A Dubium answered: Celebrant’s Communion after the faithful

Have you ever seen a priest/celebrant during Mass receive Communion after everyone else?

I have.  And the answer I was given was… I am not making this up… "It is rude not to serve your guests first."

No kidding.

The April Newsletter of the USCCB’s Committee on Divine Worship is out.

In this newsletter there is published an English version of a response to a dubium.  Here it is with some added emphases:

Dubium on the Priest Celebrant Receiving Communion After the Faithful

In the November-December 2008 issue of Notitiæ (vol. 45, pg. 609), the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments published their response to a dubium on the possibility of the priest celebrant receiving Holy Communion at Mass after or at the same time as the lay faithful. For the benefit of our readers, an unofficial translation is provided here:

Question: Whether it is permitted for the Priest celebrant to communicate only after he has distributed the Holy Eucharist to the faithful, or whether he may distribute the Holy Eucharist and then afterwards communicate together with the people.

Response: No, to both questions.

Certain practices of this kind in particular are being introduced, namely, where the Priest celebrant communicates only after he has distributed the Holy Eucharist to the faithful, or, by the same thinking, he waits until after the Holy Eucharist has already been distributed to communicate together with everyone else, namely, the faithful, as though feasting together at the Eucharistic table.

In all the Rites of the Church, an order is found which has been handed on for approaching Holy Communion: first, the Bishop or the Priest celebrant communicates, and then the other ministers according to their hierarchical rank, and finally, the people. The Priest communicates first, not because of any human superiority, but on account of the nature and dignity of his ministry. For, the Priest acts in the person of Christ on account of the integrity of the sacrament and because he presides over the assembled people: “So, as Priests join themselves with the action of Christ the High Priest, they daily offer themselves wholly to God, and as they are nourished by the Body of Christ, they partake of love from the heart of him who gives himself as food to the faithful” (Presbyterium ordinis, no.13).

In the edition of the Missale Romanum promulgated by the Servant of God, Pope Paul VI, the communion of the faithful follows immediately upon the communion of the Priest, establishing it in this way as a unique action, different from the form in the edition of the Missale Romanum which appeared in 1962, in which the communion of the Priest is separated from the communion of the faithful through the recitation of the Confiteor [The Second Confiteor was removed in the 1962MR.  I believe it remained only in the Holy Week section of the Missal (Good Friday – but that is neither Mass nor the usual sort of liturgy) and in the Pontificale for ordinations (as a commenter, below, clarified).] and of the prayers, the Misereatur, Indulgentiam, Agnus Dei and the Domine, non sum dignus.

The governing liturgical norm states: “A Priest must communicate at the altar at the moment laid down by the Missal each time he celebrates Holy Mass, and the concelebrants must communicate before they proceed with the distribution of Holy Communion. The Priest celebrant or a concelebrant is never to wait until the people’s Communion is concluded before receiving Communion himself” (Redemptionis Sacramentum, no. 97).

 

I add that Redemptionis Sacramentum should be periodically reviewed by priests, especially, and lay people.

About Fr. John Zuhlsdorf

Fr. Z is the guy who runs this blog. o{]:¬)
This entry was posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box. Bookmark the permalink.