Our Thursday stroll through the Mass has
taken us through the Eucharistic Prayer and into the Communion Rite. This is
the part of the liturgy when those who may do so come forward to receive the
Eucharist.
‘Those who may do so’ – now that is a
phrase redolent with the controversies of our day. What do you mean, ‘may’? Do
you mean to suggest that there are people who may not receive the Eucharist? What kind of an outfit are you
running, Lemieux? Who do you think you are, telling anyone what they can and
cannot do?
And so on. And so forth. Look, I get it.
The worst thing any North American can imagine is being told that they are not allowed to do something. We’re North
Americans and we can do anything we want, right? ‘No right, no wrong, no rules
for me, I am free’ – such is the ethos of our culture (thanks, Elsa, for
summing it up for us so tunefully!). Oddly, at the same time as we angrily cast
off anything the Church may have to say to us about what we can and cannot do,
we easily consent to be harried and bullied on all sides by petty bureaucrats
who churn out bushel-loads of regulations covering just about every aspect of
life… but I am getting distracted here.
Yes, there are people who may not receive the Eucharist (whether
they do so or not is really up to them, as it is not the place of the priest or
other minister in the Communion line to correct people on their decisions). And
the Communion Rite actually gives us a pretty good resume of who may or may not
do so—the rite itself can serve as a good examen for whether or not I should go
up the aisle to receive.
The rite begins with the Our Father. In
other words, the reception of Communion brings to perfection something that
already exists, and that is our unity with God. There is so much to say about
the Our Father itself—I have blogged an entire series about it in the past, in
fact. It is crucial to note that we don’t just take our relationship with God
as Father for granted here—it is only ‘at the savior’s command, and formed by
divine teaching’ that we pray this prayer. Our relationship with God is a gift,
not a given.
And so, if we are in a state of serious
sin, if we through a serious free choice to reject the moral law, have broken
our relationship with God, then we may
not receive communion. You cannot bring to perfection what does not exist,
and mortal sin has precisely that effect. In a state of mortal sin we may
remember our past relationship with God, we may grieve over having lost it, and
we may truly desire to have it back (all
human beings desire God, whether they know it or not) but we do not in that
state of being have it.
Now the only person who can discern if
you are in a state of mortal sin is you yourself, and even that, only
imperfectly. Nobody else can examine your conscience for you. But it is a very
good thing not to be presumptuous about these things, not to blithely assume
you’re OK with God. Are you sure about that? Really sure?
This is why frequent confession has
always been recommended by all the spiritually wise, and why a fundamental
attitude of humility of heart and contrition of spirit for one’s sins, mortal
or not, is the true mark of a disciple. ‘Don’t get cocky, kid’, in short
(thanks, Han Solo, for putting it so pithily!).
So this is the first principle for
whether one ought or ought not receive communion—are you in a state of sin?
Have you committed adultery, for example (i.e., you are married, and having sex
with someone besides your spouse, and yes that word does indeed apply to people
who have divorced and remarried)? What about theft? Told a lie? Have you been
violent? Abusive, physically or verbally? Fornicated (that is having sex with
someone you’re not married to, for those unclear on that word)? Missed Mass on
Sunday without a good reason (i.e. illness or physical impossibility)?
Blasphemed? You know – basic Ten Commandment stuff. It’s not rocket science.
If you want to be in Communion with God
and you have fallen into one of these areas of serious sin, the Church does not
leave you without resource. There is available to us the wonderful Sacrament of
Reconciliation—go to Confession, dummy! And then
receive the Eucharist!
If you don’t want to leave off your
serious sin, and you don’t want to go to confession, then you really don’t want
to be in communion with God, at least not as we understand these things in the
Catholic religion. In which case… why do you want to receive the Eucharist in a
Catholic Mass?
There is whole other aspect that pertains
to whether or not one may receive the
Eucharist, but that is for next time.
As someone who has struggled with being over scrupulous in my protestant past (as a child I feared the rapture while I slept), and really experiencing grace meaningfully in the Catholic Church - knowing if I am really fit to receive Communion is simply too hard a sum for me to figure. I really have to not think about it too carefully. Obviously i check myself for clear mortal sin but venial sins leave me feeling utterly condemned too.
ReplyDeleteSo I send up a prayer and go for it, or I'd never receive. The assumption that Christ wants to share this meal with me is the one thing that gets me through.
I admire people who have truly developed their conscience and have clear*er vision of their moral lives than I do.
C.C.C. 1857 For a sin to be mortal, three conditions must together be met: “Mortal sin is sin whose object is grave matter and which is also committed with full knowledge and deliberate consent.”
DeleteI have learned this statement...."grave matter which is also committed with full knowledge and deliberate consent"..that it seems is what separates the chaff from the grain. (grave from venial). That choice: we know God and then turn away from him..... In this frame even venial sins can then be grave ones.
It is difficult, a small path, for sure...even more so when you mistake shame for guilt.
Bless you!
Good point, MrsM. Yes, it is a fine balance between not being presumptuous and being scrupulous. I think if a person is prone to scrupulosity, then they should err on the side of receiving in a spirit of simplicity and trust. A person who errs on the side of laxity probably needs to be at least thinking about it a bit more, and not just assume they should always receive. It's always a matter of 'agere contra' - to act against what one's worse tendencies might be.
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