Posted on 03/04/2020 3:39:44 PM PST by ebb tide
St. Peters Basilica on November 3, 2008, Pope Benedict XVI distributes Holy Communion on the tongue to the kneeling faithful.
March 4, 2020 (LifeSiteNews) A number of Catholic priests, a bishop, and a lay group are challenging the argument that banning Holy Communion on the tongue in favor of receiving in the hand decreases the risk of spreading the coronavirus.
The priests and bishop have pointed out that not only that receiving in the hand constitutes a risk of losing precious fragments of the consecrated host, but also that reception in the hand actually increases the risk of spreading diseases and germs.
Their warning comes as a number of dioceses around the world begin to implement bans on Communion on the tongue.
The Catholic Bishops Conference of England and Wales has issued guidance for parishes that say that in the current situation, where there are very few cases of the coronavirus in the U.K., anyone with cold or flu symptoms should be asked to receive the host on the hand only. The bishops add, We should be doing this anyway, every flu season.
The bishops go on to state that should the situation develop such that there are a number of cases in local communities or a case specifically linked to a parish community, then it is likely that parishes will need to suspend distribution of the Precious Blood from the chalice and for the host to be given on the hand only.
A number of dioceses in France have already taken the step of banning Communion on the tongue, while still allowing Communion in the hand. Bishop Joseph Galea-Curmi, auxiliary of Malta, has also issued a directive to churches in the country banning Communing on the tongue pending further directives. In response to the coronavirus, Catholic authorities in Jerusalem, Singapore, the Philippines, some U.S. dioceses, and other parts of the world have also issued either directives or guidelines in favor of giving Communion in the hand but not on the tongue.
Bishop Athanasius Schneider, however, has argued that Communion in the mouth is certainly less dangerous and more hygienic compared to Communion in the hand.
From a hygienic point of view, the hand carries a huge amount of bacteria. Many pathogens are transmitted through the hands. Whether by shaking other peoples hands or frequently touching objects, such as door handles or handrails and grab bars in public transport, germs can quickly pass from hand to hand; and with these unhygienic hands and fingers people then touch often their nose and mouth. Also, germs can sometimes survive on the surface of the touched objects for days.According to a 2006 study, published in the journal BMC Infectious Diseases, influenza viruses and similar viruses can persist on inanimate surfaces, such as e.g. door handles or handrails and handles in transport and public buildings for a few days, he said.
He described any ban on Communion in the mouth as unfounded compared to the great health risks of Communion in the hand in the time of a pandemic.
Schneider said its as if some Church authorities are using the coronavirus as a pretext to trivialize reception of Communion.
It seems also that some of them have a kind of cynical joy to spread more and more the process of trivialization and de-sacralization of the Most Holy and Divine Body of Christ in the Eucharistic sacrament, exposing the Body of the Lord himself to the real dangers of irreverence (loss of fragments) and sacrileges (theft of consecrated hosts), he said.
Schneider said nobody can force a Catholic to receive the Body of Christ in a way that constitutes a risk of the loss of the fragments, and a decrease in reverence, as is the way of receiving Communion in the hand.
He recommended making a Spiritual Communion rather than receiving Communion in a trivial manner.
In these cases, it is better to make a Spiritual Communion, which fills the soul with special graces. In times of persecution, many Catholics were unable to receive Holy Communion in a sacramental way for long periods of time, but they made a Spiritual Communion with much spiritual benefit, he said.
U.S.-based priest Fr. John Zuhlsdorf explained on his popular blog that based on his experience of nearly three decades of distributing Communion in both ways, he doesnt believe that Communion in the hand is safer than Communion on the tongue.
Fr. Zuhlsdorf states: When distributing Communion directly on the tongue, I rarely, rarely, have any contact with the tongue. When distributing on the hand, there is often, quite often, contact with the communicants fingers or palms.
I dont buy for a moment that pushing for Communion on the hand reduces the risk of spread of disease. I think that proper Communion on the tongue is safer, he said.
The priest stated that a bishop cannot require Communion in the hand at the Traditional Latin Mass.
The legislation of Summorum Pontificum is for the universal Latin Church and bishops cannot override it. The Instruction Universae Ecclesiae 28 says that Summorum Pontificum derogates from all liturgical law after 1962 that doesnt agree with the laws of 1962.
He said that if the coronavirus situation gets worse, so that there is truly a great risk of contagion when out and around, A) you dont have an obligation to fulfill and B) you dont have to go to Communion to fulfill your obligation. You can make a spiritual Communion, since you are in the state of grace. Father could, in fact, opt not to distribute Communion.
A number of other priests who frequently distribute Communion both in the hand and on the tongue have echoed Fr. Zuhlsdorfs observations.
