M
Mysty101
Guest
Redemptionis Sacramentum–
usccb.org/liturgy/documents/instructioneng.shtml
The Vatican instructions on the Eucharist–restating many of the norms in the GIRM
General Instruction of the Roman Missal
Redemptionis Sacramentum–
Most of us are in the US, and the norm here is standing with a bow as a sign of reverence.Ok. Let me think this through.
Not me friends. I genuflect. I will continue to genuflect. Nothing has been prescribed here in Ireland by our Bishops, but I think we need to be bold recognise him and confess that He is Lord.
- We genuflect once when we pass the tabernacle.
- We perform a double genuflection before the Blessed Sacrament when Jesus is exposed on the Altar.
- We do nothing when he is held up before our faces?
Some people will never understand wy we do it.
Some people will not like that we do it.
They are no reason to stop doing it.
Actually, I think the norm is now nothing more than a nod of the head. Remember when the bishops instituted this? Right in the middle of the worst scandal American Catholics had ever known … the homosexual abuse by priests of young boys. I can remember seeing the instructions come out and thinking “Huh? Do they not have bigger fish to fry?”Most of us are in the US, and the norm here is standing with a bow as a sign of reverence.
Main Entry: norm [m-w.com/images/audio.gif](javascriptThe **norm **for reception of Holy Communion in the dioceses of the United States is standing.
The key word there is norm… The norm is the way most people do things… Not all things… Then it is stated “Communicants should not be denied Holy Communion because they kneel.”
So… they expect some people to be kneeling…
I can see how it’s expected… but for them to say “norm”… when then there would be an “unnorm”
The Catholic Church does not suggest that receiving on one’s tongue is “more reverent”, nor does the Church suggest that when women cover their heads they “please the Lord.”If you read the book GET US OUT OF HERE!!! by Maria Simma (it’s about Purgatory) you’ll never take the Holy Eucharist by the Hand again!
You can NEVER go wrong by showing MORE REVERENCE!
Bowing, genuflecting, receiving on the tongue, wearing a hat or head covering (for women) will always PLEASE THE LORD!
We Catholics needs to be more reverent!
Is the Mass Worship or entertainment?
Blessings,
Joanie
Any proof?Actually, I think the norm is now nothing more than a nod of the head. Remember when the bishops instituted this? Right in the middle of the worst scandal American Catholics had ever known … the homosexual abuse by priests of young boys. I can remember seeing the instructions come out and thinking “Huh? Do they not have bigger fish to fry?”
While I can appreciate one’s desire to be obedient to his bishop, I think obedience is also a two-way street. Bishops must also be obedient to the teachings and norms of the church. It is not enough that only the laity exercise obedience. First, they must have good, solid examples from those whose job it is to “shepherd” their flock.
Interestingly enough, the bishops that are most obedient to Rome are also those where genuflecting/kneeling/altar rails are abundant in their dioceses. The dioceses where the most abuses occurs are also those where genuflecting/kneeling are actively discouraged, and altar rails are nonexistent. It appears that in many parishes, the norms are only enforced when they serve to lessen any outward signs of devotion.
The Church does not teach that any of these things are “more reverent”.Bowing, genuflecting, receiving on the tongue, wearing a hat or head covering (for women) will always PLEASE THE LORD!
We Catholics needs to be more reverent!
Ms.Simma was a crack-pot; her “revelations” were never approved by the Church.If you read the book GET US OUT OF HERE!!! by Maria Simma (it’s about Purgatory) you’ll never take the Holy Eucharist by the Hand again!
Only if you insist that words don’t mean what they say.**Gregory24 !
Honey, I kneel! and recieve on the tongue. One of about 10 in my parish who do so. Totally acceptable in any cathlolic church - doesn’t matter what ANYONE says.**
First, I am not ignorant of the GIRM’s latest instruction about bowing in reverence before receiving as the norm. The GIRM establishes the norm but in doing so does not forbid other appropriate signs of reverence, including genuflecting or receiving while kneeling. If the GIRM specifically mentions that kneeling is allowed, as it does, it must certainly not forbid the lesser action of genuflecting, especially if it is done in the line prior to actually stepping up to receive. In fact, the GIRM gives specific instructions that even if one kneels they are not to be denied the Eucharist.
Colin B. Donovan, STL (degree received from Angelicum in Rome) commented on the matter by saying:
“The bishops have set the bow as the norm. They have not forbidden kneeling or genuflecting. They cannot, as the Roman interpretations of the norms have made clear. Genuflection is a one knee kneel. It is contained within the statements permitting kneeling, since it is a lesser reverence than kneeling, though stronger than bowing. Standing and bowing replaces kneeling, as the original legislation authorizing bishops’ conferences to choose standing over kneeling makes clear. . . . Indeed, the real issue is not whether genuflecting is allowed but whether the USCCB having chosen standing and bowing as the norm criminalizes or makes disobedient those who desire to do something else. To that question Rome has answered an emphatic no, with respect to kneeling and implicitly genuflecting, and warned the clergy about making it seem so.”
It does not necessarily follow that since bowing is the norm that genuflecting is therefore criminalized. Though this can potentially be confusing for Catholics, I would suggest that the recent Redemptionis Sacramentum was promulgated to clarify. In no. 90 it says: “The faithful should receive Communion kneeling or standing, as the Conference of Bishops will have determined”, with its acts having received the recognitio of the Apostolic See. ‘However, if they receive Communion standing, it is recommended that they give due reverence before the reception of the Sacrament, as set forth in the same norms’” (176). Also, “Therefore, it is not licit to deny Holy Communion to any of Christ’s faithful solely on the grounds, for example, that the person wishes to receive the Eucharist kneeling or standing” (no. 92).
