Communion in The Hand and Similar Frauds Michael Davies
Communion in The Hand and Similar Frauds Michael Davies
Communion in The Hand and Similar Frauds Michael Davies
An Artificial Consensus
A most depressing aspect of contemporary life is the manner in which those who
control the media are able to fabricate an artificial consensus. The people of South
Vietnam were handed over to a Communist dictatorship principally as a result of the
consensus against the war fabricated throughout the West by the Liberal-controlled
media. The fundamental axiom of that Liberalism condemned by the Popes for
centuries is that each individual has the right to construct his own code of morality.
Society at large has already come to accept this concept. Women who murder their
unborn babies are exercising their "right to choose". Literature that was once termed
pornographic has been re-classified as "adult". Perverts who were once looked upon as
sick individuals, and from whom society needed to be protected, are now regarded as
minority groups with an "alternate" [but legitimate] lifestyle. Even Catholic bishops
treat them with far more sympathy than they do Catholic traditionalists.
I have described and documented in my book, Pope John's Council, the manner in
which the Fathers of Vatican II were caught up in an artificially created consensus,
which resulted in most of them abandoning the attitudes of a lifetime almost overnight.
There can have been few more dramatic examples of mass conditioning since Hitler
hypnotized the German people. It still seems hard to believe that almost all the three-
thousand [almost totally orthodox] Catholic bishops who entered St. Peter's Basilica on
Oct. 11, 1962, would emerge from it on December 8, 1965, as little more than
programmed puppets, men who were happy to abandon the accumulated wisdom and
spirituality of 2,000 years in favour of the clichés fabricated by the Liberal "experts', and
repeated ad nauseam in the media they controlled as 'new insights' in tune with the
contemporary mentality. If any proof is needed that the bishops have made themselves
the creatures of their own "experts", it can be found in the imposition of Communion in
the hand upon the faithful at the command of these "experts".
Once a consensus has been established within any social group, it is very hard for
individuals to resist conforming. When an individual does refuse to conform, he is more
likely to be rejected by the group than to affect the attitude of an appreciable number of
its members. Sometimes this is all to the good, often the opposite is true. Those who
cheered Jesus on Palm Sunday and called for His death on Good Friday were just going
along with the majority. Two collegial decisions of the episcopal college which took
place at the same time are recorded by St. Matthew: "Peter saith to Him: 'Yea, though I
should die with Thee I will not deny Thee. And in like manner said all the disciples
[Matt. XXVI, 35]". But in verse 56 we read: "Then the disciples, all leaving Him, fled."
However, one Apostle did take his place at the foot of the Cross-----but it was NOT St.
Peter. The principle that "where Peter is, there is the Church" applies usually, but not
invariably.
Mind Manipulators
This is not the place to discuss in detail the technique of group dynamics employed to
brainwash whole groups into submerging their individual intellects and wills into the
collective mind of the group. Where any individual puts up significant resistance, the
manipulators [correctly] assess that it would be counter-productive to devote excessive
effort to winning him over. They realize that it is control of the group which matters; the
recalcitrant individual, therefore, is simply isolated.
Fr. Paul Crane, S.J., has remarked to me that since Vatican II the Church throughout
the West has been subjected to a conditioning process on a global scale. He considers
that traditionalists have been very effectively isolated from the main group of Catholics
and that as long as our ability to influence the conditioned group is minimal, the
manipulators are not too worried about us. As I shall show in detail later in this study,
the ordinary faithful are being induced to abandon the traditional manner of receiving
Holy Communion by propaganda violating the basic norms of natural [let alone
Christian] ethics; propaganda which offends acceptable standards of scholarship,
semantics, and straightforward honesty. Ethical or not, such techniques can be effective.
The Nazis proved that the constant propagation of false or slanted information would
eventually convince the ordinary German, who was not able or, more likely, would not
trouble, to consult alternative sources of information. Stalin observed that most people
do not have critical minds. 1 Most are content to accept that official information is
correct information. Thus, in an editorial on May 21, 1976, The Universe [Britain's largest
Catholic weekly] informed its readers that:
"Pope Paul has given permission for Holy Communion in the hand because he believes,
as do the bishops, that it will emphasize the sacred nature of the communicant as a
temple of the Holy Spirit, as well as the sacred nature of the Eucharist as the Body and
Blood of Our Lord."
The ordinary Catholic would not read this and ask himself: "Is it true?" He would
accept that it was true simply because he had read it in The Universe. It would be
unrealistic to expect him to react in any other way. He will therefore remain unaware of
the fact that the Pope has made it quite clear that he wishes the faithful to adhere to the
traditional manner of receiving Holy Communion; that a minority of English bishops
fought the innovation tooth and nail; or that the traditional manner of reception did not
detract from the dignity of a Baptized Christian as a Temple of the Holy Ghost but was
intended to emphasize the nature of the Blessed Sacrament as the Body of Christ. The
Protestant Reformers abolished the traditional practice to emphasize their belief that the
Eucharist is NOT the Body of Christ, and yet The Universe claims, without a word of
explanation, that this innovation emphasizes the Real Presence, secure in the
knowledge that this gratuitous and nonsensical assertion will remain unchallenged, or
that, if a challenge does come, it can be suppressed and kept from the knowledge of its
readers.
The example par excellence of the manner in which Catholics can be conditioned is found
in the case of Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre. A detailed analysis of his writings and
sermons reveals that all he is doing is to uphold what was the norm before the Council,
and for doing this he has been threatened with excommunication and even described as
a renegade.
Yesterday's orthodoxy has become today's heresy. Catholics who would never have set
foot inside a Protestant church, because their parish priest told them not to, will now
trudge along dutifully to tedious 'unity' services because he tells them that they must.
He tells them this because it is what his bishop has ordered; and the bishop in turn is
simply passing on directives received from the Vatican. At no level of the pyramid is
there any general realization of inconsistent or illogical behaviour-----anyone who
questions the wisdom of contradicting an attitude to heresy dating back to the Apostolic
Church is written off as a crank. Much would be explained if only one could learn with
certainty who in [or outside] the Vatican initiates the directives and reforms which are
destroying the Faith.
The particular significance of the imposition of Communion in the hand is that it is the
epitomization of the "Spirit of Vatican II", the spirit which pervades the "Conciliar
Church" to which Archbishop Lefebvre has been ordered to submit. A careful study of
the factual background to this innovation should provide any Catholic still capable of
breaking free from his conditioning with the impetus necessary to take this salutary
step. This would not make life easier; to recognize the truth incurs the obligation of
acting upon it. Life is far less complicated for those who are happy to remain
conditioned
but, surely, no price can be too high for an individual to pay to regain his personal
integrity.
It will be proved in this study that the reception of Communion in the hand never
formed part of the program of the papally-approved liturgical movement: it was not
mentioned in any official document of Vatican II: it was introduced in the 16th century
by the Protestant Reformers specifically to repudiate belief in the Catholic Priesthood
and the Real Presence; it was re-introduced after Vatican II by rebel priests in Holland
and has spread throughout the world from there; it is being imposed upon the faithful
by techniques involving distortion of the truth, outright deceit, and even intimidation.
And what will be shown concerning Communion in the hand could also be shown of so
many other post-conciliar innovations which Archbishop Lefebvre correctly designates
as unacceptable to Catholics:
"In effect, all these reforms have contributed and continue to contribute to the
destruction of the Church, to the ruin of the priesthood, to the abolition of the Sacrifice
and the Sacraments, to the disappearance of the religious life, and to a naturalistic and
Teilhardian education in the universities, in the seminaries, in Catechetics: an education
deriving from Liberalism and Protestantism which had been condemned many times by
the solemn Magisterium of the Church.
"No authority, not even the highest in the hierarchy, can compel us to abandon or
diminish our Catholic faith, so clearly expressed and professed by the Church's
Magisterium for nineteen centuries." 2
A Process of Deceit
Apologists for the practice of Communion in the hand possess what they consider an
unanswerable argument to justify the innovation, namely, that it was the practice in the
early Church. Reduced to its simplest terms, their argument reads: "Because it is older it
must be better." This argument is totally fallacious and has been most forcefully
condemned by Pope Pius XII, as will be shown later. Those concerned to uphold the
traditional practice should concentrate on exposing the fallacy of this argument and not
be sidetracked into discussions of whether the practice of Communion in the hand was
once universal, how long it lasted, how genuine the texts brought forward to prove that
it was once the custom are, or even the reasons why it was abandoned in favour of
Communion on the tongue for the laity.
Traditionalists are sometimes accused of having a static concept of the Faith, of being
opposed to any development. On the contrary, it is the Liberals who wish to ignore
developments in liturgy and doctrine which have taken place under the inspiration of
the Holy Ghost. The most effective answer to contemporary liturgical and doctrinal
innovators is to be found in Newman's The Development of Christian Doctrine. In this
book the great Cardinal shows how it was not only natural but inevitable that there
should be development in every aspect of the Church's life. The first Christians still
frequented the synagogues and, in many cases, observed Jewish dietary regulations.
Centuries passed before the true nature of the Trinity and the Divine nature of Christ
were fully clarified. Forms of worship used in times of persecution were clearly no
longer adequate when the Christians emerged from the catacombs and were presented
with great basilicas. As with other doctrines, without ever contradicting what had been
previously believed, the nature of the Sacrifice of the Mass and the Real Presence of Our
Lord in the Eucharist became more and more apparent, and this was reflected in the
liturgy. Lex orandi, lex credendi, the manner in which the Church worships will reflect
what she believes. 3 Cardinal Newman correctly observed that "a developed doctrine
which reverses the course of development which has preceded it, is no true
development but a corruption; also that what is corrupt acts as an element of
unhealthiness towards what is sound." 4 There could be no more accurate description of
the nature and effect of the reversal of development which has occurred with the
introduction of Communion in the hand.
Liberals might answer that what was adequate until the second half of this century is no
longer adequate today, as we are now in the presence of 'modern man', of humanity
'come of age', of the 'adult Catholic'. In his book The Devastated Vineyard, Dietrich von
Hildebrand shows convincingly that the so-called "modern man" is a myth, invented by
the sociologists, that in his essential nature, in his basic needs, desires, and attitudes,
contemporary man does not differ from his predecessors of past centuries. 5 Human
nature does not change.
