Taking Blood of Eucharist during Corona Virus

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I think the whole thing is ridiculous. The Eucharist and the blood of Christ I’d imagine would protect us if anything from any virus etc. Many parishes have stopped Holy Communion in the tongue also which I don’t agree with, it is the Body of Christ we are receiving after all so nothing will happen. Just my opinion sorry for it.
 
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No it won’t and this is a dangerous way to view the Eucharist.
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Can I ask you to please leave me alone. I do not want to engage with you as you disagree with EVERYTHING I say and then bring others on board. Respect my opinion.
 
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I already know that. Why do you keep commenting on my threads and posts? It sounds like you are singling me out and you do not respect my opinion.
 
Ohhh yep, I’ve considered this recently. Actually, at my parish the precious blood isn’t even an option (only the priests/deacons/EOMs receive it), but I was recently seriously perturbed during the sign of peace.

This was just after the news was out that Coronavirus has been identified in my region, and I was sitting in Mass and had already decided I wouldn’t shake all the hands (also, multiple older people around me were coughing, into their hands). Time came for the sign of peace, and to be 1000% clear, I tucked my hands into my jacket sleeves and did the mini-bow/smile thing that’s relatively common where I live…

And literally, never ever before have I had so many people stubbornly try to shake my hand. Maybe they were trying to teach me a lesson, and though they could out-stubborn me? But all around, hands came out to me. One middle aged man in front of my shoved his hand in front of my belly for a handshake, and literally left it there for several seconds, even as I clearly smiled, bowed, and slightly shook my head. He didn’t withdraw his hand until I literally said out loud: “Sorry, I’m actually not doing that right now…” and my honest impression is that he felt smug that I was being rude and he was highlighting that for others.

Honestly, I have no idea what that was about, but it really annoyed me.

Also my parish used to have hand sanitizer in the foyer, but they no longer do. AND they have a volunteer stand at the entrance door where they force every single person to walk in single file and shake his hand. It’s insane. I feel like it’s a guarantee for spreading germs. I genuinely get distracted on my way to Church, thinking about how annoyed I am that I’m about to have to shake a hand that has shaken many sick hands, with no hand sanitizer beyond. (I’ve bought multiple mini sanitizers for my purse but somehow always lose them; I know, that’s my fault. Still.) I can’t bring myself to be rude enough to say “Please don’t shake my hand, this is how disease gets spread,” so I just have to pray so hard to not feel angry and to instead forgive him, every time.

Whoo. Sorry. Guess your question brought a pet peeve out for me. I have legitimately contemplated leaving the Novus Ordo entirely over the sign of peace, and attending Latin Mass for literally no other reason than that they don’t force you to hold hands that have been coughed into, every single Mass. And now during coronavirus season, for some reason unfathomable to me, people at my parish are actually acting less respectful of sanitary practice.
 
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Since last post my BIshop has banned precious blood distribution, any physical sign of peace, and reception of host on the tongue. I think this is wise. Today I couldn’t believe Costco was out of toilet paper and Wegmans out of rice! It looked like soviet Russia.
 
In my Diocese, the Precious Blood was already not being distributed because of the flu season until Holy Thursday. It has now been extended, along with the addition of no physical signs of peace or reception of Communion on the tongue.

When I lived in the Middle East, the Sign of Peace was always a simple bow of the head to the neighbor. The altar servers formally came to the foot of the altar and bowed to the congregation signalling its end as Mass moved forward into the Liturgy of the Eucharist.

There are a number of YouTube videos on DYI hand sanitizer.
 
Many dioceses have discontinued the use of chalices and consecrated wine.

The alcohol content in wine is not enough to meet the recommended concentration of 60% for an alcoholic product to be used to sanitize for the c-v. A lot of people on this website are hooting and hollering about this subject but their opinions seem to be based not on science but on hunches and presumptions.
 
I visited soviet Russia, Leningrad, Moscov, Kiev, on a school trip, for a month, so no need to insult. I’m not a xenophobe.
 
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