Maybe this question seems weird comming from me, but in the churches you go to, is there anyone besides the priest who hands out communion? Not the blessing or anything, only the handing out.
Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
Polycarp1 said:Nuns, monks, friars, canons religious, brothers, and sisters are not ordained, but vowed to "the religious life" (not meaning other people aren't religious, but using the older meaning of "religious" as "living out a rule [religio]". Some may indeed be ordained to the Priesthood, but others are not, and are regarded as laymen as opposed to clergy as regards the Sacraments.
Priests are 'ordained' (and deacons, too?), and religious are 'consecrated'
Hi faerieevafaerieeva said:I have given out communion myself for years, but didn't know if it was common practice in other countries or even other parrishes. In my parrish the 'Lector' usually was the being the 'extraordinary minister of the Eucharist', and I did that since I was 17.
It got stuck in my mind because of the question in the other thread about going forward and receiving blessings instead of communion. In our church it was common practice for the very young children, who did not yet receive communion, to come forward and instead of receiving communion, they received 'blessing' in the form of the sign of the cross made on their brow.
The extraordinary ministers of faith, me in many cases, did this as well. I'm now contemplating the difference in the blessing of me and the priest, because there is probably a difference, right?
Well, your parish is training you right! . . In our parish, the EME are allowed to give blessings . . <sigh>proud2bcatholic said:When I went through training to be an extraordinary minister, they taught us that if a person comes to us for a blessing that we are to direct them to a Priest or Deacon for the blessing.
Anyone can bless, a blessing being a intercessory supplication to God to bless another at your request. But when a layman blesses, he or she does it on his or her own authority, with nothing backing it but his or her status as a member of Christ's Mystical Body. When a priest blesses formally in accord with his holy office, he conveys the blessing petition of the entire Church, the whole Communion of Saints.thereselittleflower said:If you go to the priest, it is a priestly blessing . . but if you go to a layman, you are receiving a blessing form someone who has no priestly office . .
If I may presume to make a correction, I don't think the Catholic Church would say it in this way, which mars the distinction between Lord and Mediator and His priestly servant, but rather in locum Christi -- the Priest blesses in the place of Christ, serving as His lieutenant at that time and place. I may be wrong on this, but "another christus" didn't sound right from what I know of Catholic doctrine. I hope I do not offend -- Peace!....and the priest who is acting as another christus...
So, what we do is where ever we end up sitting (we try to sit in the section that goes forward to our priest) we do not get in any other line than the priest, and if someone asks about it, I just say we are going forward for a priestly blessing . .
I want to be blessed by the priest . . . I want to receive the GRACE that is imparted in such a blessing . . Grace that is not imprated with a blessing from a layman . .
Oftentimes it can be embarrassing at communion time for a Catholic not to receive communion and stay in the pew (you can't receive if you're not in a state of grace or haven't fasted for one hour). It has become the practice in many places for lay people who can't receive communion to cross their arms over their chests and the priest/deacon will give them a blessing instead of Holy Communion. Blessings during Mass should be limited to ordained ministers (EME's shouldn't give blessings at communion time).ShannonMcMorland said:I just wanted to ask why go for a blessing at Communion at all? Isn't the entire congregation given a blessing by the priest at the end of Mass? Or is there something special about a blessing at Communion time? Or maybe as an act of communion (as in the sense of unity)??![]()
In the SacredHeart of Jesus,
Shannon