The key issue of the debate concerning the escalating imposition of Communion in the
hand is not whether it was once widespread in the early Church, but whether it should
be introduced in the present day. In order to simplify the debate, let it be conceded, for
the sake of argument, that for some centuries it was considered acceptable for the priest
to place the host in the hand of the communicant. There is, however, definite evidence
that, in at least some regions, the laity were receiving Communion on the tongue by the
end of the sixth century. 6 The Roman Ordo of the ninth century accepts Communion on
the tongue as the normal practice. 7 The Synod of Rouen in the year 650 condemned the
reception of Communion in the hand by the laity as an abuse. This indicates that the
reception of Holy Communion upon the tongue must have already become the
established practice. 8
Scholars are not clear why the transition took place-----differing explanations are
given and there is probably some truth in most of them. The precise reason is not
important, however. What is important is that the change must have been made for
good reason under the influence of the Holy Ghost. The change to unleavened bread is
given as one reason; the fear of abuse is another; Fr. Jungmann cites "growing respect
for the Eucharist" as the decisive reason. 9
A study of patristic and early medieval sources reveals not only a continually
heightened appreciation of the Eucharist as the true Body and Blood of Christ-----not
simply to be received, but to be adored-----but of the nature of the Mass as a solemn
Sacrifice, the prime purpose of which is the adoration of Almighty God. The essential
sacrificial act required a validly ordained priest, wheaten bread, and wine. It was
offered by the priest acting in the person of Christ. The laity had the awesome privilege
of being present at the Sacrifice-----but the liturgy naturally and logically came to
accentuate the primary role of the priest and the solemnity of the Sacrifice. A booklet of
propaganda in favour of Communion in the hand, The Body of Christ, issued by the
American Bishops' Committee on the Liturgy, writes of this as if it were something to be
condemned:
"In the eighth and ninth centuries the laity were almost completely excluded from the
celebration. They no longer took the offerings to the altar during Mass, but were
required to do so beforehand; the singing was done by the schola only; the general
intercessions disappeared; the faithful could no longer see what was happening on the
altar because the priest was in front of the altar, now sometimes completely surrounded
and completely hidden by the iconostasis; the canon was said quietly and everything
took place in silence or in a language less understood by the people."
This reads like a list of complaints made by a 16th century Protestant Reformer and, in
most of the instances given, is a condemnation of the present liturgical practice of the
Orthodox and Eastern-rite Catholics. As an example of the shoddy scholarship in this
pamphlet, and all the propaganda for Communion in the hand, it needs only to be
pointed out that the very idea of the faithful needing to see "what was happening on the
altar" would have been totally alien to the Christians of this time, as Fr. Charles Napier,
Superior of the London Oratory, has pointed out. 10 Similarly, from the time
that Christians first had churches, it was the almost invariable custom for Mass to be
offered facing the East, and so the priest always stood before the altar with his back to
the congregation. I have given sufficient evidence of this elsewhere and will not repeat
it here. [See my pamphlets, The Tridentine Mass and The New Mass, available from The
Remnant at $1 each.]
Once the true nature of the Mass is grasped, once there is a true understanding of
what takes place when a priest of God pronounces the awesome words of consecration,
it is not hard to understand why the most solemn moments of the Sacrifice take place
behind the Iconostasis in the Eastern Churches. It is, indeed, a matter for wonder that
any priest dares to pronounce these words or that the laity dare to be present when he
does. There is a passage in the ancient liturgy of St. James which expresses perfectly the
attitude which sinful men should adopt in the presence of this mystery, an attitude
epitomized perfectly by the manner in which Mass was celebrated by the close of the
ninth century, but which is found totally deplorable by today's proponents of
Communion in the hand. The passage reads:
"Let all mortal flesh be silent, and stand with fear and trembling, and meditate nothing
earthly within itself for the King of kings and Lord of lords, Christ our God, comes forward to be
sacrificed, and to be given for food to the faithful; and the bands of Angels go before Him with
every power and dominion, the many-eyed cherubim, and the six-winged seraphim, covering
their faces, and crying aloud the hymn, Alleluia, Alleluia, Alleluia. "
It was the consideration of all the reverence shown to the Blessed Sacrament, coupled
with the magnificent and solemn grandeur of the ceremonies of Holy Mass, that drew
from Frederick the Great that noble and magnanimous saying:
"The Calvinists treat Almighty God as a servant; the Lutherans as an equal; the
Catholics as a God." 11
Dietrich von Hildebrand had noticed the direction the innovations were taking as
early as 1966. Writing in the October issue of Triumph in that year, he noted:
"The basic error of most of the innovations is to imagine that the new liturgy brings
the holy sacrifice of the Mass nearer to the faithful, that shorn of its rituals the Mass
now enters the substance of our lives. For the question is whether we better meet Christ
in the Mass by soaring up to Him, or by dragging Him down into our workaday world.
The innovators would replace holy intimacy with Christ by an unbecoming familiarity.
The new liturgy actually threatens to frustrate the confrontation with Christ. It
discourages reverence in the face of mystery, precludes awe, and all but extinguishes a
sense of sacredness."
The final sentence could have been written specifically to describe the effect of
Communion in the hand!
2) Declaration of November 21, 1974, available from The Remnant at 6 for $1.
3) This principle is discussed in detail in my book, Cranmer's Godly Order, p. 57; and my pamphlet The
Roman Rite Destroyed, pp. 20/21. Both are available from The Remnant.
4) Development of Christian Doctrine, Ch. V, Sect. VI, 4.
5) The Devastated Vineyard (Franciscan Herald Press), p. 41. This important work can be purchased from
Roman Catholic Books, POB 255, Harrison, NY 10528.
6) S. Greg: Dialog. iii, 3 (PL, lxxvii, 224).
7) PL, lxxvii, 994.
8) Some authorities place the Synod of Rouen in the mid-ninth century. Others speak of two Synods. It is
the fact that Communion in the hand was condemned as an abuse which matters, not the exact date of the
Synod.
9) The Mass of the Roman Rite (London, 1959), p. 510.
10) The Clergy Review, August 1972, p. 628.
11) J. O'Brien, History of the Mass (New York, 1888), p. 381
What Was the Ancient Practice?
It is worth noting that the practice being imposed by our contemporary liturgical
commissars is not that described by St. Cyril, or described for that matter in standard
works of reference. Women did not receive the Host directly into their bare hands, but
were compelled to cover them with a cloth called the dominica, brought with them for
the purpose. The innovators cannot, thus, even claim to be reviving an ancient Catholic
custom. They are imposing upon the often unsuspecting faithful a manner of receiving
Communion invented by the 16th century Protestant Reformers.
A quotation attributed to St. Cyril of Jerusalem is the text most often used to justify
the innovation. This text has been carefully edited in a number of the propaganda tracts,
articles, and editorials intended to brainwash the faithful. Examples can be found in the
editorial from the London Universe, which has already been cited, also in a pamphlet
produced by the Catholic Truth Society of England & Wales, and in the pamphlet Take
and Eat produced by the [American] Federation of Diocesan Liturgical Commissions.
The full text is, however, contained in the pamphlet The Body of Christ produced by the
United States Bishops' Committee on the Liturgy.
St. Cyril was a bishop of Jerusalem in the 4th century and is distinguished chiefly for
the great series of lectures [catecheses] which he delivered to candidates who were to be
Baptized at Easter [probably in the year 350]. The introductory lectures and the eighteen
subsequent catecheses are classic theological documents, containing an outstandingly
clear and well-argued presentation of the main points of the Catholic Faith. Some of the
manuscripts in which these lectures have come down to us also contain five further
lectures, supposedly delivered to the same audience during Easter week, in which the
candidates were introduced to the great Sacramental mysteries of Baptism,
Confirmation, and the Eucharist [hence these five lectures are called the Mystagogical
Catecheses]. The manuscripts variously assign the Mystagogical Catecheses to authors
other than St. Cyril; later writers simply append them to the earlier collection of lectures
and regard them as authentic. Modern scholars are divided on their authenticity. [A
good summary of the present state of opinion can be found In Quasten, Patrology III,
364/5.] In any case, it is one of the doubtful lectures which is so frequently cited today
to justify Communion in the hand. Nevertheless, for the purpose of argument, it can be
accepted as genuine. Moreover, the features St. Cyril describes are, as will be shown,
corroborated by other patristic sources. It will be noted, when the entire quotation is
cited, that the author exhibits a clearly defined and cogently argued belief in the
essentially sacrificial nature of the Mass and in the full substantial reality of Christ's
presence in the sacred species-----[so much so that he was a great embarrassment to the
Protestant Reformers in the 16th century. He even speaks of a change of substance in
the elements in a manner reminiscent of the doctrine of transubstantiation.]
"Then, after you have partaken of the Body of Christ, come forward only for the cup of the
Blood. Do not stretch out your hands but bow low as if making an act of obeisance and a
profound act of veneration. Say 'Amen'. and sanctify yourself by partaking of Christ's Blood
also. While the moisture is still on your lips, touch them with your hands and sanctify your eyes,
your forehead, and all your other sensory organs. Finally, wait for the prayer and give thanks to
God, who has deemed you worthy of such mysteries." 12
The practice of touching the sensory organs with the Host and smearing them with the
precious Blood might be thought harmless, if a trifle odd, but it clearly had inherent
dangers. It could lead to an extravagant, perhaps superstitious, devotion to the
particular Host received by the communicant and to further extravagant piety. This was
indeed what did happen, and the practice of actually kissing the Host became
widespread. St. Cyril compared the smearing of the sensory organs with the Blood of
the Lamb immolated in the Eucharist, to the smearing of the doorposts of the captive
Jews in Egypt with the blood of a slaughtered lamb. He considered that just as this
practice protected the Jews, so the smearing of the sensory organs would prevent the
destructive evil of sensory temptation entering through them. 13
Further evidence of the wide geographical extension of this strange practice is provided
by another bishop of the first half of the fifth century. Theodoret, bishop of Cyrrhus in
Syria, who confirms that the excess of kissing the Host was already in use:
"One should consider how during the sacred mysteries we take the limbs of the Spouse, kiss
them, embrace them and apply them to our eyes." 14
This was no isolated extravagance. The practice of kissing the Host, made possible by
its reception in the hand and leading to a distorted theology of the Real Presence,
persisted at least down to the end of the 8th century. Our witness is St. John of
Damascus [675-749]:
"Let us receive the Body of the crucified, and applying it to our eyes, our lips, and forehead, let
us partake of the Divine burning
coal." 15
It is hardly surprising that, in view of such excesses, the Holy Ghost should have
prompted a change, i.e., the placing of the Blessed Sacrament upon the tongue, to
ensure proper reverence and decorum.
