Well, we wouldn’t want people to feel included in the Catholic Church. This isn’t the place for that.
I don’t understand why this keeps coming up time and again. The CDW did not explicitly ANYTHING the practice. They made some observations and said they were studying the issue. And after nearly ten years, they’ve still not seen it necessary to issue anything further.
Can we not just trust our priests and bishops instead of empanelling ourselves as a litugical jury? Maybe just focus on yourself and the Eucharist during Communion, and stop worrying about what others - including the priest - might be doing.
Actually, the CDWDS did not make observations on this…a priest who was one of the undersecretaries did make observations, in a letter addressed to an individual, that letter then appearing on the Internet. His answers were limited precisely because the dicastery was evaluating the matter. They have, however, yet to address it.
Thankfully, in the years intervening, we now have a truly wonderful secretary for the dicastery in the person of His Grace the Archbishop who, when responsible for the liturgy office for the Bishops’ Conference for England and Wales wrote:
Even though some in the assembly may not receive ‘sacramental’ Communion, all are united in some way by the Holy Spirit. The traditional idea of ‘spiritual’ communion is an important one to remember and reaffirm. The invitation often given at Mass to those who may not receive sacramental communion – for example children before their First Communion and adults who are not Catholics – to receive a ‘blessing’ at the moment of Communion emphasises that a deep spiritual communion is possible even when we do not share together the Sacrament of the Body and Blood of Christ.
I remember many bishops asked Pope Benedict for a clarification on this issue at the time of the 2005 Synod of Bishops, which was on the Eucharist. His response then, as it had been before and after, was silence…which is not an infrequent response to
dubia that the Pope, in his sovereign judgment, decides ought not to be answered, for whatever reason he determines it should not be answered. Both Pope Saint John Paul II and Pope Benedict imparted blessings in place of Communion when they distributed the Eucharist at Papal Masses.
I especially appreciate your comment about impaneling a jury…since my then bishop sent me away for advanced studies and I was professor of liturgy and sacraments as well as his Master of Ceremonies; I also had the honour of dealing with people who attempted to play liturgical policeman.