D
Dr.Bombay
Guest
God rest Michael Davies’ soul. He does have a point that some of the modern innovations were exactly the same things the “Reformers” introduced. I’m not saying that was the intent of the innovations, but they are similair in many respects.To receive the Chalice is no denial that the fullness of Christ’s Presence, Body and Blood, Soul and Divinity, is present in Both and in Either Sacred Species. So, doctrinally, no. But the argument that only the Apostle’s received the Sacred Blood under It’s seperate species OR that only the Apostles (and thus those who succeed them, ie, bishops and priests) can receive the Most Sacred Body in their hands is a specious one and one that would perplex the Patristic Church, since they received Both Sacred Species and they received the Sacred Body in their hands. I wasn’t being an antiquarian, I was answering the charge that the Mass has become Protestantized and that one sign of that is the reception of the Chalice by the laity (Michael Davies’ assertion) and that reception in the hand was another sign. A reading of history shows that both practices predate by CENTURIES the “Reformation.” The young man then made his assertion (see Servo Pio XII’s last post) and I answered it. If “traditionalists” (I put that in quotes because I think it’s a relative term) don’t want anyone invoking “antiqurianism,” then they ought not do it themselves. The Church has good reason for the disciplines she imposes surrounding the Sacraments. I don’t question that. There are times when the Chalice shouldn’t be offered (mega Masses, for example). If tomorrow the Holy Father banned reception in the hand, I would bend to his will. The same with the Chalice. I also didn’t intend to hijack the thread.