Catholic Metanarrative

Wednesday, February 15, 2006

Wednesday Liturgy: Follow-up: How to Understand Purification

We received some very enlightening comments and questions after our remarks on the rite of purification (Jan. 31).

Before embarking on this theme I wish to mark an oversight on my part which a reader from Melbourne, Australia, kindly pointed out to me and which obliges me to revise my former reply.

The reader wrote: "Regarding the question on First Communion from an Extraordinary Minister you made no mention of the 2004 instruction 'Redemptionis Sacramentum,' which has: '[87.] … Moreover First Communion should always be administered by a Priest and never outside the celebration of Mass.' Does this change your answer of Jan. 31, that it is OK for an extraordinary minister to administer the chalice at a first Communion?"

Well, it certainly strengthens my overall argument against the practice which inspired the original column.

It is not totally clear if this text would specifically forbid an extraordinary minister from administering the chalice after the child has received the Body of Christ. I would opine that it does, because, although Christ is received whole and entire under either species, if Communion is given under both kinds then it is the whole rite that encompasses the act of first Communion and not just the reception under the species of bread.

An extraordinary minister could hold the chalice for the priest if Communion under both kinds is given by intinction (by dipping the Host into the Precious Blood).

Returning to purification, a Marquette, Michigan, reader asked: "Could you describe the correct way vessels should be purified." We addressed this topic in some detail in a follow-up on Feb. 8, 2005.

A priest from San Francisco commented: "Is it true that pouring an equal amount, or more, of water into the chalice renders the consecrated wine in the chalice unconsecrated? If this is so -- and I would say that it must be because the sign of the sacrament is wine, and not totally diluted wine -- does this change the rules for purification? In other words, can what is in the chalice, if it is no longer consecrated, be poured down an ordinary sink, or does it need to be poured into the ground if not consumed?"

It is true that Christ's sacramental presence would cease should excess water (or even unconsecrated wine) be added to the Precious Blood. This is in conformity with the doctrine of St. Thomas Aquinas as we mentioned in another follow-up last July 5.

However, this is not a respectful way of treating the sacred species and could even be considered as a sacrilegious act.

In conformity with liturgical norms, the Precious Blood must be consumed in its proper state at the altar before the purification rites begin. If the quantity is too much for the priest and deacon to consume personally, the extraordinary ministers of holy Communion may assist in doing so immediately after finishing their ministry.

As "Redemptionis Sacramentum," No. 107, says: "Furthermore all will remember that once the distribution of Holy Communion during the celebration of Mass has been completed, the prescriptions of the Roman Missal are to be observed, and in particular, whatever may remain of the Blood of Christ must be entirely and immediately consumed by the Priest or by another minister, according to the norms."

Finally, another priest from Bishopton, Scotland, offered some interesting observations on the word "purification" which I will share with our readers. He wrote:

"On purification perhaps I can shed a little light as the answer given is, I think, inadequate! The word is a challenging one at first but perhaps this will help. In the ancient world the great division recognized in culture (even pre-Christian) is the gap between the sacred and the profane.

"This gap cannot be bridged easily or casually -- the crossing of it is always marked and a special caste (e.g. priests) was necessary for this. Objects too, if they were used in both spheres, have to go through a process too -- it's called purification.

"If your chalice (simply a word for cup in its original Latin form -- 'calix') is used for both sacred (Mass) and profane (drinking at a meal) uses (and this was not uncommon in the earliest days of the church -- our understanding of the Real Presence and associated devotions and careful cleansing being a later part of our history) we must mark this. Chalices were thereafter purified before their use in Mass (hence 'purus-facere') but to mark their return to profane use they were also subject to a process -- the same one.

"This helps us understand why women were purified after childbirth. It was not that they needed to be cleansed, but that they had been involved in a sacred process -- bearing children (the result of procreation -- participating in God's work of creation); their moving back into the mundane or secular ('profane,' if you like) had to be marked, hence their 'churching.' This reminds us of the very positive and profoundly spiritual nature of this process and rite. I hope this helps!"

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