The correct thing to do is obey. Just do exactly as you are told even if it is wrong. Jesus didn’t want to die but he did the Father’s will. The priest is your spiritual father placed there by God so do his will even if you think it is wrong.
Clean the vessels as reverently as you can. Pray and sing a hynm of thanksgiving as you do. Polish the paten, chalice and cups as if they were the very vessels used by Jesus at the last supper. Kiss the chalice and place the vessels back in the safe as if they were the Pope’s personal property. Give thanks that you were chosen to handle the sacred vessels and given such an important task as if you were King Solomon’s personal cup bearer.
God will be pleased with your humility in the presence of his legitimate authority and pleased with your willingness to bear with the faults of others. You will learn to imitate Christ who said, “Not my will but thy will be done” and God will be pleased with your sacrifice.
-Tim-
This. The purification of vessels is ideally done in silence, though.
As far as the purification goes, it is also possible to commiserate with the priest and yet to say, “Still, it is not up to us. The US bishops asked the Vatican to extend the permission for it, but after considering the request the Vatican chose not to permit it. I know what you mean about the rules, but when permission was expressly asked for and expressly denied, we ought to be obedient, even when we do not agree. It is good for us, don’t you think? When obedience is not unjust and will do no harm, I think we ought to be obedient. I’m sure your life in this parish would be far easier if those who did not understand your reasoning still trusted you enough to act according to your directions, rather than writing them off as silly rules.” I would be very surprised if that last bit of reasoning did not hit home with him at all.
CONGREGATIO CULTO DIVINO ET DISCIPLINA SACRAMENTORUM
Prot. n. 468/05/L Rome, 12 October 2006
Your Excellency,
I refer to your letters of 9 March 2005 and 7 March 2006, in which, in the name of the Conference of Bishops of which you are President, you requested a renewal of the indult for extraordinary ministers of Holy Communion to purify the sacred vessels after Mass, where there are not enough priests or deacons to purify a large number of chalices that might be used at Mass.
I have put the whole matter before the Holy Father in an audience which he granted me on 9 June 2006, and received instructions to reply as follows:
- There is no doubt that “the sign of Communion is more complete when given under both kinds, since in that form the sign of the Eucharistic meal appears more clearly” (General Instruction of the Roman Missal, no. 281; Catechism of the Catholic Church, no. 390).
- Sometimes, however, the high number of communicants may render it inadvisable for everyone to drink from the chalice (cf. Redemptionis Sacramentum, no. 102). Intinction with reception on the tongue always and everywhere remains a legitimate option, by virtue of the general liturgical law of the Roman Rite.
- Catechesis of the people is important regarding the teaching of the Council of Trent that Christ is fully present under each of the species. Communion under the species of the bread alone, as a consequence, makes it possible to receive all the fruit of Eucharistic grace (cf. Denzinger-Schönmetzer, no. 1729; General Instruction of the Roman Missal, nos. 11, 282). “For pastoral reasons”, therefore, “this manner of receiving Communion has been legitimately established as the most common form in the Latin rite” (Catechism of the Catholic Church, no. 1390).
- Paragraph 279 of the General Instruction of the Roman Missal directs that the sacred vessels are to be purified by the priest, the deacon or an instituted acolyte. The status of this text as legislation has recently been clarified by the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts. It does not seem feasible, therefore, for the Congregation to grant the requested indult from this directive in the general law of the Latin Church.
- This letter is therefore a request to the members of the Bishops’ Conference of the United Status of America to prepare the necessary explanations and catechetical materials for your clergy and people so that henceforth the General Instruction of the Roman Missal, no. 279, as found in the editio typicatia of the Roman Missal, will be observed throughout its territories.
With the expression of my esteem and fraternal greetings, I remain, Your Excellency,
Devotedly yours in Christ,
- Francis Cardinal Arinze
Prefect
Monsignor Mario Marini
Under-Secretary