish with people from all over the world coming to our English masses here in Tokyo.
The first incident concerned a Filipino woman who was the very last person to come to receive communion, probably to avoid causing any disruption to the line of people that had been ahead of her.
She knelt down whereby the priest refused her communion. I was an extraordinary minister standing close by and had just finishing distributing communion to the line of
people I was serving.
Thus Filipino woman was very respectful.
When the priest trued to pull her up by grabbing her arm, she remained kneeling and
remained completely calm. The priest then rushed away from her claiming that she was in violation of guidelines from the Catholic Bishops Conference of Japan (which actually is not true).
It was really heart-rending to see her remain kneeling. She continued to kneel for the next 3 minutes or so in front of the entire congregation with a forlorn look and her face.
Her behaviour was respectful and there were no theatrics.
This placed me and other extraordinary ministers in a really tough position.
We had to also refuel her because of the priest to avoid scandal.
Later I related the story to another elder priest of our parish church and he said the priest who refused was wrong.
I thought I would never have to deal with another incident such as this again till last Saturday week where my own friend was refused, though this time he stood when another priest, the parish priest asked him to.
My friend even apologised to the parish priest but he also told the PP that he was in error.
What was unpleasant also for me was that the PP spoke disparagingly to me about ‘my friends’ as I was leaving the church. It is really disheartening to witness such
behaviour.
With people from all over the world attending our masses, it seems a more merciful view to giving communion to people should be adopted as there is a good chance people who
wish to kneel will be present.
Pope Francis asks us all to be merciful in this Year of the Jubilee of Mercy.
God Bless
ps. Thank you everyone for your comments whether for or against.
It has been very helpful to be able to share this issue which has been a source of
great upset for me over the past few weeks.