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The Proper Role of Eucharistic Ministers (Catholic Caucus)
Crisis Magazine ^ | August 6, 2015 | JOHN M. GRONDELSKI

Posted on 08/10/2015 2:03:13 PM PDT by NYer

Extraordinary Minister

Every three years as the Church is reading the Gospel of Mark, during the dog days of summer it stops for five weeks and turns instead to the Gospel of John for instruction on the Eucharist. We began this process July 26 with the account of the sign of the multiplication of the loaves, and will continue it August 2 and 9 as we make our way through Jesus’ “Bread of Life” discourse.

Earlier this year, I wrote an article in these pages about the ongoing abuse of extraordinary ministers of the Eucharist, a phenomenon that become de facto established in the Church in the United States, clear norms of the Holy See notwithstanding. I have long maintained that this phenomenon feeds the vocation crisis by dissociating priesthood from Communion. I also began to argue in that earlier piece that the ongoing abuse of extraordinary ministers engrains the functionalist and utilitarian mindset at the expense of symbolism. The functionalist/utilitarian mindset is so corrosive to modern mentality especially, e.g., in sexual ethics. In the present case, it reduces the symbolic act of the pastor who is “feeding my sheep” to a pragmatic act of “let’s get this done so as not to ‘unduly prolong’ Mass.” No wonder, then, that parenthood is also being progressively parceled up into generative, gestational, and upbringing “functions.” Priests, by neglecting the symbolic role of their spiritual paternity in feeding their people, do something analogous.

That earlier article elicited an outpouring of comments and, somewhat unusual for Crisis, a somewhat edged controversy. That’s why, in the midst of this late summer Johannine excursus, I return to the topic, convinced the Gospels provide us some possible perspectives on the question.

Jesus’s feeding the crowd with five loaves and two fishes is called a “miracle” in the Synoptic Gospels (Matthew, Mark, Luke). John, however, has no “miracles.” The Fourth Gospel is instead constructed around “signs,” which point beyond themselves to the One signified. Thus, Jesus multiplies the loaves because “I am the Bread of Life.” He heals the blind man because “I am the Light of the World.” He raises Lazarus because “I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life.” And he almost faces stoning from the Jews for his response, “Before Abraham was, I AM.” Of course, all of this is a clear allusion to God’s revelation of himself to Moses at the Burning Bush (Ex 3:14), the making of the old covenant.

Jesus’ acts in John are symbols. They are intended to contain what they point to while still pointing beyond themselves. They do something (e.g., feed the people) but they also point beyond themselves (e.g., to him who feeds and makes that feeding possible, as well as to foretell God’s future plan of institution of the Eucharist).

I note this efficacy aspect of Jesus’ work because I have heard, even in Catholic circles efforts to rationalize the sign. It’s not that the boy’s five barley loaves and two fishes fed the crowd. It was the “love and concern” that Jesus displayed which “opened up” the crowd’s hearts (and, apparently, their picnic baskets) to share their feed to meet the needs of all. Obviously, such a reductionist interpretation is foreign to the text and its generally received Catholic understanding. I cite it for two reasons: (1) to recover what John is trying to say and (2) to show the strong (and corruptive) strain of reductionist rationalism in some Germanic Catholic circles, especially in advance of the October Synod. Jesus’s priestly action feeds the people, not the people who are otherwise self-sufficient but only need a catalyst. The “sign” is that Christ feeds the people.

If the sign is that “Christ feeds the people” then so, too, should the alter Christus, the priest acting here and now in persona Christi, make Christ and His Saving act present to feed the people.

One might say that the Gospel presents Jesus blessing and breaking the bread, which the contemporary alter Christus does by offering the elements and consecrating the Eucharist. But John goes further. Jesus tells the apostles to get the crowd ready (“have them sit down”). He asks them to feed the crowd. He distributes the loaves and fishes, the gifts offered to Christ not directly by their little owner but through the mediation of Andrew the Apostle (“there is a boy here with five barley loaves…”). And, when the food is consumed, Jesus designates his Apostles as the clean-up crew, gathering the leftovers “so that nothing is wasted” into twelve hampers, a very apostolic number.

For John, the sign of the multiplication of the loaves is a profound symbol. It is not a social welfare or logistical problem, to be functionally met in merely pedestrian ways. It is not a technocratic problem, e.g., if only the Apostles had each put in 16.667 days of work to collect those 200 days wages! Jesus does not ask his Apostles (or, even less, the community-at-large) to tackle a supply chain problem efficiently. He asks them to do what he does: “feed my sheep.”

