24 January 2021

Ask Father: Coming Late to Mass and Reception of Holy Communion

As Father points out, as far as reception of Communion goes, there is no rule. The rules apply to the obligation to hear Mass on Days of Obligation.

From Fr Z's Blog

From a reader….

QUAERITUR:

If one is late for Mass because of an unexpected occurrence (line for confession was longer than expected, traffic, etc.), is he permitted to receive Communion? Is there a point in the Mass at which a potential communicant cannot receive? Is there varied opinion about this between OF and EF parishes?

I expect that there will be varied opinions along the general lines of Novus Ordo dominance and Traditional dominance.  I suspect that people (priest and lay onlookers) at the former sort of parish, Novus Ordo, will be more censorious if they think about it at all. They may be the same people heading to the parking lot having just barely received Our Eucharistic Lord.

Of course, I’m talking about 30% who still believe what the Church teaches about the Eucharist.  The rest think that when you sing the song and get the white thing in your hand … well… that’s really nice and people should feel good so everyone should go!   And you MUST go!  ROW BY ROW!   Anything not forbidden is obligatory, after all.

At a more traditional place, where teaching has been sound and where people really believe, I suspect there will be less of a hang up about who is receiving and when, for reasons that will unfold, below.

Let’s make distinctions.

First, attendance at Mass is not absolutely necessary for the reception of Communion.

Consider that Communion is brought to the sick, outside of Mass. Also, it is possible to receive outside of Mass even directly after Mass has been celebrated, as is the case when the choir receives afterward (that’s fairly common at a TLM), or in this time of Wuhan Devil lunacy, some who desire not to be forced to receive Our Lord on their unconsecrated hands, are given the choice to receive after Mass… segregated, as it were.

Lastly, there is the example of Good Friday: the liturgy is not a Mass.

Next, while we can receive outside of Mass, it is better to receive during Mass. And during a Mass where you have been an active participant for the whole of the Mass, not just part.

Manualists (bless them) designated a certain segment of Mass when one had to be present so as to fulfill the Sunday obligation. That was generally either from the Gospel to the conclusion of Communion or else (more commonly) “from chalice veil to chalice veil”, that is, from the beginning of the Offertory (RING goes the bell when the chalice veil is removed) to when the priest veils the chalice again after the ablutions. That’s a bare and minimalistic view of participation for the sake of obligation. ‘Tis enough. T’will serve, as Mercutio would put it.

But we should not fall into the trap of thinking that, just because the minimum suffices, we are doing well. We should participate at the whole of the Mass from entrance procession to recessional. In making one’s confession, attrition (sorrow for sin because of fear of Hell) is sufficient to receive absolution, but contrition (sorrow because of offending our loving God) is better.

It could be that, arriving late though no fault of your own, could be a test to find another Mass at another church or wait for the next Mass on the schedule if there is one, perhaps praying in church in the meantime in reparation for the sins of bishops and elected officials.

Your question touches on a lot of different points for reflection about the state of the Church and our sacred worship – and therefore our Catholic identity – today.  We ARE our rites!   What we do shapes us.  Who we are shapes the rites.

Which should have logical priority?

If those who have pretty much caved into the world shape the rites, the sense of transcendence and transformative mystery will soon be obscured by the human elements (e.g., the demand some have to see the priest grin at them over the altar).

The Eucharist (both the Eucharistic species and the celebration of the Eucharist, Mass) is the “source and summit” of who we are as Catholics.

How we celebrated Mass and how we receive the species is of fundamental importance.

Save The Liturgy – Save The World

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