K
Kramgen
Guest
Is that wrong or not recommended as a lay person.
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1389 The Church obliges the faithful to take part in the Divine Liturgy on Sundays and feast days and, prepared by the sacrament of Reconciliation, to receive the Eucharist at least once a year, if possible during the Easter season.[224] But the Church strongly encourages the faithful to receive the holy Eucharist on Sundays and feast days, or more often still, even daily. (source)
You can receive every day. The Church recommends frequent communion.Is that wrong or not recommended as a lay person.
In regards to when it became a rule, see the following link provided by @(name removed by moderator) Can We Receive Holy Communion Twice on Christmas Day? - Canon Law Made EasyCanon Law Made EasyIs this new? I was brought up with the belief that there is only one special day during the year when the honor to receive twice is granted…Christmas. Once during Midnight Mass, and once during the Christmas day Mass. Interestingly enough, attending Midnight Mass did not satisfy fulfillment of Xmas day obligation (which I found irritating as a youth)… but I digress.
Anywho, I guess times are changing![]()
I pray this allows you to appreciate the Eucharist all the more.I am going to go a little bit against the grain here: I am about to undergo three months of receiving Communion monthly.
For most of Christian history, people received only on rare occasions. In the East it is pretty common to only receive after each of the four fasting periods, and even then only with the approval of your confessor. I think receiving less often may help us to avoid trivializing Communion. I do believe frequent Communion is a good thing, but I don’t think frequent should mean “as often as possible”
This is my opinion, and I am not recommending that anyone follow it. Just sharing my view. Please pray for me as I undergo these three months.
I’m all for restoring the fast to at least 3 hours. The one hour fast is pretty useless in most Sunday situations.One more reason to extend the fast.
Given that we all just went about 10 weeks without, I don’t think anyone currently going to Mass and receiving is “taking it for granted” at this point. All it would take is another COVID spike and boom, Masses could go away again.The argument was if people receive communion too often, they will start taking it for granted.
You’re personally free to fast as long as you want. There are plenty of traditionalists who still do the fast from midnight Saturday night.I’m all for restoring the fast to at least 3 hours. The one hour fast is pretty useless in most Sunday situations.