By the mid-thirteenth century, it was already a firmly established tradition that only
what had been consecrated should ever come in contact with the Blessed Sacrament. St.
Thomas Aquinas [1225-1274] writes:
"The dispensing of Christ's Body belongs to the priest for three reasons. First,
because, as was said above, he consecrates in the person of Christ. But as Christ
consecrated His Body at the Supper, so also He gave it to others to be partaken of by
them. Accordingly, as the consecration of Christ's Body belongs to the priest, so
likewise does the dispensing belong to him. Secondly, because the priest is the
appointed intermediary between God and the people, hence as it belongs to him to offer
the people's gifts to God, so it belongs to him to deliver the consecrated gifts to the
people. Thirdly, because out of reverence towards this Sacrament, nothing touches it
but what is consecrated, hence the corporal and the chalice are consecrated, and
likewise the priest's hands, for touching this sacrament. Hence it is not lawful for anyone
else to touch it, except from necessity, for instance, if it were to fall upon the ground, or else in
some other case of urgency." 16 [Emphasis added by the author]
"While in recent times great emphasis has been placed on the sacredness of the hands
of the priest, it must be noted that the anointing of the hands at ordination cannot be
connected with a special privilege of touching the Eucharist."
Well, St. Thomas Aquinas certainly saw such a connection, hundreds of years before
the existence of America had ever been imagined-----and it was clearly an accepted
tradition by his time. It may well be that this was not the precise or the only reason for
the origin of this practice, but to state that an action which has been invested with a
particular significance for up to 1,000 years does not possess this particular significance
is to rob the word 'symbol' of any meaning. It is also worth noting that the traditional
ordination rite found in the Roman Pontifical [a rite, by the way, that has been
Protestantized even more thoroughly than the New Mass] contains the following
admonition in the charge delivered by the bishop to the ordinands:
"Realize what you are doing, model yourselves on what you handle, and as you
celebrate the mystery of the Lord's death, see that your bodies are wholly dead to every
vice and carnal impulse."
This is a clear reference to the fact that the ordinands will soon be handling the Body of
Christ, which is spoken of as a privilege. If every Catholic were permitted to handle the
Blessed Sacrament, there would not be much point in making specific reference to it
here.
"The special anointing of the hands symbolizes the priest's public ministry of service
to others." [!]
Does it indeed? It would be interesting to have a source cited for this piece of
nonsense. Postmen, doctors, garbage collectors, teachers, road-sweepers, and the armed
forces all perform a "public ministry of service to others"-----perhaps they should have
their hands anointed?
"Further evidence that anointing gives no special title to touching the Eucharist is
derived from the reflection on the ministry of deacons, which was always connected
with the Eucharist; yet the deacon's hands were never anointed."
It can be pointed out that in some regions at least, the deacon's hands WERE
consecrated-----as the 6th century Epistle of Gildas and the 8th century Pontifical of Egbert
of York prove. While some instances of deacons administering the Host can be adduced
from the early centuries, the connection of the deacon with the Eucharist has
traditionally been associated with the chalice. This is made clear in the citation from St.
Thomas Aquinas, who clearly rules out the possibility of the deacon administering the
Host under normal circumstances. The Catholic Encyclopedia testifies:
"The care of the chalice has remained the deacon's special province down to modern
times. Even now in a High Mass the rubrics direct that when the chalice is offered, the
deacon is to support the foot of the chalice or the arm of the priest . . . As a careful
study of the first Ordo Romanus shows, the archdeacon in the papal Mass seems in a
sense to preside over the chalice, and it is he and his fellow-deacons who, after the
people have communicated under the form of bread, present to them the calicem
ministerialem with the precious blood." 17
The discussion so far can be summarized as follows: it is accepted, for the sake of
argument, that a form of Communion in the hand, though not the present form, did
exist in the Church for the first seven or eight-hundred years of her history, although
the practice of placing the Host on the tongue was known at least as early as the sixth
century. Unless we are to believe that the Holy Ghost abandoned the Church for 1,000
years, we must accept the fact that, under His guidance, a tradition evolved that only
the consecrated hands of a priest could touch the Host; we have the witness of St.
Thomas Aquinas that, by the 13th century, it was firmly established that not even a
deacon could do so under normal circumstances. It is noteworthy that those concocting
propaganda in favour of Communion in the hand, particularly that published under the
auspices of the hierarchy of the U.S.A., take it as established that any liturgical
development not in accordance with their own pet theories is an aberration. It must be
borne in mind continually that abuses such as lay ministers of Communion,
Communion in the hand, standing for Communion, or the vandalization of beautiful
sanctuaries, formed no part of the papally approved liturgical movement-----or indeed,
the official reforms envisaged by the Council Fathers of Vatican II.
There is no living priest who can speak with greater authority concerning the
liturgical movement and the Liturgy Constitution of Vatican II than Fr. Louis Bouyer.
He gave the Constitution a rapturous welcome in his book The Liturgy Revived, praising
it as the culmination of the movement-----and yet now he condemns the reform which
has been imposed as a deliberate turning of the back upon both. There is, he claims, no
liturgy worthy of the name in the Catholic Church today [referring, of course, to the
Latin rite]. 18 It is being no more than objective to point out that the bureaucrats, the
liturgical commissars who are imposing their diktat upon us today, are spiritual and
intellectual pygmies alongside a theological giant such as Dietrich von Hildebrand, who
writes: "Truly, if one of the devils in C. S. Lewis' The Screwtape Letters had been
entrusted with the ruin of the liturgy, he could not have done it better." 19 Indeed, it is
impossible not to see the destruction of the Roman Rite as the greatest triumph of Satan
since the Protestant Reformation-----and it appears that the Father of Lies is running out
of ideas as he is making precisely the same changes now as he did then.
In 1947 Pope Pius XII warned us against the very practices which are now universally
triumphant throughout the West. In his encyclical Mediator Dei, perhaps the most
sublime exposition of the nature of the Eucharist as a Sacrifice and Sacrament which has
been written since the Summa Theologica, he warned us of "a wicked movement that
tends to paralyze the sanctifying and salutary action by which the liturgy leads the
children of adoption on the path to their heavenly Father." This wicked movement was
concerned with reviving obsolete liturgical practices on the grounds that they are more
primitive. Pope Pius explains:
"The liturgy of early ages is worthy of veneration; but an ancient custom is not to be
considered better, either in itself or in relation to later times and circumstances, just
because it has the flavour of antiquity. More recent liturgical rites are also worthy of
reverence and respect, because they too have been introduced under the guidance of the
Holy Ghost, who is with the Church in all ages even to the consummation of the world .
. .the desire to restore everything indiscriminately to its ancient condition is neither wise
nor praiseworthy. It would be wrong, for example, to want the altar restored to its
ancient form of a table; to want black excluded from the liturgical colours, and pictures
and statues excluded from our churches . . . This attitude is an attempt to revive the
'archaeologism' to which the pseudo-synod of Pistoia gave rise; it seeks also to re-
introduce the many pernicious errors which led to that synod and resulted from it and
which the Church, in her capacity of watchful guardian of 'the deposit of faith'
entrusted to her by her Divine Founder has rightly condemned."
But what was rightly condemned in 1947 was wrongly imposed in 1977-----Pope Pius
XII did not mention such outrages as lay ministers of Communion, or Communion in
the hand: even the most extreme Protestantizers of his day had not imagined such
success possible!
12) S. Cyrilli, Catechesis mystagogica V, xxi-xxii, ed. Touttee-Maran, S. Cyrilli Hieros. opera omnia,
(Venice, 1763), pp. 331-2; reproduced in Migne, PG 33. On the question of the dubious authorship of this
work see: J. Quasten, Patrology, vol. III (Utrecht, Antwerp, 1963), pp. 364-366.
13) St. Cyril of Alexandria on Exodus: Glaphyra in Exodum II, ed. Aubert, S. Cyrilli Alexandriae opera (Paris,
1638), Vol. I, pp. 270-271; reproduced in Migne, PG 69.
14) Theodoret of Cyrrhus In Canticum Canticorum interpretatio I, 1, ed. Schultze-Noesselt, Theodoreti
Cyrrhensis opera (Halle, 1769-1774), vol 2, pp. 1 ff; reproduced in Migne PG 81, col. 27 ff.
15) De fide orthodoxa IV, 13, Migne PG 94, col. 1149B.
16) ST, III, Q. 82, Art. 13.
17) CE (1913) vol. iv, p. 649, col. 2.
18) The Decomposition of Catholicism (Franciscan Herald Press, 1969), p. 99.
19) The Devastated Vineyard, p. 71.
Ancient Rites and Customs
Even the most cursory study of the first eight centuries of the Church's history brings
to light innumerable rites and customs which were subsequently abandoned.
Candidates for Baptism were required to present themselves for "scrutinies" on seven
successive days; to prostrate themselves while lengthy exorcisms were read; the priest
anointed their lips and ears with his saliva; they were anointed from head to toe with
exorcised oil . . . after Baptism the candidates were anointed with perfumed unguents;
after their First Communion they were sometimes given a draught of milk and honey.
