When to sit back after communion?

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I have always knelt until the priest\deacon return’s unconsumed Host to the tabernacle, kneels and turns to come down from tabernacle.

When is the proper time to return to sitting from kneeling at end of communion?

thanks,
brian
 
I was taught the same, when the Eucharist is back in the tabernacle. I know others sit when the priest sits. I just wait until the alter servers have taken everything from the alter, or sometimes I’m still praying and remain kneeling until it’s time to stand.
 
I sit when the priest sits unless he has a deacon clean the vessels in which case I will sit when the deacon returns to his seat.
 
Supposedly, it’s ok to sit, once the doors have closed on the Tabernacle. But nobody does in our church. We all wait for the priest to sit.
 
When is the proper time to return to sitting from kneeling at end of communion?
There is no specified time. It is by custom, not by rubric.

GIRM 43 says: they may sit or kneel during the period of sacred silence after Communion.

So, you could remain kneeling until the priest signals that the concluding rite is beginning or you could sit after you return to your seat, or something in between.
 
There is no specified time. It is by custom, not by rubric.
This. I sit when the sacred species is no longer present – that is, once the purification of the vessels is complete.
 
Our priest actually announced at mass once after closing and locking the door of the tabernacle “you can all sit now.” And even then, people don’t. (Which means if I do, I have to sit forward on the pew if the person behind me is still kneeling.)
 
If I can see Jesus I am kneeling.
Once in the tabernacle it is unnecessary, but you may continue since if the candle is lit you know he is physically present.
 
If I can see Jesus I am kneeling.
Once in the tabernacle it is unnecessary, but you may continue since if the candle is lit you know he is physically present.
Hmmm well ‘substantially present’ is a better way of describing the Real Presence. It is not a physical presence. The accidents (what can be perceived by the senses appearance, taste etc.) are physically present, but the Real Presence isn’t in the accidents.
 
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I have always knelt until the priest\deacon return’s unconsumed Host to the tabernacle, kneels and turns to come down from tabernacle.

When is the proper time to return to sitting from kneeling at end of communion?

thanks,
brian
In the US, standing for the Communion Procession, for the distribution and reception of Holy Communion, and during the singing of the Communion Hymn is the norm, but those who wish to kneel or sit after their individual reception of Holy Communion can (since it is not a rigid rule).
 
Strange, for all my life(48 years), we always knelt until it was our row to go and receive, then back to the pew to kneel and pray, then finally waiting for tabernacle to be shut and priest\deacon to turn back to sit down…
Brian
 
I have never been to a church that stands during that time. Ever. How can it be a norm? I thought the “norm” in this case was whatever the bishop decides?
 
I have heard many people say this over the years and never understood how not sitting shows respect for the priest. I really would like to know why people think that way.

If we begin kneeling out of respect for the presence of Christ in the Eucharist, why do people continue kneeling when the Eucharist is locked away, and then say they are then doing it out of respect for the priest. 🤔
 
When is the proper time to return to sitting from kneeling at end of communion?
As a non-Catholic who attends Mass with my Catholic wife, I kneel until she gets up to join the Communion line. From that point forward I am sitting until the congregation stands for the closing prayer and blessing. (In spite of the very generously padded kneelers at our church, my somewhat arthritic knees can tolerate only so much kneeling.)
 
I feel your pain!

A few months ago we attended a few Masses in Prague - where the kneelers are typically very old and very, very hard. I was in agony.
 
Its a personal choice, given we can sit after Communion. Personally, I kneel until the final prayers and blessing begins.
 
I have never been to a church that stands during that time. Ever. How can it be a norm? I thought the “norm” in this case was whatever the bishop decides?
Allowed if appropriate.

GIRM 2010
43. The faithful should stand from the beginning of the Entrance Chant, or while the Priest approaches the altar, until the end of the Collect; for the Alleluia Chant before the Gospel; while the Gospel itself is proclaimed; during the Profession of Faith and the Universal Prayer; and from the invitation, Orate, fratres (Pray, brethren), before the Prayer over the Offerings until the end of Mass, except at the places indicated here below.

The faithful should sit, on the other hand, during the readings before the Gospel and the Responsorial Psalm and for the Homily and during the Preparation of the Gifts at the Offertory; and, if appropriate, they may sit or kneel during the period of sacred silence after Communion.

In the Dioceses of the United States of America, they should kneel beginning after the singing or recitation of the Sanctus (Holy, Holy, Holy) until after the Amen of the Eucharistic Prayer, except when prevented on occasion by ill health, or for reasons of lack of space, of the large number of people present, or for another reasonable cause. However, those who do not kneel ought to make a profound bow when the Priest genuflects after the Consecration. The faithful kneel after the Agnus Dei (Lamb of God) unless the Diocesan Bishop determines otherwise.[53]

For the sake of uniformity in gestures and bodily postures during one and the same celebration, the faithful should follow the instructions which the Deacon, a lay minister, or the Priest gives, according to what is laid down in the Missal.
http://www.usccb.org/prayer-and-wor...uction-of-the-roman-missal/girm-chapter-2.cfm
 
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When I am more heavily pregnant is it ok to sit during consecration? Also it’s getting uncomfortable to get up and down due to pelvic pain
 
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