C
Catholic_Tom
Guest
I think you misunderstood…there is wine, but it’s not give to the laity.This is incorrect, every time I go the Mass, there is wine.
I think you misunderstood…there is wine, but it’s not give to the laity.This is incorrect, every time I go the Mass, there is wine.
I think that is rather harsh, these are questions from someone raised Protestant, no harm in asking and offering opinion…I think like the previous person noted, authority is the real issue here, but some of the answers provided as to the “why” the church changed this practice is interesting.Maybe that Protestant is displaying the trait of disobedience. It may be common in the Protestant realm.
Let me add this: that we don’t know that in the early church that they always took bread and wine. A common name for the mass in Acts is “the breaking of the bread.”One poster said that they could never become a Catholic if the Church (Bishops) can decide what the Catholic practices will be.
I suppose the other option is that the Bishops shall not decide practices but the laity shall decide. That is preposterous. We don’t have the years of study, the office nor the state of mind to make those decisions. Holy Mother Church knows best!
Maybe that Protestant is displaying the trait of disobedience. It may be common in the Protestant realm.
I personally think this inconsistancy between the different Catholic rites is confusing and tends reduce credibility in those who determine practices…some do, some don’t, etc…just my opinion.I personally prefer they Byzantine method of distributing communion.
It is in our church. I would also ask your protestant friend why so many protestant churchs give out grape juice instead of wine–why do they believe that is valid? And why do so many do it so infrequently when Christ clearly commanded us to?I think you misunderstood…there is wine, but it’s not give to the laity.
Tom,I think you misunderstood…there is wine, but it’s not give to the laity.
I’m actually very much inclined to agree with Edwin on this, were it not for the fact that the Council of Trent declared:Actually the Hussites were reacting to the already existent practice, which was motivated by the fear of irreverence (wine–or, if you insist, the species of wine–is much easier to spill than the Host; I know this from experience as a lay Eucharistic minister in the Episcopal Church, though so far I’ve managed to avoid major disaster). The Church hardened its position in response to the Hussite, and later the Protestant, challenge. I think this was deeply stupid. The Church should not do things just to prove that it can. Unquestionably reception in one kind is valid, and it is appropriate in very limited circumstances. But it should never have been the norm. The Church’s practice of giving the laity communion in one kind provoked heresy; it did not guard against it in any way.
In Christ,
Edwin
If anyone says that the holy Catholic Church was not moved by just causes and reasons that laymen and clerics when not consecrating should communicate under the form of bread only, or has erred in this, let him be anathema.
Still, this practice does seem to me to be awfully stupid.{Session 21, Canon 2}
In all fairness, Edwin, the Council of Trent itself declared that the Latin Church’s decisions regarding this were merely disciplinary. Following these very same canons, the Council declared:No. Actually people like me have finally figured out that it was a matter of discipline largely in spite of your Church’s intractable stance over the centuries. The greater flexibility after Vatican II has helped, but post-Tridentine Catholicism created a whole set of confusions between discipline and dogma that still haunt us all.
And earlier the Council had said:The two articles proposed on another occasion but not yet discussed, namely, whether the reasons which moved the holy Catholic Church to decree that laymen and priests not celebrating are to communicate under the one species of bread only, are so stringent that under no circumstances is the use of the chalice to be permitted to anyone; and whether, in case it appears advisable and consonant with Christian charity that the use of the chalice be conceded to a person, nation or kingdom, it is to be conceded under certain conditions, and what are those conditions, the same holy council reserves for examination and definition to another time, at the earliest opportunity that shall present itself.
This is all from Session 21.Wherefore, though from the beginning of the Christian religion the use of both forms has not been infrequent, yet since that custom has been already very widely changed, holy mother Church, cognizant of her authority in the administration of the sacraments, has, induced by just and weighty reasons, approved this custom of communicating under either species and has decreed that it be considered the law, which may not be repudiated or changed at pleasure without the authority of the Church.