During the Mass catechumens were ordered to leave the church after the Liturgy of the
Word [the Mass of the Catechumens]; babies who were Baptized were given Holy
Communion under the form of wine. Long and arduous public penances were imposed
for certain sins-----penitents were excluded from the churches and had to remain outside
in sackcloth and ashes begging for prayers; Lent was truly a time of severe penance, of
fasting and abstinence; widows and virgins in particular were exhorted to fast often and
pray for the Church. There were very strict rules for anyone wishing to invite a widow
for a meal. "Let them be ripe in years," wrote St. Hippolytus, "and let him send them
away before evening." Among those who could not be accepted as candidates for
Baptism were sculptors, painters, actors, or anyone who gave theatrical performances,
charioteers, profligates, eunuchs, charmers, mountebanks, cutters of fringes of cloth,
and soldiers. Concubines were acceptable if they had remained faithful to their master.
Christians were urged to rise at about midnight, wash their hands and pray. If they
signed themselves with their moist breath, and caught their spittle in their hand, their
bodies were sanctified right down to their feet . . . So great was the veneration of the
primitive Christians for the Blessed Sacrament that It was placed in the grave with the
dead, in order to safeguard him or her from the wiles of the devil and serve as a
companion for the body in death, as in life. This practice was condemned by the first
Council of Carthage, in A.D. 393.
The attitude of the early Christians towards schism and heresy is certainly relevant
today, in view of the prevailing indifference to truth masquerading under the name of
'ecumenism'. Those who quote St. Cyril's description of the distribution of Holy
Communion would certainly not wish the faithful to learn of his views on heresy:
"Let us hate them who are worthy of hatred, withdraw we from them whom God
withdraws from; let us also say unto God with all boldness concerning all heretics, 'Do
not I hate them, O Lord, that hate Thee?" 20
There is no lack of quotations from other Fathers of the Church expressing similar
sentiments.
The list of ancient customs could be extended indefinitely. It is of no little interest to
examine those that have been revived, or later developments that have been reversed,
and look for a common denominator in them. This common denominator is not hard to
find -----it is the aim of bringing Catholic worship into conformity with that of the
Protestant sects. The replacement of altars by tables, communion under both kinds, an
audible vernacular liturgy, the abolition of black vestments, of explicitly sacrificial
prayers, of wafer-like altar breads. I will not go into detail here, but will simply refer
readers to my book Cranmer's Godly Order. I provide more than enough evidence there
to prove that the present liturgical revolution, while not identical with Cranmer's, has
more than sufficient parallels to outrage any Catholic who loves the Faith. There is,
however, no little irony in the fact that Cranmer was sufficiently conscious of the
solemnity of Holy Communion, even in his own version denuded of our Lord's Real
Presence, to restrict its distribution to the ordained clergy. There were no lay ministers
of Communion for him!
"I cannot see how the seventh section requiring the bread of the Lord to be put not in
the hand, but in the mouth, of the recipient, can be consistent. Certainly the reason
given in this section, namely, lest those who receive the bread of the Lord should not eat
it but take it away with them to misuse it for superstition or horrible wickedness, is not,
it seems to me, conclusive; for the minister can easily see, when he puts the bread in the
hand, whether it is eaten or not. In fact, I have no doubt that this usage of not putting
these sacraments in the hands of the faithful has been introduced out of a double
superstition; firstly, the false honour they wished to show to this sacrament, and
secondly the wicked arrogance of priests claiming greater holiness than that of the
people of Christ, by virtue of the oil of consecration. The Lord undoubtedly gave these,
His sacred symbols, into the hands of the Apostles, and no one who has read the
records of the ancients can be in doubt that this was the usage observed in the churches
until the advent of the Roman Antichrist.
"As, therefore, every superstition of the Roman AntiChrist is to be detested, and the
simplicity of Christ, and the Apostles, and the ancient Churches, is to be recalled, I
should wish that pastors and teachers of the people should be commanded that each is
faithfully to teach the people that it is superstitious and wicked to think that the hands
of those who truly believe in Christ are less pure than their mouths; or that the hands of
the ministers are holier than the hands of the laity; so that it would be wicked, or less
fitting, as was formerly wrongly believed by the ordinary folk, for the laity to receive
these sacraments in the hand: and therefore that the indications of this wicked belief be
removed-----as that the ministers may handle the sacraments, but not allow the laity to
do so, and instead put the sacraments into the mouth-----which is not only foreign to
what was instituted by the Lord but offensive to human reason.
"In that way good men will be easily brought to the point of all receiving the sacred
symbols in the hand, conformity in receiving will be kept, and there will be safeguards
against all furtive abuse of the sacraments. For, although for a time concession can be
made to those whose faith is weak, by giving them the Sacraments in the mouth when
they so desire, if they are carefully taught they will soon conform themselves to the rest
of the Church and take the Sacraments in the hand." 21
It will be noted here that the consecration of the priest's hands is seen as indicating
the privilege of handling the Host, something denied in such propaganda tracts as
Take and Eat. The fact that the Protestant Reformers introduced Communion in the
hand specifically to deny the Catholic doctrines on the priesthood and the Real
Presence invested the practice with an anti-Catholic signification from that time
onwards. This was a signification it did not possess in the early centuries. This
practice is, then, totally unacceptable in Catholic worship, and can never become
acceptable. Contemporary Protestants would certainly not change to the reception of
Communion on the tongue to accommodate Catholics, and so, in the interests of a
spurious ecumenism, Catholics are being made to accept what is now a specifically
Protestant practice in order to remove any remaining vestige of external respect for
the Blessed Sacrament which those who consider it to be no more than bread would
find offensive. This is something which should not surprise us-----it is simply a
logical continuation of the pattern which began with the destruction of the Mass of
St. Pius V. [Emphasis added by the Web Master]
21) This is an original translation but Bucer's Censura has now been republished with
the Latin text and an English translation on parallel pages: Martin Bucer and the Book of
Common Prayer, ed. E. C. Whitaker (Mayhew-McCrimmon, Essex, England).
An Abuse Fostered by Disobedience and Deceit
Communion in the hand was re-introduced into the Catholic Church as an act of
rebellion soon after Vatican II. It began in Holland as an arbitrary act of defiance of
legitimate authority. Mandatory liturgical norms were defied and Communion was
distributed in some Catholic churches in what had been, since the Reformation, the
characteristically Protestant manner. It was an abuse and should have been dealt with
by the bishops immediately and effectively. Priests who refused to conform to the law
of the Church should have been suspended. Such action was not taken, and the practice
spread to Germany, Belgium, and France. In these countries the Bishops also betrayed
their office and allowed the abuse to go unchecked. Thus a practice which had already
been made unacceptable to Catholics because of its adoption by Protestants to
symbolize their rejection of Catholic Eucharistic teaching, was made doubly
unacceptable when it became a symbol of the rejection of ecclesiastical authority by
Liberal clerics.
The consequences of this rebellion became so serious that the Pope consulted the
Bishops of the world, and, after obtaining their opinions, promulgated the Instruction
Memoriale Domini, in 1969. This Instruction is included [click link above or refer to
contents page of this section (back button below)] and will be referred to from time to
time. The principal points contained in it are:
3. It is a sign of reverence which does not detract from the dignity of the
communicant.
Therefore:
"The Apostolic See strongly urges bishops, priests, people to observe this law, valid
and again confirmed, according to the judgment of the majority of the Catholic
episcopate, in the form which the present rite of the sacred liturgy employs, and out of
concern for the common good of the Church."
However, a calamitous error of judgment then followed. It was agreed that wherever
the practice "has already developed in any place" a two-thirds majority of the episcopal
conference could petition the Holy See for permission to legalize the abuse. Quite
clearly, the phrase "has already developed" meant by that date, May 28, 1969. Countries
where the practice had not developed by that date were obviously excluded from the
concession-----and all the English-speaking countries come into this category. Liberal
priests in certain countries had found that if they broke the law then the Holy See
would amend the law to conform with their disobedience. Liberals in other countries
presumed that, if they followed suit, the Vatican would continue to surrender. Their
judgment was correct, and not simply as regards Communion in the hand. However,
there was one important difference in the situation before and after Memoriale Domini.
The Bishops who, since May 1969, first tolerated, then approved, and are now trying to
impose the abuse, are acting in explicit defiance of the clear wishes of the Holy Father----
-and yet these same men have the hypocrisy to cite loyalty to the Pope as an excuse for
refusing permission for the celebration of the Mass of St. Pius V! In fact, a clear and
consistent criterion has been applied by the bishops in respecting the wishes of the
Pope: where his wishes are ignored in order to destroy the Faith, this is acceptable;
where his wishes are ignored in order to defend the Faith, this is unacceptable.
Communion in the hand was thus born in disobedience and the bishops are now
fostering it by deceit. The principal instrument for deceiving the American faithful is
the booklet, The Body of Christ, published by the American Bishops' Committee on the
Liturgy. There is a popular saying that those whom the people cease to respect they
cease to obey. Any bishop who fails to publicly repudiate this shameful propaganda
tract merits neither respect nor obedience. Such bishops merit the appellation of
hirelings rather than shepherds. Strong words? Perhaps, but easily justified.
A booklet entitled Preaching and Teaching About the Eucharist has been written by one
Joseph M. Champlin [presumably a cleric, although he doesn't bother to say so]. It is
published by the Ave Maria Press and contains potted sermons intended to popularize
the deceptions in The Body of Christ at the parish level. This is how Joseph M. Champlin
recommends the parish clergy to explain the revival of Communion in the hand to their
congregations [p. 15]:
"Around the time of the Second Vatican Council, some Catholics, following the
liturgical principles approved by the bishops, sought to have the ancient practice of
communion in the hand restored as an option. As these desires intensified, Pope Paul
surveyed bishops throughout the world about the desirability of reintroducing this as
an alternative to communion given directly on the tongue. In response to their views,
our Holy Father decreed that the present method would be retained, but that bishops in
a particular country might vote to introduce communion in the hand as an option.
Within a few years' time, the bishops of 54 countries have voted in this fashion, with
our bishops the most recent hierarchy to do so."
