T
thequeen
Guest
Being a type1 diabetic I am exempt from any type of fast before communion read my reply to how do you rate your priest.
1/2 hour before a Sunday Mass might be a good enough time to stop eating and begin the brief Eucharistic fast, though that varies from parish to parish depending on the pace of Mass.I’m a hungry man. I’m also often a forgetful man.
Let’s say I accidentally start eating and Mass starts in a half hour. And let’s say I honestly forgot and wasn’t purposely eating before Mass.
I know taking the Eucharist after recently eating is a Mortal Sin, and I should not receive it.
If I refuse to receive communion because I was recently eating, am I still in Mortal Sin because I skipped communion?
Do I need to confess that I skipped communion? Or did I do the right thing in skipping, and I should just wait till next weekend, since I still attended Mass, and take communion next time?
Off-label yes is perfectly acceptable. It is the intent of the user that matters, not the intent of the manufacturer or marketer.The label states the product’s intended use.
How is fasting before Communion obscure? Maybe we need to return to a longer and more meaningful fast in order to clarify.Yes: Some people’s conscience is bothered by an obscure rule about fasting before communion. It seems obtuse to me, but I’ve got bigger sins to worry about than thinking about this.
Or not. I have a chronic cough that results in some major fits. Entirely non-contaigious. Thank God I haven’t had to stay home from church for the last 20 years because of it.If you are having coughing fits, it is likely better that you stay home so you do not spread your illness to everyone else!
I just read the link. Clearly, the product being sold South of the Border is a different product with the same brand as the cough drops sold in America.The label states the product’s intended use.
In the USA, Halls Cough Drops are used to stop coughing. It’s medicine.
In countries like Belize, these same drops are labeled a hard candy.
Halls Cough Drops: Candy or Medicine in Belize? - San Pedro Scoop
It isn’t the label, but the intended use of the consumer that makes something medicine or not. For a diabetic, food such as an apple, an orange or a cookie can be medicine if it’s used to ward off or correct a hypoglycemic episode. In such a case one isn’t eating for only nutrition, but to prevent a serious medical episode that can have dangerous consequences (fainting and falling and knocking one’s head, etc.)The label states the product’s intended use.
In the USA, Halls Cough Drops are used to stop coughing. It’s medicine.
In countries like Belize, these same drops are labeled a hard candy.