K
kleary
Guest
I was making the comparison between the differences between the ordained Bishops and the lay people here. The liberals use Jesus saying “Take and Eat” to push Communion in the Hand as if Jesus direction here is for lay people to take with their hands the Sacred Host.And this is where one can appeal to tradition WITHOUT being guilty of antiquarianism, since one isn’t saying that we HAVE to do what the early Church did: it’s a very poor and illogical historical/traditional argument to say that He only meant the Apostles as Bishops if we then invoke the Apostolic Fathers and Patristic Fathers in our apologetics for our faith (which we constantly do). Why? Because reception in the hand by the laity WAS practiced in the Apostolic and Patristic Church, by the disciples of those Apostles. The argument that only the Apostles could receive by hand seems to have been refuted by Apostolic/Patristic practice. Again, I’m not saying we HAVE to have Communion in the hand because the ancient Church had it. I’m saying that since the Apostolic Church had it, it must have been an Apostolic practice. That’s not “liberal,” that’s simply history and logic.
A small retort to say “Hey… he said that to his Bishops” was simply to make the difference. I know that Communion in the hand was prevalent in the Church at the time of the Apostles. They did not have neatly cut round pieces of bread that we do today.
However the Holy Spirit guided the Church in her understanding of the Eucharist and the “on the tongue” meathod became the norm with Communion in the hand being shut down.
The FACT that it resurfaced in the Middle Ages as a practice meant to show disbelief in the Real Presence and the Catholic priesthood… and started as an abuse in disobedience of the Holy See back in the 1960’s should be enough for anyone to see.