This is propaganda in the direct tradition of the Third Reich. Joseph Goebbels could
not have improved upon it. Note that there are no direct lies. Joseph M. Champlin
wishes congregations to be told that some Catholics sought to have the ancient practice
restored -----he omits to add that they took the matter into their own hands without
waiting for permission. The Pope did, indeed, "survey" bishops throughout the world,
but Joseph M. Champlin deems it unnecessary for congregations to be told that the
bishops voted overwhelmingly against the innovation. Is it conceivable that the
ordinary Catholic, without any background information, could react in any other way
but to conclude that the bishops had approved it? Memoriale Domini did, indeed,
concede that bishops in a particular country might vote to legalize the abuse [they could
hardly "introduce communion in the hand" as it could only be legalized where it was
already established illegally]-----but Joseph M. Champlin does not think it would be
helpful to let congregations know that this concession applied to countries where the
abuse had been established by May 1969. He also deemed it prudent not to have them
informed that the Holy Father had strongly urged bishops, priests and laity to observe
the traditional practice and had warned of the dangers to which the innovation could
lead. The nearest Joseph M. Champlin comes to outright untruth is by stating that the
rebels who initiated the abuse were "following the liturgical principles approved by the
bishops" during "the Second Vatican Council". Once again, the layman with no
background information will therefore conclude that even if not directly mandated by
Vatican II, Communion in the hand is the type of reform for which the bishops voted.
There is not one word anywhere in the Liturgy Constitution of Vatican II which hints at
this or at any similar innovation. The Council Fathers would, for the most part, have
been horrified at the thought. Just how far they were from approving it is proved by the
large majority of bishops voting AGAINST it as late as 1969. However, in making this
allegation, Joseph M. Champlin is adding his testimony to the accuracy of Chapter XVI
of my book, Pope John's Council, in which I show that the seeds of all the post-conciliar
abuses are contained in the Constitution itself; they are the cunningly contrived
ambiguities set to explode after the Council, the "time bombs" introduced by the
'experts' who drew up the documents for which the [mostly naive] bishops voted.
At this moment some readers might object that, perhaps, in popularizing The Body of
Christ, Joseph M. Champlin has misrepresented the case as presented in this booklet,
which carries the authority of the bishops. On the contrary, Joseph M. Champlin has
popularized their text with complete accuracy. At the risk of being repetitive, the
parallel passage will be quoted in full, and for a very good reason. The object of this
study is to prove to Catholics that they have been deliberately deceived. It would take
several volumes to analyze every example in The Body of Christ and similar tracts. But if
it is accepted that deceit has been proved conclusively in even one instance, then those
readers who have not been completely brainwashed may be able to begin the painful
process of overcoming their conditioning.
This is what is stated in The Body of Christ, on pages 15 and 16. [Note that even
Joseph M. Champlin's linking of the abuse with the Constitution on the Liturgy is
paralleled here.]
"As we mentioned above, after the Constitution on the Liturgy was published, there was a
return to the ancient practice of communion in the hand in some countries. When the
custom had gained ground bishops and conferences of bishops looked to the Holy See
for directives.
"The Holy Father put the Consilium for liturgical reforms in charge of the matter. On
October 28, 1968, it sent a circular letter to the presidents of the conferences of bishops
throughout the world asking them to make known the thought of the individual
bishops of their own country on this important subject.
"After setting forth the pros and cons, the circular asked that after a careful examination
with the conference, a secret vote should be taken on three questions:
1. If it should be permitted, during communion, to
receive the host in the hand, in addition to the traditional way.
2. If it were considered opportune that, in the judgment of the bishop,
experiments should first be carried out in small communities.
3. If it were considered that the faithful, after a careful catechetical preparation,
would receive the rite well.
"The Consilium study was the source for the Instruction Memoriale Domini, of May 29,
1969, and of the response which was to grant the faculty to the conferences that
applied."
Having taken note of the methods adopted in The Body of Christ, it is far from
unlikely that Catholics who cite Memoriale Domini to their parish priests or bishops will
be told that the Holy Father has changed his mind and now approves of the practice.
On the contrary, a clear directive was given in the official publication for the Roman
Clergy as recently as 1977 that the abuse of Communion in the hand is strictly
forbidden in Rome and throughout Italy.
If You Can't Beat Them, Join Them
To their everlasting shame, the Bishops of such countries as Great Britain, Canada,
and the U.S.A. have not simply succumbed to blackmail and obtained permission to
legalize an abuse which can lead to a profanation of the very Body of Christ, but they
are now engaged in an all-out campaign to impose it as the norm. This is something
which no one could possibly deny after reading such official propaganda tracts as The
Reception of Holy Communion in the Hand, published by the Catholic Truth Society of
England and Wales, or such American offerings as The Body of Christ or Take and Eat.
These publications contain page after page of the most slanted propaganda which is
clearly inspired by the belief that most of the laity have already been conditioned
beyond the point where they are capable of independent thought. This propaganda
consists, in the main, of totally gratuitous assertions. The only appropriate response to
these assertions is to ask "How?"-----"Why?"-----"Who says so?" -----"How do you know?"--
---"Where is your proof?"
Here are just a few examples from page 17 of The Body of Christ. It differs in no way
from the propaganda utilized in other countries.
The converse is that the reception of Holy Communion on the tongue teaches the
opposite-----in which case the Church has been gravely at fault for more than a thousand
years, as are the Orthodox Church and the Eastern Catholic rites today, and the Pope
himself and the bishops of Italy. The fallacy here is the implication that the aim of
Communion on the tongue is to prove that the hand is less good than the tongue, a
suggestion which has never been made. It is a sign of reverence and respect, intended
to show in a most striking manner that what we are receiving is not earthly bread but
the Bread of Angels. [Emphasis added by the Web Master]
Does it indeed? How does receiving Communion in the hand remind us of this?
Who says that it does? And why doesn't receiving Communion on the tongue remind
us of the same thing?
"Receiving the Lord into the palm of our hand brings out the truth that we are
cleansed and consecrated by these rites, sharers in Jesus' priesthood, and a new
creation."
Therefore, receiving Communion on the tongue obscures this truth? Pity the thousands
of millions of Catholics, priests and lay [including countless Saints], who have had this
truth obscured. Pity the poor Catholics in the diocese of Rome whose bishop is
preventing them from realizing this. Pity our unhappy brethren in the Ukrainian rite,
whose liturgy fails to bring out this truth.
"In view of the state of the Church as a whole today, this manner of distributing
Holy Communion [on the tongue] must be observed, not only because it rests on a
tradition of many centuries but especially because it is a sign of reverence of the faithful
towards the Eucharist. The practice in no way detracts from the personal dignity of those
who approach this great Sacrament, and it is part of the preparation needed for the
most fruitful reception of the Lord's Body." [Author's emphasis]
Appendix:
"1. As to the giving of Holy Communion in the mouth, it is emphasized that no change
has been made in the decision taken by the Italian Episcopal Conference in 1974 to keep
the traditional practice (cf. circular letter of the general Secretariate, n. 1197/74, in
Liturgia n.189, 1975, pp. 67-68). Therefore in Rome also all priests are bound to keep
strictly to the rule, in full conformity with what has been authoritatively determined by
the Italian bishops.
2. As for the practice adopted by some groups of the faithful and some religious
communities, of giving themselves Communion directly, we recall that the action
accomplished by Christ in the institution of the Eucharist and confirmed by the
tradition of the Church is repeated in a more concordant manner when the eucharistic
Bread is actually given or distributed to the faithful (cf.M.26:26; Mk.14:22); L.22:19). For
this reason the Rite De sacra Communione et de Cultu mysterii eucharistici extra Missam (cf.
Tip. Poliglotta Vaticana, 1973) at n.21, para. iv prescribes: 'Holy Communion should be
distributed by the competent minister, who shows and gives to the communicant the
particle of consecrated Bread'."
I have already referred to the fact that Communion in the hand is probably the most
dramatic symbol of the gradual replacement of the cult of God by the cult of man. Prior
to Vatican II the prime concern of the Church was the worship and dignity of God.
Since the Council the Church has turned in upon itself; it has become preoccupied with
an obsessive and unhealthy introspection. It cares little for God, little for
the unevangelized mass of mankind. It devotes its energies to changing liturgical
minutiae, the hem-lines of nuns, the sanctuaries of churches, the phrasing of prayers.
The symbol of this introspection is the turning round of the altars. Prior to Vatican II
priest and people celebrated Mass as a united body, facing out towards the East, symbol
of Christ the Sun of Justice, symbol of the Resurrection and the Second Coming. To
quote Fr. Jungmann, a favourite author of the Liberals, referring to a custom firmly
established by the fourth century:
"Now the priest is standing at the altar, generally built of stone, as the leader of his
people: the people look up to him and at the altar at the same time, and together with
the priest they face towards the east. Now the whole congregation is like a huge
procession, being led by the priest and moving east towards the sun, towards Christ the
Lord." 22
Today the worshipping community has turned in upon itself, President and People
contemplate each other and seem pleased with what they see. And this process of self-
contemplation has the effect of increasing the preoccupation with the dignity not of God
but of the people. Every-----I repeat, every traditional sign of reverence towards the
Blessed Sacrament during the distribution of Holy Communion has been abolished.
Imagine the reply a potential convert would have received had he approached a
Catholic priest before Vatican II, and in most cases for some years after, and asked what
special signs of reverence were used by Catholics to indicate their belief that the Blessed
Sacrament is God!
The priest would have explained that communicants knelt reverently, received the
Host on the tongue, only the consecrated hands of a priest could touch It, or touch the
chalice, the corporal, pall, or the purificator which came into contact with the sacred
species. [The final three could be washed by religious or lay persons after having first
been washed by a cleric in major orders, and the water of the first washing poured into
the sacrarium, Canon 1306]. From the moment of Consecration until after the
Communion of the people the priest would keep the thumb and forefinger of both
hands together, to ensure that the smallest particle of a Host was never dropped.
He would then open them over the chalice while the server poured wine and water
over them in a series of meticulously prescribed ablutions. Imagine, therefore, the reply
of any priest you knew before Vatican II if you had suggested to him that all these signs
of reverence should and would be abolished-----and yet most of the priests who would
have exploded with indignation at such a suggestion have accepted the changes
without protest, if without enthusiasm. Can it be seriously denied that the Church is in
an advanced stage of brainwashing?