I suggest this sign has something to say to use about the banal use of extraordinary ministers of the Eucharist. For one, it asks us to reflect on what we are doing: addressing a spiritual need of encounter by a functionalist mentality. (“How to buy food for such a crowd! How not ‘unduly to prolong’ the distribution of Communion!) It also reminds us that in that unitary spiritual encounter with a High Priest (and his priests), the priest has a key role that should not be substituted, diluted, or delegated, just as the Priest and his priests had a key role in the blessing and distribution on a grassy hill two thousand years ago in Israel.

Vatican II encouraged us to return to Scripture. Scripture is not just a dry exegesis of verbs as they were defined millennia ago: there has always been a tradition of searching for “spiritual sense” in the Word. Scripture perhaps has something to tell us.



TOPICS: Catholic; Religion & Culture; Worship
KEYWORDS: crisismagazine; emhc; eucharisticministers; johnmgrondelski
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1 posted on 08/10/2015 2:03:13 PM PDT by NYer
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To: Tax-chick; GregB; SumProVita; narses; bboop; SevenofNine; Ronaldus Magnus; tiki; Salvation; ...

CATHOLIC CAUCUS

Ping!

2 posted on 08/10/2015 2:04:00 PM PDT by NYer (Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy them. Mt 6:19)
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To: NYer

Great article. I always try to get in the line of the actual priest. Funny thing is, I have timed it and sometimes it takes longer for all of the Eucharistic Ministers to receive their communion first than if the priests themselves would just begin giving communion with no delay.


3 posted on 08/10/2015 2:10:45 PM PDT by carikadon
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To: carikadon

LOL. I can believe it !! Personally, we only go in line to receive from a priest (or deacon) ourselves. However, one time recently, the priest did not want to hand out Communion [for almost a whole week at daily Mass] because he was sick; nothing sadder to see than four EMs distributing the Body and Blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ, while the priest sits in a chair.


4 posted on 08/10/2015 2:27:45 PM PDT by mlizzy (America needs no words from me to see how your decision in Roe/Wade has deformed a great nation. -MT)
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To: NYer

Picture of Jesus



ACTUAL PHOTOGRAPH of Jesus!

5 posted on 08/10/2015 2:32:03 PM PDT by Grateful2God (Those who smile like nothing's wrong are fighting a battle you know nothing about. -Thomas More)
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To: carikadon

True! Not to mention purifying the Sacred Vessels... It would be better to just have Father distribute, then use the time after for prayer and thanksgiving. I’m not in a hurry. I love my time with Jesus after Communion!


6 posted on 08/10/2015 2:36:29 PM PDT by Grateful2God (Those who smile like nothing's wrong are fighting a battle you know nothing about. -Thomas More)
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To: NYer
I have long maintained that this phenomenon feeds the vocation crisis by dissociating priesthood from Communion.

If he thinks that doing away with Eucharistic Ministers is going to spur a rush of new applications to the seminaries, he's smoking something. And it ain't Pall Malls.

The choices are clear. We are either going to have more involvement by laypeople at all levels and in all functions. Or accept married and women priests. Or not have a Church at all.


7 posted on 08/10/2015 2:36:36 PM PDT by Buckeye McFrog
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To: mlizzy

That’s like folks who “schieve” (pronounced “skeeve”)- the Italian word for when you don’t want to touch something someone else has touched, because you’re afraid of germs. They won’t drink from the Chalice, and are glad it’s more “sanitary” to receive Our Lord in their hands. I simply don’t believe that. That’s Jesus’ Precious Blood in that Chalice, and I don’t believe It carries germs!


8 posted on 08/10/2015 2:52:37 PM PDT by Grateful2God (Those who smile like nothing's wrong are fighting a battle you know nothing about. -Thomas More)
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To: NYer

bookmark


9 posted on 08/10/2015 3:06:25 PM PDT by GOP Poet
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To: Grateful2God

We agree, G2G. We couldn’t imagine what Father had that allowed him to conduct Mass, yet he felt it was so serious, he shouldn’t be handing out Jesus’ Precious Body/Blood.


10 posted on 08/10/2015 3:13:35 PM PDT by mlizzy (America needs no words from me to see how your decision in Roe/Wade has deformed a great nation. -MT)
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To: NYer; All

Is anybody here an Extraordinary Minister? There are so many elderly in my family- to bring Communion would be such a blessing all the way around. Yet, I wrestle with the idea for a number of reasons. I can’t get around much anymore, I have to use a cane. But that aside, I have qualms about it. I don’t take Communion in my hand- it was so ingrained in me not to. I also am deeply troubled by an experience as a patient in the hospital. Because of Universal Precautions Against The Spread Of Disease, my EM wore gloves- vinyl- to distribute the Eucharist. Worse yet, the gloves are disposed of in the garbage or the Hazardous Waste containers. Thank God the gloves usually come off inside-out, but that’s little consolation. Any thoughts?