Fr. Ryan Hilderbrand and Fr. Ray Blake have both taken to Twitter to state that they never make contact with members of the faithful when giving Communion on the tongue but often do when distributing Communion in the hand.
When people receive on the tongue while kneeling, I never get my finger licked.
When I think about how many times I brush my hand against someone else's while distributing in the hand, I remember that "reception on the tongue kneeling" is more sanitary.https://t.co/NjTYm0TRSq
Fr. Ryan Hilderbrand (@FrHilderbrand) March 3, 2020
The U.K.-based Latin Mass Society (LMS), an association of Catholic faithful dedicated to the promotion of the traditional Latin liturgy of the Catholic Church, has issued a statement explaining that in celebrations of the Extraordinary Form and other traditional Rites and Usages of the Latin Church, such as the Dominican Rite Holy Communion (the Host) may not be distributed in the hand, according to the universal liturgical law applicable to them.
The LMS notes that the guidelines from the bishops in England and Wales do not take the form of a decree with the force of canon law.
Their statement also observes that the distribution of the Host in the hand does not appear to be less likely to spread infection than the distribution on the tongue.
On the contrary, the statement continues, distribution on the hand has the result that the Host touches possibly infected surfaces, the palm of the left hand and the fingers of the right hand of the communicant, which is avoided in distribution by a priest directly onto the communicants tongue.
The statement by the LMS makes it clear that should the spread of COVID-19 necessitate the suspension of the distribution of Holy Communion on the tongue, this would mean the suspension of the distribution of Holy Communion to the Faithful in these [Extraordinary Form] celebrations.
Like Bishop Schneider, the LMS statement advises that in such circumstances, Catholic laity can make a Spiritual Communion.
Bishop Schneider has said that any ban on Communion on the tongue, while allowing Communion in the hand, constitutes an abuse of authority and has pointed out that during the Churchs 2,000-year history there were no proven cases of contagion due to the reception of Holy Communion..
I dont buy for a moment that pushing for Communion on the hand reduces the risk of spread of disease. I think that proper Communion on the tongue is safer, he said.
Ping
My diocese has just put the ban in today.
Sorry...I’ve always repelled from anyone but family feeding me.
I don’t know about this one. Would the virus transfer from priest to Christ’s body, and then to tongue? I believe it would stop at the body. If the priest washed his hands, more than ritualistically (since he just did prior to serving), I don’t see it spreading. There’s probably a greater danger of the virus being spread through the air.
Any excuse will do, eh?
“Suspend distribution of the Precious Blood from the chalice and for the host to be given on the hand only.
Fr. Z is correct.
No need to distribute the chalice. Yes, if the minister knows how to do it, then placing the host on the tongue is 100% safer than placing in the hand.
Just go to any mass and watch people receive the host in their hands and walk away. Who knows what they do with the hosts. Sad and wrong.
Communion Ping.
Yes, hands “do” get exposed to germs, but there is (or need be) no direct contact between the “dispensing” hand of the Eucharistic Minister and the “receiving” hand of the communicant.
“On the tongue”, however, puts the priests hand directly into the path of the exhaled breath of every communicant, with its suspended load of microscopic liquid droplets, which settle on the fingers, which then touch the Host and transfer that contaminant load DIRECTLY into the mouth of the next communicant.
These are scientific facts.......your “sources” are wrong.
More fake-science. Nobody exhales on the reception of the Host.
Heres a silly question: does Catholic Caucus have any meaning on FR? Asking for a friend.
We have a priest here in Dallas Diocese that for decades has been saying the no illness has been directly tied to Holy Communion - Precious Body or Precious Blood.
Our bishops have also mandated that the Precious Blood not be administered during flu season.
reminds me of “oh, ye of little faith!”
Pleas provide the source of your "scientific facts".
Using you own faulty logic, the priest at a novus ordo mass, breaths on his own hands when he self-communicates at Mass. With those hands, he then administers Holy Communion to umpteen Eucharist monsters, most all whom receive in the hand and they then place the host in their own mouths, thus contaminating their own hands, even though they had just been sanitized. Now with those recontaminated hands they pick up umpteen ciboriums and chalices and proceed to pass them around to each other. They then proceed to give Holy Communion to the entire congregation, whether in the hand or on the tongue, with those recontaminated hands.
Very risky, hygienically speaking
Wrong, as usual. People breath in and out constantly. When the Host is moved toward the persons face, some will be inhaling, some will be exhaling. They may pause breathing during the actual placement of the Host on the tongue, but the priests hand will be in the breathing zone more than long enough to be exposed to exhaled breath.
Crazy talk.
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