katherine2:
Nobody is to be denied communion because they kneel. This is not because standing is not the norm, it is because we do not deny communion to someone for the mere act of failing to follow a norm. If you fail to mak the sign of the cross at Mass, or say “amen” or kneel during the canon or bow your head during the Creed, you also are not to be denied communion.
I can agree with this.
Nobody should be called illicit because it is uncharitable. They should be educated and counseled.
No, this isn’t what the Vatican said or meant at all. They never mentioned charity, nor it being uncharitable. They specifically instructed the bishops to insert a clause to protect those who kneel, and later said that the
act of kneeling cannot be referred to as illicit.
That doesn’t mean, “hey don’t call those people illicit, it isn’t nice.” It means, “don’t go calling kneeling ‘acting illicitly.’”
“…
while this Congregation gave the recognitio to the norm desired by the Bishops’ Conference of your country that people stand for Holy Communion,
this was done on the condition that communicants who choose to kneel are not to be denied Holy Communion on these grounds. Indeed, the faithful
should not be imposed upon nor accused of disobedience and of acting illicitly when they kneel to receive Holy Communion”.
Kneeling is an appropriate acts because it is permited in some countries.
No again. Kneeling is appropriate because:In fact, as His Eminence, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger has recently emphasized,
the practice of kneeling for Holy Communion has in its favor a centuries-old tradition, and
it is a particularly expressive sign of adoration,
completely appropriate in light of the true, real and substantial presence of Our Lord Jesus Christ under the consecrated species.
It’s appropriate specifically because it is Jesus Christ, Our Lord, before Whom they are kneeling.
otm:
Note: nothing in my comments here or above imply, nor are they meant to imply, the the CDW does not have the power to alter the GIRM. They promulgated it; they certainly can change it. My comments are directed to the fact that they have not done so.
Otm, the CDW doesn’t need to alter the GIRM, nor abbrogate norm 160. They have clearly pointed out
the spirit in which the norm was to be
understood and implemented. There is such thing as
the spirit of the law, and
the letter of the law.
As a billing and budgeting director, I am sure you’re very attentive to the
letter of the law, but in matters of the Faith, the CDW is speaking in terms of
the spirit of the law, and is being very specific about its authority to do so. The law doesn’t have to be changed; it simply has to be
properly understood! The letters are
clarifications, not changes.
I wouldn’t say that I am an arbiter; but I am a very good observer of human nature, and I can see a stiff neck, whether the head on it is liberal, or conservative, or moderate
I would say that it takes one with a stiff neck to repeatedly refuse to acknowledge that the CDW has the authority to specify the manner in which the norm is to be understood for the sake of proper application. How many times must one repeat…?
As the authority by virtue of whose recognitio the norm in question has attained the force of law, this Dicastery
is competent to specify the manner in which the norm is to be
understood for the sake of a
proper application.