S
Sunbreak
Guest
This is not what “extraordinary” means for the Church, and you do a disservice to her and her members by perpetuating the misconception that “extraordinary=rarely used”.
Huh? That is exactly the original intent of using extraordinary ministers. They were to be used only when the clergy could not handle the amount of people receiving communion, not as some sort of “right” for lay people to administer communion.
To the original poster:
The pastor can decide whatever he wants in this regard. I would not build this into a discrimination type thing. Administering communion, whether body or blood of Christ is a privilege, not a right.
Huh? That is exactly the original intent of using extraordinary ministers. They were to be used only when the clergy could not handle the amount of people receiving communion, not as some sort of “right” for lay people to administer communion.
To the original poster:
The pastor can decide whatever he wants in this regard. I would not build this into a discrimination type thing. Administering communion, whether body or blood of Christ is a privilege, not a right.