The idea that to kneel is undignified is far from new. It was an important part of Nazi
propaganda. Elizabeth Gerstner is a prominent leader of Catholic resistance to the
tyranny of the "Conciliar Church" in Germany. During the war her family, like so many
of the European traditionalists, were prominent in their opposition to Nazism. She
herself was imprisoned at the age of twenty-one. In a recent letter to me she
remembered a favourite slogan of Nazi propaganda: Ein Deutscher kniet nicht vor seinem
Herrgott, em Deutscher steht vor seinem Gott. ["A German does not kneel before his God, a
German stands before his God."] The National Socialist Propaganda for schools [N.S.
Schulungsbriefe] issued by Dr. Goebbels' propaganda-ministry, calumniated "the Jewish
corruption" of the Catholic Church [semitische Verseuchung]. The slave kneels, claimed
Dr. Goebbels; Germans on the contrary are freie Menschen, free men. Equally
unacceptable to Dr. Goebbels was the failure to worship in German. Well, he would
find much to commend in the "Conciliar Church"!
The fact that kneeling is not usual in the Eastern rites, Catholic or Orthodox, is not
relevant to the question of kneeling within the Latin rite. Eastern Catholics have their
own traditional manners of expressing reverence, such as very frequent Signs of the
Cross. In the West kneeling is a traditional sign of reverence-----this point is emphasized
in a recent series of textbooks for Protestant children in Britain:
"If you have lost something, and you think it might be under your bed, you kneel
down to look underneath it. This does not mean anything. It is the natural thing to do.
But kneeling can also be a very special symbol. In feudal times a man knelt before his
overlord. He put his hands between the hands of his lord and made his oath,
promising to be a true and faithful servant. This is called paying homage. It is still done
today before a king or queen. When the Queen of England was crowned in 1953, each
lord of the realm knelt before her, put his hands between hers, and promised to be a
true and loyal subject.
"Kneeling down before another person is always a sign of respect for someone
greater. The greatest kind of respect is called reverence. That is why it is a very ancient
custom for men to kneel down before their God and worship Him. The Moslems,
followers of the Arab prophet named Mohammed, do not only kneel down. They also
touch the ground with their foreheads when they worship Allah, as they call God." 23
There are many precedents for kneeling in adoration in the Bible-----in the New as well
as the Old Testament. 24 In Psalm 94 we read:
For the Lord is a great God,
and a great King . . .
Come let us adore and fall down:
and weep before the Lord that made us.
What more fitting response could there be than to follow the example of the psalmist,
when our very God is offered to us in Holy Communion by the consecrated hands of
His priest which have just offered Him in Sacrifice?
22) J. A. Jungmann, SJ, The Early Liturgy (Notre Dame Press, 1959) p. 138.
23) N. J. Bull, Symbols, Part 2, Actions (London, 1967).
24) See, for example, 3 Kings 8: 54; Daniel 6: 10; Luke 22: 41; Acts 9: 40; Acts 20: 36
Venite, Adoremus, Et Procedamus
Ante Deum
In kneeling before our God and allowing Him to be placed upon our tongues by the
consecrated hands of a priest we are in good company. We have the consolation of
receiving Him as did St. Thomas Aquinas, St. Francis of Assisi, St. Ignatius of Loyola, St.
John Bosco, St. Teresa of Avila, St. Bernadette, St. Therese of the Child Jesus, St. Maria
Goretti, St. Thomas More, the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales, the children of
Fatima-----the list is endless! We can unite ourselves with this army of Saints and the
countless host of good and faithful Catholics who for more than a millennium have
received Communion in the traditional manner. Alternatively, we can join those
Catholics who have "come of age", who are "mature" and "adult", who stand before the
priest, hold out their hands and say:
"A Conciliar Catholic does not kneel before his God, a Conciliar Catholic stands
before his God."
The truth of the matter may well be that a "Conciliar Catholic" has no God but
himself.
Dietrich von Hildebrand was another staunch opponent of the Nazis. Fascists and
Communists do not like people who ask questions. They prefer those who submit
without question to the Party diktat. Dietrich von Hildebrand continued asking
questions until death robbed us of the greatest lay defender of the faith in the English
[and German] speaking world. In The Devastated Vineyard he demands [pp. 67/8]:
"Why, one asks oneself, has kneeling been replaced by standing? Is not kneeling the
classical expression of adoration? It is in no way limited to being the noble expression of
petition, of supplication; it is also the typical expression of reverent submission, of
subordination, of looking upwards, and above all it is the expression of humble
confrontation with the absolute Lord: adoration. Chesterton said that man does not
realize how great he is on his knees. Indeed, man is never more beautiful than in the
humble attitude of kneeling, turning towards God. So why replace this by standing?
Should kneeling perhaps be prohibited because it evokes associations with feudal times,
because it is no longer fitting for 'democratic' modern man? Does religious renewal lie
in suffering from an unfortunate case of 'sociologitis', which nonsensically wants to
deduce fundamental human phenomena from a particular historical epoch and kind of
mentality? And why can the faithful no longer kneel beside one another at the
Communion rail-----which is after all a great expression of humanity-----why must they
march up to the altar goose-step fashion? Is this supposed to correspond to the meal
character of Holy Communion [which is stressed so frequently[ better than kneeling
together in a recollected way?"
A Decline in Reverence
There is ample testimony to the fact that the liturgical "renewal" has been accompanied
not simply by a decline in Mass attendance, but by a decline in reverence towards the
Blessed Sacrament. It is not only traditionalists who testify to this. Cardinal Heenan, in
common with so many bishops, gave way on the question of allowing lay ministers of
Holy Communion. On February 2, 1974, he used the occasion of commissioning a group
of these ministers to lament the decline in reverence towards the Blessed Sacrament:
"At one time it would have been unthinkable for anyone without anointed hands to
touch the Sacred Species. In this century there has been a steady diminution of outward
signs of respect for sacred objects. When I was a boy there was a scale of values. It was
understood that anyone could handle a ciborium or monstrance, but only the priest
could touch the chalice because it was consecrated. Until recent times we priests kissed
each sacred vestment as we put it on, we genuflected before and after touching the
Sacred Host. The new rubrics abolished the kissing and reduced genuflections to a
minimum. . . . the loss of outward marks of respect lead the simple-minded to lose their
sense of reverence. Some have begun to ignore the Blessed Sacrament. They do not
genuflect to the Blessed Sacrament and do not kneel in adoration when they come into
church."
There are . . . reasons for the changes-----diabolic reasons is probably the most accurate
description.
In the October 1977 issue of his official diocesan journal, The Messenger, Bishop
Ackerman of Covington, Ky., took the occasion of informing his priests that they would
have to distribute Communion in the hand [whether they liked it or not] to lament the
decline in reverence for the Blessed Sacrament:
"There is clear evidence that in recent years the reverence which we should have
for the Holy Eucharist has diminished among some of our people and especially the
young. This is displayed in the manner in which many come to the altar to receive Holy
Communion -----a tragic result of a dilution of Faith in the Real Presence of Christ
caused by some teachers and writers with little or no faith . . . Many have forgotten, or
seem to have forgotten, the law of the Eucharistic Fast. Those who plan to receive Holy
Communion must abstain from solid food or liquid refreshment, with the exception of
water, for at least one hour before the reception of this Sacrament. This is not simply a
request or a pious admonition. This is a discipline of the Church imposed out of
reverence for the Holy Eucharist: it is a serious obligation which must be obeyed by all.
Only the truly infirm and sick are excused. How shocking it is to see Catholic men and
women, boys and girls chewing gum in church and continuing to do so when they
come to Holy Communion. Where is their faith? Have they lost all reverence for the
Holy Eucharist? The practice of receiving 'Holy Communion in the hand' must not
become an avenue to continued or even greater irreverence. There is much truth in the
proverb: Familiarity breeds contempt."
It might have been hoped that in order to prevent Holy Communion in the hand from
leading to greater irreverence, Bishop Ackerman would have forbidden the abuse-----
which he was quite entitled to do. Instead of doing so, he allowed his "experts" to send
out the standard brainwashing material to priests and teachers to initiate the campaign
of making the innovation the norm.
"Doctrinal errors quickly produce practical abuses. The Holy See tells us that the
irreverences coming from faulty Eucharistic theology are many in number and spread
through many places.
"Numerous and widespread abuses have appeared, sometimes so serious that they
cast doubt on the very Faith in the Real Presence, on the adoration and reverence due to
the Blessed Sacrament. [Instruction on Worship of the Eucharist, May 15, 1969]."
But Cardinal Heenan's concern at the decline in reverence for the Blessed Sacrament
did not result in his refusing to commission lay ministers of Holy Communion; Bishop
Ackerman's concern did not lead him to forbid Communion in the hand in his diocese;
and the alleged concern of the Vatican has not prevented its giving official sanction to
both abuses whenever so requested.
"There is ample evidence of consecrated Hosts being discarded into a bin; because, so
it is said, 'the Presence does not remain when the meal is finished'; sometimes these
Hosts are re-consecrated. Priests are known to genuflect at the Communion but not at
the Consecration; because, they hold, 'Christ is present only in the meal'. Some have
affirmed publicly that they do not genuflect before the Tabernacle, because 'one does
not adore a box'.
"Children are known to have fiddled with the Sacred Host placed into their hands at
Holy Communion; adults have been seen to pass the Blessed Sacrament from one to the
other in a Queue.
"Rightly does the Sacred Congregation ask whether people who act like this really
believe in the Real Presence of Christ.
"One must pass over in appalled silence the unspeakable abominations of demonism
when the Sacred Host is sacrilegiously carried off to the satanic rituals of black masses.
"Sacrileges have occurred in the past and will occur in the future. But today the Holy
See testifies that they are numerous and widespread; it also says that Communion in the
traditional manner is a better safeguard against adulteration of doctrine and
profanation."
Precisely! The Holy See says that the traditional manner is a better safeguard against
profanation-----but then sanctions an innovation which could well be described as an
invitation to sacrilege!
