Japhy,
When you quoted RS, you didn’t include
and also from the GIRM regarding the denial of Holy Communion–
I do not want to get into this again, but my point is that if the norms can be set aside in one instance where it is specifically noted in the GIRM, why would an action not mentioned be required?
Lux
Lux,
I think you are mixing up norms, rubrics, and direct instructions. Each has different applications and levels of authority.
First of all, most of the Rubrics aren’t in the GIRM. They are in the Missal and the Missal says to strike one’s breast at the words “mea culpa” in the Confetior. If the USCCB wanted to dispense with this rubric, it could have included a request when it presented the particular rubrics for the US. Then it would have been mentioned in the US version of the GIRM. (As they did with the kneeling after the Agnus Dei, for example) They didn’t ask for that, so the rubric in the Missal applies. There are some rubrics where there are options but no option is offered for this one, so the rubric in the Missal applies.
You mention that the norm for reception of Communion is being “set aside”. Although this thread has wandered, I think you mean some people receiving on the tongue and/or kneeling. That is a norm, not a rubric. The universal norm is to receive on the tongue. The only reason the norm is even possible to receive in the hand in the US is because of an indult. An individual can avail him/herself to the provisions of an indult in a diocese where it has been granted. “can” not “must” Any Catholic can still follow the universal norm which is to receive on the tongue. That’s not “setting aside” anything. It is still following the norm – the universal one.
As for kneeling, that falls into direct instuction. The CDW has seen fit to issue direct instruction that receiving while kneeling is a choice the communicant can make. Issuing such direct instructions in areas where questions arise is part of the CDW’s “job” so to speak. It is not my job, your job, even the Bishops job to issue specific instructions regarding how the Mass is said and how we participate. When the CDW issues an instruction, it is authoritative since this is part of its “job”. If anyone else issues this type of instruction, it would not be authoritative or at least less so.
An example would be receiving on the tongue during a flu outbreak. My own archbishop got it right, IMHO. His suggested that people may want to receive on the hand during the swine flu situation but he specifically noted that this wasn’t an order, just a suggestion. Had he issued an “order,” it would have been less authoritative until specific instruction came from the CDW.