I’ve brought this up in other threads, but I think it deserves its own.
What problem would there be, if any, with receiving communion in the hand, but covering one’s hand with a purificator (or even a nice, dignified cloth handkerchief)?
I do not receive CITH, but given the present circumstances, I can see that I am more or less going to have to, if I should be so blessed as to be able to go to Mass anytime soon. Both for reasons of tradition and hygiene, I do not wish to receive on my bare palm. I do realize that in medieval times, women used houseling cloths for receiving communion (not clear why men didn’t use them). So there is historical precedent for it. Just using my mother wit, I have to think that this method is far less likely to carry CV than either COTT or the conventional method of CITH.
I can foresee a problem with small particles adhering to the cloth, but these same small particles would adhere to one’s skin, and it is my understanding that these particles can (and should) be consumed by the communicant. I would be planning to receive on the purificator, cup it up to my mouth, and administer the Host to myself this way. I would then fold the purificator in on itself, put it in a plastic bag, and put it back in my pocket.
I have verbal permission from a diocesan priest (on leave from his diocese) to wash communion linens by hand, and to dispose of the water reverently in an unused area of my garden. This permission has never been revoked.
Is there any reason I can’t do this? (Priests’ and deacons’ opinions welcomed.)
What problem would there be, if any, with receiving communion in the hand, but covering one’s hand with a purificator (or even a nice, dignified cloth handkerchief)?
I do not receive CITH, but given the present circumstances, I can see that I am more or less going to have to, if I should be so blessed as to be able to go to Mass anytime soon. Both for reasons of tradition and hygiene, I do not wish to receive on my bare palm. I do realize that in medieval times, women used houseling cloths for receiving communion (not clear why men didn’t use them). So there is historical precedent for it. Just using my mother wit, I have to think that this method is far less likely to carry CV than either COTT or the conventional method of CITH.
I can foresee a problem with small particles adhering to the cloth, but these same small particles would adhere to one’s skin, and it is my understanding that these particles can (and should) be consumed by the communicant. I would be planning to receive on the purificator, cup it up to my mouth, and administer the Host to myself this way. I would then fold the purificator in on itself, put it in a plastic bag, and put it back in my pocket.
I have verbal permission from a diocesan priest (on leave from his diocese) to wash communion linens by hand, and to dispose of the water reverently in an unused area of my garden. This permission has never been revoked.
Is there any reason I can’t do this? (Priests’ and deacons’ opinions welcomed.)