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round and round…It was not stipulated in the GIRM, and a letter cannot override the law.
The dicastery in question has the authority to interpret the GIRM. If you have a citation that refutes this please give it.
round and round…It was not stipulated in the GIRM, and a letter cannot override the law.
it is more than a letter, is a ruling on the law from a higher judge that you, I or any US Ordinary.It was not stipulated in the GIRM, and a letter cannot override the law.
The problem seems to be whose arbitrary choice and whose private judgement. I haven’t seen any document anywhere that said that we should stand to receive Communion – but, for that matter, I can’t say I’ve seen a document that ever said we should kneel to receive Communion, either. It should be noted that conservative Lutherans to this day come forward to a Communion rail and kneel to receive what they consider Communion – which says that the posture dates back at least before the Council of Trent.I am quoting the GIRM
When the kneeling vs standing issue came out a while back, I was involved in a discussion which included several very faithful priests and a bishop. All of them including the bishop agreed that the choice to have the people receive communion standing and make a profound bow as a sign of reverence was an attempt to try to instill some level of reverence to the Blessed Sacrament which many of the bishops noticed was lacking by a large percentage of people in the U.S. Church today.So basically, I have no problem with people who receive kneeling, and no problem with people who receive RESPECTFULLY standing. It’s the ones who take Communion like it’s the latest giveaway at Burger King (or worse, like it’s a cookie at a cocktail party) that get my goat. That, and liturgical advisors that arrange the Communion lines so there’s no discreet way to step aside and absorb what I’ve just received a moment before I return to my seat (or worse yet, run into the EM distributing the Blood).
Cynthia
Then you haven’t read the thread. Please do before you continueThe problem seems to be whose arbitrary choice and whose private judgement. I haven’t seen any document anywhere that said that we should stand to receive Communion –
Ahh, finally some wisdom and common sense. Those who want to label all kneelers as disobedient have their reasons. Wonder what they are?When the kneeling vs standing issue came out a while back, I was involved in a discussion which included several very faithful priests and a bishop. All of them including the bishop agreed that the choice to have the people receive communion standing and make a profound bow as a sign of reverence was an attempt to try to instill some level of reverence to the Blessed Sacrament which many of the bishops noticed was lacking by a large percentage of people in the U.S. Church today.
This bishop and several others that I have heard on EWTN have agreed that in no way did they plan to restrict the right of the faithful to kneel, but were trying to get people to show at the very least some basic sign of reverence to our Lord in the Most Blessed Sacrament.
I don’t understand why so many people are so distressed by someone showing our Lord a tiny drop of the amount of adoration that he deserves by kneeling in His Presence to receive Him in Holy Communion. Perhaps this is their way of making reparation for all of those who have no respect or love for Him.
Ahh, finally some wisdom and common sense. Those who want to label all kneelers as disobedient have their reasons. Wonder what they are? Particularly sense the Vatican says the opposite.When the kneeling vs standing issue came out a while back, I was involved in a discussion which included several very faithful priests and a bishop. All of them including the bishop agreed that the choice to have the people receive communion standing and make a profound bow as a sign of reverence was an attempt to try to instill some level of reverence to the Blessed Sacrament which many of the bishops noticed was lacking by a large percentage of people in the U.S. Church today.
This bishop and several others that I have heard on EWTN have agreed that in no way did they plan to restrict the right of the faithful to kneel, but were trying to get people to show at the very least some basic sign of reverence to our Lord in the Most Blessed Sacrament.
I don’t understand why so many people are so distressed by someone showing our Lord a tiny drop of the amount of adoration that he deserves by kneeling in His Presence to receive Him in Holy Communion. Perhaps this is their way of making reparation for all of those who have no respect or love for Him.
We have kneelers to receive communion. And it is a Novus Ordo Mass not a TLM.I am still wondering—so far 22% of those who voted, voted to kneel always—Do all of this number attend a Parish where there are no provisions to kneel, and they have been instructed to stand? This is what I really want to know? How many people put their “inclination or arbitrary choice” ahead of the instructions in the GIRM?
If Rome is is so adament about allowing kneeling, they should not have approved the US adaptations.