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Elf01
Guest
Personally I’d be afraid of ingesting some of the sanitizer.Am following this thread with amusement because I’m a n00b EM and it never occurred to me that clean hands might be offensive.
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Personally I’d be afraid of ingesting some of the sanitizer.Am following this thread with amusement because I’m a n00b EM and it never occurred to me that clean hands might be offensive.
I’ve never seen anyone, EMHC or otherwise, coat their hands with enough sanitizer to make that possible. Your hands would be so slippery, you couldn’t hold on to the host to give it to anyone.Personally I’d be afraid of ingesting some of the sanitizer.
I have to agree with you. It is a relatively new trend and there are EMs who are still hand rubbing while they are standing behind the altar waiting to receive. It certainly seems out of place to me.The clean hands aren’t “offensive” to me (I agree, they must have clean hands!). The show of cleaning them and the hand rubbing around the altar is distracting.
You keep calling it a “show”. This is uncharitable and not factual.The show of cleaning them and the hand rubbing around the altar is distracting.
(Please Note: This uploaded content is no longer available.)If witnessing or smelling this event is the most distracting or troubling part of a Mass I attend, I would say its a pretty good Mass!
This is one of those posts to which I wish that I could react more strongly than just clicking a heart.This is the Catholic version of first-world problems.
Because The Body of Christ still has the accidents of bread… which means The Host still has the chemical properties of bread.How can the actual body of Jesus be a vessel to transmit germs?
The fingers of the EMHC ought not touch the hand nor the tongue of the people receiving. If either happens, the EMHC needs further training., then the first person in line takes communion on the tongue and has a cold. Or they’re touching someone’s hand that was just sneezed in. I’m not sure how long the efficacy of the cleaner lasts in the first place.
You must be easily distracted. Perhaps you should be focusing on something else immediately prior to receiving the Eucharist. As others have pointed out, calling it a “show” is extremely judgmental and uncharitable. Perhaps you are unaware that the continuing hand rubbing helps the sanitizer evaporate more quickly - the goal being to have completely dry hands before handling the Eucharist. The rubbing also helps the odor - which some have commented on - to dissipate faster.0Scarlett_nidiyilii:![]()
The clean hands aren’t “offensive” to me (I agree, they must have clean hands!). The show of cleaning them and the hand rubbing around the altar is distracting.it never occurred to me that clean hands might be offensive.
There are other ways to inform the parish that the ministers have clean hands - a paragraph in the bulletin or an announcement for example.
But in any case, does the hand sanitizing really do that much? Say they sanitize their hands, then the first person in line takes communion on the tongue and has a cold. Or they’re touching someone’s hand that was just sneezed in. I’m not sure how long the efficacy of the cleaner lasts in the first place.