The Meal Obsession
Since the Second Vatican Council a movement to transform the Catholic Mass into a
Protestant Lord's Supper has been gaining strength within the Church. The sacrificial
nature of the Mass is expressed in very muted tones in even the papally approved text
of the new Mass when celebrated with Eucharistic Prayer No. II. The meal is
emphasized to the detriment of the sacrifice in almost all the episcopally approved
catechetical texts which have appeared since the Council; in some cases the Mass is
presented as nothing more than a jolly party. Altars have been replaced by tables. And
now the innovation of Communion in the hand is being used to promote the meal
concept to an even greater extent than before.
The official booklet-----The Body of Christ-----provides ample evidence of this. It has been
well analyzed by Frank Morris in a series of excellent articles in The Wanderer. [This was
before the paper became anti-traditionalist and an apologist for whatever nonsense the Vatican issues in
the name of upholding the non-dogmatic statements of Vatican II as if they were dogma by ceasing any
criticism of imprudent actions of the Holy See-----The Web master.] He noted, for example, that the
booklet contains about 13 references to the sacrificial nature of the Mass and about 41 to
the meal aspect. 25 A careful examination of The Body of Christ reveals that lip service is
paid to orthodoxy, in the form of brief reiterations of traditional teaching [even
transubstantiation gets a mention], and expressions of concern to maintain reverence,
while its clear objective is to promote attitudes and practices which will undermine
reverence and traditional belief. This is precisely what has happened in the majority of
the official, papally-approved documents concerned with the Liturgical Reform-----
beginning with the Liturgy Constitution itself. Lack of space precludes any discussion
of this question in detail here. I have dealt with the Liturgy Constitution in my book
Pope John's Council, and will deal with the subsequent documents in its sequel, Pope
Paul's New Mass. In order to discover the true intent of these documents the reader must
ignore the padding and look for what each document permits that wasn't permitted
before. Sadly, when Memoriale Domini is examined in this light, it will be discovered
that, while most of it is devoted to extolling the merits of the traditional practice, its
practical effect is to legalize the abuse. This is something to which such columnists as
Frank Morris could well devote some research. There are still conservative Catholics
who resolutely close their eyes to the fact that the source of liturgical abuses lies in the
official reforms, and are no more than a logical extension of these official reforms. Those
who maintain that anything approved by the Pope is ipso facto beyond criticism are
living in a fantasy world which renders their no doubt sincere attempts to defend the
Faith ineffective. Frank Morris took a welcome step in the right direction in his January
12, 1978 article when he criticized the instruction forbidding us to make a double
genuflection when the Blessed Sacrament is exposed. He comments that this instruction
is disturbing, "no matter what its origin". Its origin is an official decree of the
Congregation for Worship approved by Pope Paul VI. The same instruction forbids
exposition for the purpose of Benediction!
As has been stated already, it would take several volumes to expose all the fallacies
contained in The Body of Christ. A few more examples should suffice to prove
conclusively that its authors are attempting to deceive the Catholic laity. It claims [p. 11]
that:
"The option of Communion in the hand does grow organically from procedures
already existing, retains sound tradition, results from careful multi-disciplined,
scholarly research, opens the way for legitimate progress, fulfills a current need and
genuinely serves the good of the Church."
Communion in the hand is a complete innovation and did not grow from any
procedure already existing in any Catholic rite. A tradition is something which is
living today. A long obsolete practice is not a tradition. It resulted from an act of
rebellion, an aping of Protestant practice-----perhaps this is what the American bishops
mean by "careful, multi-disciplined, scholarly research". It opens the way to irreverence,
profanation of the Blessed Sacrament, and division and discord within the Church. The
American bishops describe this as fulfilling a current need and genuinely serving the
good of the Church!
On pages 20 & 21, it is stated that fears about the innovation are unwarranted and that
"Observers from countries that have already introduced the option offer encouraging
testimony about the positive acceptance and relatively smooth implementation of
communion in the hand."
It can be noted here that, at the 1977 Bishops' Synod in Rome, high praise was given
in the official communiqué to the resounding success the catechetical renewal has been
throughout the world. Bishops are not likely to admit that policies which have been
approved and which involve their prestige have been unsuccessful. The bishops of
Great Britain and the U.S.A. will duly send in their reports saying how successful the
innovation has been. The impression I have gained from visiting and reading reports
from a good number of countries is that the practice has been followed invariably by
irreverence and discord.
The clear meaning of Memoriale Domini is that the abuse was only to be tolerated where
Communion in the hand had become established by May 1969. However, the Vatican
gave way and agreed to approve it wherever and whenever the practice might become
established. Once again, it is typical of the "Conciliar Church" that no criteria were
provided for deciding what was meant by "established". Did it mean just one priest
giving Communion in the hand to one person in the whole of the U.S.A.? Did it mean
50% of the parishes in every diocese?
This most important point was raised by Bishop Blanchette of Joliet, Ill. When the
National Conference of Catholic Bishops debated the question in 1977, Bishop
Blanchette pointed out that the procedure approved by the Vatican was that
permission could be requested from the Holy See if the contrary usage prevailed. He
pointed out that the Bishops could hardly take the second step without taking the first.
"I said, we are now going to discuss and probably vote on whether we want to petition
the Holy See, and we have not established that a contrary usage prevails. I said a simple
way to do that would be to ask the Ordinaries to indicate whether in their dioceses the
contrary usage prevails. The Ordinary should know, he is the shepherd of the diocese.
He has been asked to obey and his priests have been asked to obey, so if anybody
knows whether the contrary usage prevails, he should. And so I asked that the agenda
be amended so that the first step-----finding out whether the contrary usage prevails-----
could be verified, and if it were verified then we could get on with the rest of the
agenda. But if the first step is not verified, how can we logically go on to the second
step? That was my motion". 27
Bishop Blanchette's motion was supported in writing by five other bishops and
sustained by the president of the conference. According to the rules, there should have
been a written vote, but supporters of the innovation objected and voted, on a show of
hands, to rule the president out of order. Even Cardinal Krol later condemned the use of
a parliamentary device to get rid of a valid motion on a crucially important topic. 28 It
therefore seems quite reasonable to ask: just how legal this vote was? Then, of course,
other extraordinary measures were taken to get the innovation adopted. Retired
bishops were prevented from voting, and, when the necessary majority had still not
been achieved, bishops who had not been present were polled until the necessary total
was arrived at. Those who criticize the innovation are attacked for making a fuss about
a 'trivial' matter. Well, if the matter is so trivial, the steps taken to force the innovation
through are certainly extraordinary.
It is quite certain that the contrary usage prevailed in England and Wales only to the
most limited extent. It is unlikely that there were more than a few dozen parishes or
centres in the entire country where the practice had been established.
There was certainly no interest in and no desire for the practice among the mass of the
Catholic population. However, the English have their own way of doing things. No one
knew that the bishops had even discussed the matter, let alone applied for an Indult. It
was all done in conditions of the greatest secrecy and even the production of the
propaganda material was an undercover operation.
Priests and people were then presented with a fait accompli, Catholic papers dutifully
filled their pages with propaganda and bookshops and various official centres put all
their secretly-produced material on display. To add insult to injury, the Catholic
Information Office then stated that there had been widespread consultation among
priests and laity! 29 This even provoked an adverse comment in the Summer 1976 issue
of Music and Liturgy, the mouthpiece of some of Britain's most extreme proponents of
liturgical innovation. While predictably enthusiastic about Communion in the hand, an
editorial stated:
The manner in which the Protestant practice of Communion in the hand has been
introduced in Britain and the U.S.A. certainly illustrates a point made at the beginning
of this study: "The particular significance of the imposition of Communion in the hand
is that it is the epitomization of the 'spirit of Vatican II', the spirit which pervades the
'Conciliar Church', to which Archbishop Lefebvre has been ordered to submit.' 30
Indeed, the more one studies the squalid duplicity which has marked every stage of the
imposition of this Protestant practice, the greater the admiration one must have for the
courage, the honesty, and the orthodoxy of this saintly prelate!
The deceitful propaganda epitomized by such publications as The Body of Christ in the
U.S.A., or The Reception of Holy Communion in the Hand in England, has been reproduced
a hundredfold, a thousandfold, in the official Catholic press. A consensus has been
established. Communion in the hand is now the mature, adult, Vatican II, People-of-
God-on-the-march thing to do. It is a test of our loyalty to the Holy See. Those who
oppose it are reactionary, ignorant, not in tune with the "Spirit of Vatican II", anti-social,
disobedient to the Holy Father, etc. etc. etc. They must be treated as intemperate
extremists simply because they oppose the prevalent fad. This is not a new
phenomenon and was commented upon by Cardinal Newman:
"If the multitude of men are ever in the broad way 'that leadeth to destruction', there is
no ground for maintaining that, in order to be right in our religious views, we must
agree with the many; rather, if such as persons are, their opinions are also, it would
seem to be certain that those opinions which are popular will ever be mistaken and
dangerous as being popular opinions. Those who serve God faithfully must ever look
to be accounted, in their generation, singular, intemperate, and extreme. [Emphasis
added] They are not so: they must guard against becoming so; if they are so they are
equally wrong as the many, however they may in other respects differ from them; but
still it is no proof that they are so, because the many call them so. It is no proof that they
are so, because others take it for granted that they are, pass their doctrines over, put
their arguments aside without a word,-----treat them gravely, or are vexed about them,
or fiercely oppose them. No: there are numberless clouds which flit over the sky, there
are numberless gusts which agitate the air to and fro: as many, as violent, as far-
spreading, as fleeting, as uncertain, as changing, are the clouds and the gales of human
opinion; as suddenly, as impetuously, as fruitlessly, do they assail those whose mind is
stayed on God. They come and they go; they have no life in them, nor abidance. They
agree together in nothing but in this, in threatening like clouds, and sweeping like gusts
of wind. They are the voice of the many; they have the strength of the world, and they
are directed against the few. Their argument, the sole argument in their behalf, is their
prevalence at the moment; not that they existed yesterday, not that they will exist
tomorrow; not that they base themselves on reason, or ancient belief, but that they are
merely what every one now takes for granted, or, perhaps, supposes to be in Scripture,
and therefore not to be disputed:-----not that they have the most voices through long
periods, but that they happen to be the most numerously professed in the passing
hour." 31
Now that the practice of Communion in the hand has been established, the Liberals
will not encounter much opposition. While the number who favoured the innovation
was minimal, this is irrelevant to the Liberal campaign. Revolutionaries do not need
massive support, they simply require minimal opposition. [Emphasis added] The
number of Catholics who will put themselves out to combat the abuse will be very
small indeed, even among those who oppose it. The tendency among most so-called
conservatives is to grumble at each abuse as it arrives and then accept it. [Emphasis
added] One thing is certain, priests or laymen who accept this abuse will accept
anything. However, those who are prepared to make a stand in defence of the Blessed
Sacrament can expect to be assailed by the voice of the many and the strength of the
world. But they can take comfort in the fact that they are in good company.