11 posted on 08/10/2015 3:13:42 PM PDT by Grateful2God (Those who smile like nothing's wrong are fighting a battle you know nothing about. -Thomas More)
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To: Buckeye McFrog
But what DOES spur a rush of new applications to the seminaries? I mean, look at the evidence, the actual track record.

As I understand it, for instance, in Fr. George Rutler's one parish in NYC, where everything was priestly, traditional, and beautiful, where they had male altar servers and Communion was distributed by priests and deacons only, their membership doubled or tripled and they had 12 vocations to the priesthood over the course of his pastorship. From one parish. That's more than some whole "feminist modernist" dioceses.

Look at any diocese and look where the actual vocations come from.(I mean the home-grown vocations, not necessarily the imported clergy from Nigeria, Colombia or the Philippines.) As a rule, they come from only a handful of parishes. The ones which most emphasize the traditions, and the role of the priest.

12 posted on 08/10/2015 3:19:00 PM PDT by Mrs. Don-o (Semper Fi.)
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To: carikadon

We run to the altar. We are actually rushed to the altar after waiting for all the sleeveless women and shorts and sandals wearing guys to go up to the altar to first


13 posted on 08/10/2015 3:26:22 PM PDT by stanne
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To: Buckeye McFrog
We've weathered storms before, and we're still around... I think that we ourselves, and our shepherds, too, often lack faith. Think of Abraham. God told him all that wonderful news, he and Sarah tried to have a baby, but no pregnancy. Instead of trusting God to keep His Word, well, enter Hagar and Ishmael. God, of course kept His promise, and Isaac came along eventually.

My point: things can look pretty bleak sometimes, but we still have Jesus' Promise that the gates of hell shall never prevail against us. We need to have faith, not compromise. There has already been too much of that, in the name of (unappreciated) ecumenism, when we should have remained steadfast. All it takes is two gathered in His Name. Jesus promised He would remain with us even unto the end of time- and if there is but one Particle of the Consecrated Jesus in the whole world, then He is indeed still with us- Body, Precious Blood, Soul, and Divinity! Be strong, and of good courage! God will never abandon us!

G-d ♡ bless you!
Grateful ✟ ✡

14 posted on 08/10/2015 3:46:03 PM PDT by Grateful2God (Those who smile like nothing's wrong are fighting a battle you know nothing about. -Thomas More)
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To: mlizzy
Strange what a bunch of germophobes we've become! Think of the Middle ages when priests ministered during plagues, to folks who bathed once a year, and never brushed.

All kidding aside, the Eucharist has been with us since the time of the Apostles, and all of a sudden, we and the priests are afraid of germs being transmitted. What would Molokai be right now if Father Damien had felt that way?

God must shake His Head...

15 posted on 08/10/2015 3:56:32 PM PDT by Grateful2God (Those who smile like nothing's wrong are fighting a battle you know nothing about. -Thomas More)
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To: Grateful2God

I no longer am a Extraordinary Minister of Holy Communion.

Reading one book, changed my mind. Also receive Jesus on my tongue — not in my hand.

“Get Us Out of Here” by Maria Simma


16 posted on 08/10/2015 4:19:06 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: carikadon

I also get into the priest’s line. My parish is relatively small, and the church is never packed except at Christmas and Easter, yet we usually have as many as 6 extraordinary ministers. Ridiculous.

It is worse when I attend my sister’s parish in Pennsylvania. Their congregation is much larger, but I have yet to see the church packed at any Mass I have attended there. Yet there are usually at least 8 lay people converging upon the altar, and they all wear white cassocks.


17 posted on 08/10/2015 4:24:57 PM PDT by Bigg Red (Let's put the ship of state on Cruz Control with Ted Cruz.)
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To: Grateful2God

+1


18 posted on 08/10/2015 4:25:34 PM PDT by Bigg Red (Let's put the ship of state on Cruz Control with Ted Cruz.)
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To: Grateful2God

Well said, my FRiend. Bless you.


19 posted on 08/10/2015 4:27:28 PM PDT by Bigg Red (Let's put the ship of state on Cruz Control with Ted Cruz.)
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To: Buckeye McFrog
We are either going to have more involvement by laypeople at all levels and in all functions. Or accept married and women priests. Or not have a Church at all.

Baloney. Just look at the overflowing seminaries among traditional Catholic orders. I belong to a parish that has had four priests (more priests than scheduled Sunday Masses) for most of the time since it became a Fraternity of St. Peter (FSSP) apostolate in 2001. There are a lot of respectable Catholic men out there who have a vocation to the priesthood but couldn't be bothered with it if they end up functioning like some guy in a local bridge club.

20 posted on 08/10/2015 4:28:39 PM PDT by Alberta's Child ("It doesn't work for me. I gotta have more cowbell!")
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