E
Eilish_Maura
Guest
I did not get from the post that it was being discouraged as a sign of reverence but of being seen as officially part of the process.
I don’t know. I do it after both, if I am receiving under both species. That’s just what makes sense to me, though.I see people who do this and people who don’t … it is not necessary.
We instruct our Candidates and Catechumens on receiving the Eucharist … if one asks about that practice we tell them it is not necessary but that some cathcolics make the sign of the cross upon reception for cultural or other reasons…
Now this is just an observation: of those who cross themselves after reception. If they receive both the Body and the Blood, about three-quarters will only make the sign after receiving the Body and not after receiving the Blood …
I have always wondered about that … if you are only going to do it once, why before reception of the Blood and not after?
If it is important or significant for the Body, why is it not so for the Blood?
I received my first communion on Easter, 2007. In RCIA, we learned to take the host(body) and take one step to the side before eating it. I specifically asked about crossing myself and I was told it’s not necessary, but I wasnt told NOT to do it. However, you will probably notice that the ministers of the eucharist do not cross themselves when they receive the host, nor do the deacons or altar servers. I hope this helps.Hi folks,
I apologize if this is the wrong place for this question. I will be entering the Catholic Church this Easter, and was recently instructed by my priest that they discourage (at least silently) doing the sign of the cross on oneself just after receiving communion, on one’s way back to the pews. The priest said that this was “discouraged” because communion is not a “silent prayer for yourself”, etc. Is this true? Thanks in advance.
God Bless
Jon
Ditto!Jon, I won’t tell you how many years I have been doing this, but many decades! I find it incredible that you were discouraged from what could be a reverent sign. It sounds more like someone’s opinion. If it’s official, it counters what the good nuns taught us all those years ago. Seems like so many practices now cater to the lowest common denominator.
Welcome home!
Me, too; I don’t know that I could stop - it would take great force of will, as I’ve done this for 40+ years. This is what the Sisters taught us, along with bowing one’s head at hearing the name of Jesus. I’ve always regarded it as a simple sign of reverence…that’s all.I do this. But not because it’s a prayer for myself, but to show respect and reverence for what I have just received.
Receiving the Eucharist is very personal. I simply don’t understand the thinking of the priest, except that it goes along with the other modern trends which are borne out of respect for fellow men rather than respect for God. For example, remaining standing until all have returned to their pews. My biggest concern here is not whether one does or does not make the Sign of the Cross, but the fact that a priest is actively discouraging it. It should not matter. Personally, I say a short prayer immediately after receiving, and it is normal to finish it with a Sign of the Cross.I don’t know folks. I’ve been looking around at a lot of sources, and the consensus among authority that actually mentions it (which isn’t many) is that it is not necessary to either do the sign or not do the sign after receiving communion.
If that is truly the case, I would say, for my part anyway, that the best way to go would be to pray about and discern what making the sign at that time means to me, and whether not making the sign might be better for the parish community as a whole, i.e., we don’t want to give the impression that receiving Eucharist is a personal prayer, but rather is a communal sacrament.
I undrestand that many people have done it for many years, some consciously, some not. For that reason, many would be loathe to stop. But, what does anybody think about the points on both sides in my second paragraph?
God Bless
Jon
Those who cross themselves at that point are most likely familiar with the Traditional Latin Mass. During the prayers at the foot of the altar, when the priest says the prayer “Indulgentiam, absolutionem, et remissionem peccatorum nostrorum, tribuat nobis omnipotens et misericors Dominus,” both priest and faithful cross themselves. It is translated as “May the almighty and merciful Lord grant us pardon, absolution, and remission of our sins.” The priest repeats this to the faithful before Communion, after the third confiteor.“May almighty God have mercy on us, forgive us our sins, and bring us to everlasting life”
At this spot early in mass, I see some people cross themselves, and others don’t. Some reason why or why not?
thanks, Richie