J
jimXroberts
Guest
In the OF, the paten is a small gold plate on which the host is placed at the offertory. At EF Masses, the host is placed and later broken on the corporal. In both forms, care is taken in folding and unfolding the corporal to ensure that any particles of the host remain folded inside. The wider plate with handles used at Holy Communion at EF Masses is properly called a patina. If there is a church in the London area that would like a patina, we have three and only use one about every 5 years when we have an EF funeral Mass.
The main purpose of the patina is to catch the host if it misses the communicant’s tongue. In many decades of serving at Mass, I have only known this to happen once. There is little risk of particles falling from the host whether Holy Communion is given on the tongue or in the hand. Congregational hosts are not normally broken. In the unusual event that there are not enough hosts, the priest or Eucharistic Minister may break them, but does so inside the ciborium so that any loose particles are contained.
Our present understanding of the properties of matter is that minute particles of any solid pass into the air and later settle as dust. Similarly small amounts of wine are lost through evaporation, allowing us to smell it. The Church’s teaching on the real presence is that it only exists where the sacred elements are recognisable as bread and wine, not as dust and vapour.
The main purpose of the patina is to catch the host if it misses the communicant’s tongue. In many decades of serving at Mass, I have only known this to happen once. There is little risk of particles falling from the host whether Holy Communion is given on the tongue or in the hand. Congregational hosts are not normally broken. In the unusual event that there are not enough hosts, the priest or Eucharistic Minister may break them, but does so inside the ciborium so that any loose particles are contained.
Our present understanding of the properties of matter is that minute particles of any solid pass into the air and later settle as dust. Similarly small amounts of wine are lost through evaporation, allowing us to smell it. The Church’s teaching on the real presence is that it only exists where the sacred elements are recognisable as bread and wine, not as dust and vapour.
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