As I understand it, even though the American norms specify that the sign of respect before receiving is a bow of the head, when the Sacred Congregation for Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments was queried about whether continuing to genuflect was forbidden, they responded in the negative. Consequently, if genuflecting is not specifically forbidden by Rome, the burden of proof to the contrary certainly falls on the one trying to enforce such a non-existent prohibition.
“The way Americans read law; the norms would be interpreted strictly. But that interpretation is misleading. The law has to be understood in the sense in which it is intended by Rome (which approved the law and whose interpretation of the law is definitive), and Romans do not read law the same way Americans do. Americans tend to take a much stricter interpretation of law that admits of no exceptions unless they are stated in the text itself. Vatican officials, however, often understand laws in a more permissive way that allows for unwritten exceptions” (Jimmy Akin). There are a number of examples I could cite that refer specifically to posture during Mass (e.g., See attachment #2).
Again, genuflecting is a lesser act than kneeling and kneeling is specifically mentioned as an allowed and acceptable posture for receiving Holy Communion. I know I was not denied the Eucharist on Saturday, but even being reprimanded during reception and after Mass for something not disallowed—but even approved of—could prove to be a problem. But the real matter is that if the Holy See has allowed reception by standing or kneeling, genuflecting ahead of time is certainly not a violation of Church law. I am a ten-year convert to the Catholic Church and have always genuflected out of my great reverence and love for the Eucharist and the Church. I have always been encouraged to do so. For me it is a personal way of demonstrating my love and utter reverence for the Eucharist, the liturgy, and the Church… Never before have I been reprimanded for expressing my reverence to Our Lord in the Eucharist.
Sometimes I think the reprimand should be for those who refuse to show any reverence toward the Eucharist, but then again that is just my humble opinion.
Congregation de Cultu Divino et Disciplina Sacramentorum
Prot. n. 1322/02/L
Rome, 1 July 2002
“The Congregation in fact is concerned at the number of similar complaints that it has received in recent months from various places, and considers any refusal of Holy Communion to a member of the faithful on the basis of his or her kneeling posture to be a grave violation of one of the most basic rights of the Christian faithful…Even where the Congregation has approved of legislation denoting standing as the posture for Holy Communion, in accordance with the adaptations permitted to the Conferences of Bishops by the Institutio Generalis Missalis Romani n. 160, paragraph 2, it has done so with the stipulation that communicants who choose to kneel are not to be denied Holy Communion on these grounds.”
Jorge A. Cardinal Medina Estévez
Prefect
+Francesco Pio Tamburrino
Archbishop Secretary
I always genuflect right before I receive holy communion, and I always take it on my tongue as a sign of respect. I am 24 and it seems that I am deffinetely the only one that genuflects at my church in florida… what do you guys do?
There is a consistent theme running through the forum, most notably in reference to hand holding or the orans postion during the Our Father, and that theme is that doing something different than a) what we are supposed to do (or not do), and b) that is it not called for, or allowed specifically in the GIRM is a clear sign of those who are obstinate in not following Rome.
And to my constant amazement, these same people feel that as long as they think it is more proper, or reverent, or holy, they are allowed to adjust the rubrics of receiving Communion, while calling the hand holders dissidents, liberals, Modernists, etc, and disparaging the hand holder as self centered, horizontal in worship, and most certainly not holy, reverent, or proper.
There is no liturgical procession I am aware of or have ever seen (and I go back well before Vatican 2) in which people while in procession stop and geneuflect. We never did that when there were altar rails; we simply went up and knelt down. And to any Masses I have been to of recent years in which there is still an altar rail in use, no one genuflects on the way up.
As there are only a few individuals in any church (if any) who do choose to genuflect, they are right; the GIRM doesn’t prohibit it. It does, however, contain the norm that we are to reverence the Eucharist with a bow.
Given that doing something as different as a genuflection during a procession catches attention, and the obvious desire of the Church for uniformity of act and posture, those who are genuflecting, whether or not they choose it, are drawing attention to themselves. Given the norm of bowing, and the fact that the vast majority are not genuflecting, one can reasonably ask why, if bowing is considered by Rome to be a proper reverence, all cannot manage to do that?
It is also a fact that a sudden, unexpected genuflection directly in front of someone who is not expecting it is not only disruptive of their medation of what they are about, but also an invitation to cause them to fall. If for no other reason than the physical safety of the person behind you, genuflecting should be avoided.
Further, the fact that there is no norm for the posture and/or act during the Our Father but there is for receiving communion should be a greater reason to follow the norm. This alone would make all the discussion about hand holding during the Our Father even more poignant concerning Communion; sadly, those who are most vehement about the Our Father turn out to be those promoting a difference from an explicit norm during Communion.
If nothing else, it shows some similarities between themselves and those they are most disdainful of - those they label as dissidents, liberals and Modernists.
Perhaps because most think that vatican II gave a license to do what ever feels right for the same reasons people mimic the priest in the orans posture as if it adds some sort of “prayer power”, holding hands during the Our Father, sing top 40s Christian music etc…I always genuflect right before I receive holy communion, and I always take it on my tongue as a sign of respect. I am 24 and it seems that I am deffinetely the only one that genuflects at my church in florida… what do you guys do?