Yes, I know, LifeSiteNews. Many people don’t like LifeSiteNews. So be it.
Just read the article.
Thoughts?
A pyx I would guess. You can buy them easily in bulk.Who’s got that many sitting around?
Exactly.The bishop hasn’t weighed in, so I’m not sure anyone else is really in position to at this point, either.
It is somewhat similar, somewhat not, to a recent situation in Switzerland where consecrated Hosts were placed in something resembling white cardboard matchboxes and set out to be taken “self-service”. The bishop of that diocese promptly brought that to a screeching halt.Cor_ad_Cor:![]()
Exactly.The bishop hasn’t weighed in, so I’m not sure anyone else is really in position to at this point, either.
And while the peanut gallery over at Life Site had plenty to say— and some of it wrong (i.e. no one is “self communicating” in this scenario)— no one actually said it was invalid (because it isn’t).
Illicit? Perhaps, perhaps not. Problematic? Probably, unless people are properly trained.
As you said, that’s for the bishop to weigh in on, not anyone else.
Which raises a good point: This may already have been addressed, and we’re simply not getting the latest news but just the scandalous version of the story. … Just a possibility.The Bishop of Biloxi released a “precept ” on Communion on the diocesan website on July 15 that would appear to shoot down this priest’s idea by mandating that each church is only allowed one EMHC per 100 communicants present at Mass. This would seem to make it impossible for the pastor to designate every head of household an EMHC. The pastor also seems to have deleted or made private his Facebook video that got picked up by Lifesite.
Consecration depends upon the intent of the priest. I have told this story before, but when I was younger and serving Mass one time, I saw a ciborium of unconsecrated hosts on the credence table, and after Mass, I asked the priest if those got consecrated too, when he said Mass. He said no, he did not intend to consecrate those, they were for a later Mass.Would this even be valid consecration? I mean, I’m not sure how validity of consecration works in these circumstances, but from my understanding, the vessels with hosts are being held by the laity for the entirety of the consecration. I mean, I guess if intention beyond the altar is sufficient, it would be valid consecration…
Valid or not, it is undeniably illicit.
Indeed. It would have sufficed to put a terse blurb in the bulletin, explaining that the bishop said we can’t do this, so we won’t be doing it, end of story. The pastor might also have been well-advised to comment on it briefly from the pulpit at all Masses, saying something like “hey, I was just trying to find a way for everyone to receive communion safely, but as it turns out, the bishop reminded me that the Church doesn’t allow something like that, bad idea, best of intentions, we all make mistakes, live and learn, we move on”. He may have done something precisely like that.I can see where a bishop might handle it more quietly in a manner such that the pastors concerned get the message without making it more grist for the sensational Catholic media.
I absolutely love the way you have phrased that, HSD!The pastor might also have been well-advised to comment on it briefly from the pulpit at all Masses, saying something like “hey, I was just trying to find a way for everyone to receive communion safely, but as it turns out, the bishop reminded me that the Church doesn’t allow something like that, bad idea, best of intentions, we all make mistakes, live and learn, we move on”. He may have done something precisely like that.
This story told within any light you wish to present it in is still quite scandalous though, no?scandalous version of the story.
If the bishop stepped in and corrected the situation, there is no need for the public to be hearing or reading about it further.This story told within any light you wish to present it in is still quite scandalous though, no?
I disagree, if stories like these were viewed by a wider audience perhaps our clergy would be less inclined to continue coming up with ”innovations”, no matter how well intentioned, as I stated earlier these ”innovations” are dangerous.If the bishop stepped in and corrected the situation, there is no need for the public to be hearing or reading about it further.
I have to think that if I were a priest, in keeping with Pope Francis’s comments about “smelling like the sheep”, it would be better to speak in the people’s vernacular, “I’m just like you, Our Lord just called me to the priesthood to help all of us to save our souls, you work with me and I’ll work with you”. I have heard far too much, especially in traditionalist circles, of wooden, preachy admonitions that sound as though they come from someone who has never lived in the “real world” and does not understand what “real people” go through in their daily lives.HomeschoolDad:![]()
I absolutely love the way you have phrased that, HSD!The pastor might also have been well-advised to comment on it briefly from the pulpit at all Masses, saying something like “hey, I was just trying to find a way for everyone to receive communion safely, but as it turns out, the bishop reminded me that the Church doesn’t allow something like that, bad idea, best of intentions, we all make mistakes, live and learn, we move on”. He may have done something precisely like that.
I would respectfully have to part company with you on this one point. The internet, and the plethora of faithful Catholic and Catholic-oriented websites and apostolates, have made it far more difficult for those priests, bishops, teachers, and others who are supposed to be guardians of sound doctrine and liturgy, to “get away with shenanigans”. Do something bizarre or out-of-bounds, and it will go viral. It’s just too bad we didn’t have something like this in the 1960s and 1970s.They do care what their own bishop thinks, and the bishops like I said are capable of dealing with this like they have for decades when we didn’t have the Internet and LifeSiteNews so somebody in Maine or France could get all wound up about what a priest did in Biloxi.