This study will close with a comment by Dietrich von Hildebrand, from a book which
every Catholic should buy, read, and re-read frequently. It is far more reassuring to
share his views than those of the many who think that to be right is to adopt the opinion
which prevails at the moment-----and to hold it only as long as it prevails.
"It is not difficult to see that the danger of parts of the consecrated Host falling to the
ground is incomparably increased, and the danger of desecrating it or indeed of
horrible blasphemy is very great. And what in the world is to be gained by all this? The
claim that contact with the hand makes the host more real is certainly pure nonsense.
For the theme here is not the reality of the matter of the Host, but rather the
consciousness, which is only attainable by faith, that the Host in reality has become the
Body of Christ. The reverent reception of the Body of Christ on our tongues, from the
consecrated hand of the priest, is much more conducive to the strengthening of this
consciousness than reception with our own unconsecrated hands. Visus, tactus, glistus in
te fallitur, sed auditu solo tuto creditur, says St. Thomas Aquinas in his magnificent hymn
Adora te ["Sight, touch, and taste would err about Thee, but through hearing alone are
we given certain faith."] 32
31) Parochial and Plain Sermons, vol. v, Serom XVII, Many Called, Few Chosen. Also
available in Newman Against the Liberals, p. 253 -available from The Remnant at $11.
32) The Devastated Vineyard, pp. 67/8.
Appendix:
Communication from the Vicariate of Rome on the Distribution of Holy Communion:
The following communication appeared in the Revista Diocesana di Roma. n. 7-8, 1977,
pp. 691-692, published in conformity with the regulations in force in the whole of Italy:
"This Vicariate receives frequent requests for clarification from priests, nuns, and
laity concerning some questions about eucharistic Communion.
"1. As to the giving of Holy Communion in the mouth, it is emphasized that no change
has been made in the decision taken by the Italian Episcopal Conference in 1974 to keep
the traditional practice (cf. circular letter of the general Secretariate, n. 1197/74, in
Liturgia n.189, 1975, pp. 67-68). Therefore in Rome also all priests are bound to keep
strictly to the rule, in full conformity with what has been authoritatively determined by
the Italian bishops.
2. As for the practice adopted by some groups of the faithful and some religious
communities, of giving themselves Communion directly, we recall that the action
accomplished by Christ in the institution of the Eucharist and confirmed by the
tradition of the Church is repeated in a more concordant manner when the eucharistic
Bread is actually given or distributed to the faithful (cf.M.26:26; Mk.14:22); L.22:19). For
this reason the Rite De sacra Communione et de Cultu mysterii eucharistici extra Missam (cf.
Tip. Poliglotta Vaticana, 1973) at n.21, para. iv prescribes: 'Holy Communion should be
distributed by the competent minister, who shows and gives to the communicant the
particle of consecrated Bread'."
When it celebrates the memorial of the Lord, by that rite the Church witnesses to its
faith and adoration of Christ, who is present in the sacrifice and who is given as food to
those who share in the Eucharistic table.
For this reason it is of great concern that the Eucharist be celebrated and shared in
most worthily and fruitfully, by observing unchanged the tradition that has reached us
step by step, the tradition whose riches have been poured into the practice and life of
the Church. The documents of history demonstrate that the ways of celebrating and
receiving the holy Eucharist have been diverse. Even in our time many and important
ritual changes have been introduced into the celebration of the Eucharist in order to
bring it into accord with the spiritual and psychological needs of men today. Because of
circumstances, communion under both kinds, bread and wine, which was once
common in the Latin rite but had fallen into disuse little by little, has again been made a
part of the discipline governing the faithful's mode of receiving the holy Sacrament. At
the time of the Council of Trent a different situation had arisen and was in effect
everywhere; the Council approved and defended it as suited to the conditions of that
period. (1)
With the renewal of the modes of communicating, however, the sign of the
Eucharistic meal and the complete fulfillment of Christ's mandate have been effected
more clearly and vividly. At the same time a full sharing in the celebration of the
Eucharist, expressed through Sacramental communion, has recently stirred up in some
places the desire to return to the practice by which the Eucharistic bread is placed in the
hand of the faithful who communicates himself by putting it in his
mouth.
In some communities and localities this rite has even been performed without
obtaining the prior approval of the Apostolic See and occasionally without appropriate
preparation for the people.
It is true that, according to ancient usage, it was once permitted for the faithful to
take the sacred food in their hands and themselves to place it in their mouths and even,
in the earliest period, to carry the holy Sacrament with them from the place of
celebration, especially in order to receive it as viaticum if they should have to suffer for
the profession of the faith.
Nevertheless the precepts of the Church and the writings of the Fathers give
abundant witness to the great reverence and prudence shown to the holy Eucharist. For
"no one . . . eats this flesh unless first he adores," (2) and each recipient is warned: ". . .
receive it and take care that none of it be lost to you" (3): "for it is the body of Christ." (4)
In the meantime the care and ministry of the Body and Blood of the Lord was
entrusted in a quite special way to sacred ministers or to persons assigned to this
function: "After the president has completed the prayers and all the people have made
the acclamation, those among us whom we call deacons distribute a part of the bread
and wine and water, in which the thanksgiving has been made, to each one present and
bring them to those who are absent." (5)
The office of bringing the Eucharist to those who were absent was soon entrusted to
sacred ministers alone, for the reason that greater care might be shown for the reverence
due to the Body of Christ as well as for the needs of the people. In the following period,
after the true meaning of the Eucharistic mystery, its effect, and the presence of Christ
in it had been profoundly investigated, from a pressing sense of reverence toward this
holy Sacrament and of the humility which its reception demands, the custom was
introduced by which the minister himself would place the piece of consecrated bread on
the tongue of the communicants.
In view of the state of the Church as a whole today, this manner of distributing Holy
Communion must be observed, not only because it rests upon a tradition of many
centuries but especially because it is a sign of the reverence of the faithful toward the
Eucharist. The practice in no way detracts from the personal dignity of those who
approach this great Sacrament and it is a part of the preparation needed for the most
fruitful reception of the Lord's body. (6)
This reverence is a sign of communion not in "common bread and drink" (7) but in
the Body and Blood of the Lord. By it "the people of God shares in the blessings of the
paschal sacrifice, renews the new covenant once made by God with man in the Blood of
Christ, and in faith and hope prefigures and anticipates the eschatological banquet in
the kingdom of the Father." (8)
The Apostolic See therefore strongly urges bishops, priests, and people to observe
zealously this law, valid and again confirmed, according to the judgment of the
majority of the Catholic episcopate, in the form which the present rite of the sacred
liturgy employs, and out of concern for the common good of the Church.
If the contrary usage, namely, of placing Holy Communion in the hand, has already
developed in any place, in order to help the episcopal conference fulfill their pastoral
office in today's often difficult situation, the Apostolic See entrusts to the conferences
the duty and function of judging particular circumstances, if any. They may make this
judgment provided that any danger is avoided of insufficient reverence or false
opinions of the Holy Eucharist arising in the minds of the faithful and that any other
improprieties be carefully removed.
In these cases, moreover, in order to govern this usage properly, the episcopal
conferences should undertake the appropriate deliberations after prudent study; the
decision is to be made by a two-thirds majority by secret ballot.
These deliberations should then be proposed to the Holy See for the necessary
confirmation, together with an accurate explanation of the reasons which moved the
conferences to take this action. The Holy See will weigh the individual cases with care,
remembering the bonds which exist between the several local Churches among
themselves and with the entire Church, in order to promote the common good and
edification and the increase of faith and piety which flow from mutual good example.
This Instruction, prepared at the special mandate of the Supreme Pontiff Paul VI,
was duly approved by him, in virtue of apostolic authority, on May 28, 1969. Pope Paul
also decreed that it be brought to the attention of the bishops through the presidents of
the episcopal conferences.
Anything to the contrary notwithstanding.
A. Bugnini,
Secretary
FOOTNOTES:
1 Cf. Council of Trent, session XXI, doctrine concerning communion under both kinds and
communion of children: Denz. 1726-1717 (930); session XXII, decree on the petition for the concession of
the cup: Denz. 1760.
2 Augustine, Enarrationes in Psalmos, 98, 9: PL 37, 1264.
3 Cf. Cyril of Jerusalem, Catecheses Mystagogicae, V, 21: PG 33, 1126.
4 Hippolytus, Traditio Apostolica, n. 37; ed. B. Botte, 1963, p. 84.
5 Justin, Apologia I, 65: PG 6, 427.
6 Cf. Augustine, Enarrationes in Psalm os, 98, 9: PL 37, 1264-1265.
7 Cf. Justin, Apologia I, 66: PG 6, 427; cf. Irenaeus, Adversus Haereses, 1.4, c. 18. n. 5: PG 7,1028-1029.
8 S. Congregation of Rites, instruction Eucharisticum Mysterium, n. 3a: AAS 59 (1967) 541.
9 Cf. ibid. n. 9, p. 547.
10 Cyril of Jerusalem, Catecheses Mystagogicae, V. 21: PG 33, 1126.
11 Cf. Acts 20: 28. and Cf. II Vatican Council, decree Christus Dominus, n. 38, 4: AAS 58 (1966) 693.