Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacrament
INSTRUCTION
On certain matters to be observed or to be avoided
regarding the Most Holy Eucharist
INDEX
Preamble [1-13]
Chapter I
The regulation of the Sacred Liturgy [14-18]
1. The Diocesan Bishop, High Priest of his Flock [19-25]
2. The Conference of Bishops [26-28]
3. Priests [29-33]
4. Deacons [34-35]
Chapter II
The Participation of the Lay Christian Faithful in the Eucharistic
Celebration
1. Active and Conscious Participation [36-42]
2. The Ministries of the Lay Christian Faithful in the Celebration of Holy
Mass [43-47]
Chapter III
The Proper Celebration of Mass
1. The Matter of the Most Holy Eucharist [48-50]
2. The Eucharistic Prayer [51-56]
3. The Other Parts of the Mass [57-74]
4. The Joining of Various Rites with the Celebration of Mass [75-79]
Chapter IV
Holy Communion
1. Dispositions for the Reception of Holy Communion [80-86]
2. The Distribution of Holy Communion [87-96]
3. The Communion of Priests [97-99]
4. Communion under Both Kinds [100-107]
Chapter V
Certain Other Matters concerning the Eucharist
1. The Place for the Celebration of Holy Mass [108-109]
2. Various Circumstances Relating to Mass [110-116]
3. Sacred Vessels [117-120]
4. Liturgical Vesture [121-128]
Chapter VI
The Reservation of the Most Holy Eucharist and Eucharistic Worship outside
Mass
1. The Reservation of the Most Holy Eucharist [129-133]
2. Certain Forms of Worship of the Most Holy Eucharist outside Mass
[134-141]
3. Processions and Eucharistic Congresses [142-145]
Chapter VII
Extraordinary Functions of the Lay Faithful [146-153]
1. The Extraordinary Minister of Holy Communion [154-160]
2. Preaching [161]
3. Particular Celebrations Carried Out in the Absence of a Priest [162-167]
4. Those Who Have Left the Clerical State [168]
Chapter VIII
Remedies [169-171]
1. Graviora Delicta [172]
2. Grave Matters [173]
3. Other Abuses [174-175]
4. The Diocesan Bishop [176-180]
5. The Apostolic See [181-182]
6. Complaints Regarding Abuses in Liturgical Matters [183-184]
Conclusion [185-186]
Preamble
[1.] In the Most Holy Eucharist, Mother Church with steadfast faith
acknowledges the Sacrament of redemption,[1] joyfully takes it to herself,
celebrates it and reveres it in adoration, proclaiming the death of Christ
Jesus and confessing his Resurrection until he comes in glory[2] to hand
over, as unconquered Lord and Ruler, eternal Priest and King of the Universe,
a kingdom of truth and life to the immense majesty of the Almighty Father.[3]
[2.] The Church’s doctrine regarding the Most Holy Eucharist, in which the
whole spiritual wealth of the Church is contained - namely Christ, our
Paschal Lamb[4] - the Eucharist which is the source and summit of the whole
of Christian life,[5] and which lies as a causative force behind the very
origins of the Church,[6] has been expounded with thoughtful care and with
great authority over the course of the centuries in the writings of the
Councils and the Supreme Pontiffs. Most recently, in fact, the Supreme
Pontiff John Paul II, in the Encyclical Letter Ecclesia de Eucharistia, set
forth afresh certain elements of great importance on this subject in view of
the ecclesial circumstances of our times.[7]
In order that especially in the celebration of the Sacred Liturgy the Church
might duly safeguard so great a mystery in our own time as well, the Supreme
Pontiff has mandated that this Congregation for Divine Worship and the
Discipline of the Sacraments,[8] in collaboration with the Congregation for
the Doctrine of the Faith, should prepare this Instruction treating of
certain matters pertaining to the discipline of the Sacrament of the
Eucharist. Those things found in this Instruction are therefore to be read
in the continuity with the above-mentioned Encyclical Letter, Ecclesia de
Eucharistia.
It is not at all the intention here to prepare a compendium of the norms
regarding the Most Holy Eucharist, but rather, to take up within this
Instruction some elements of liturgical norms that have been previously
expounded or laid down and even today remain in force in order to assure a
deeper appreciation of the liturgical norms;[9] to establish certain norms
by which those earlier ones are explained and complemented; and also to set
forth for Bishops, as well as for Priests, Deacons and all the lay Christian
faithful, how each should carry them out in accordance with his own
responsibilities and the means at his disposal.
[3.] The norms contained in the present Instruction are to be understood as
pertaining to liturgical matters in the Roman Rite, and, mutatis mutandis,
in the other Rites of the Latin Church that are duly acknowledged by law.
[4.] “Certainly the liturgical reform inaugurated by the Council has greatly
contributed to a more conscious, active and fruitful participation in the
Holy Sacrifice of the Altar on the part of the faithful.”[10] Even so,
“shadows are not lacking”.[11] In this regard it is not possible to be
silent about the abuses, even quite grave ones, against the nature of the
Liturgy and the Sacraments as well as the tradition and the authority of the
Church, which in our day not infrequently plague liturgical celebrations in
one ecclesial environment or another. In some places the perpetration of
liturgical abuses has become almost habitual, a fact which obviously cannot
be allowed and must cease.
[5.] The observance of the norms published by the authority of the Church
requires conformity of thought and of word, of external action and of the
application of the heart. A merely external observation of norms would
obviously be contrary to the nature of the Sacred Liturgy, in which Christ
himself wishes to gather his Church, so that together with himself she will
be “one body and one spirit”.[12] For this reason, external action must be
illuminated by faith and charity, which unite us with Christ and with one
another and engender love for the poor and the abandoned. The liturgical
words and rites, moreover, are a faithful expression, matured over the
centuries, of the understanding of Christ, and they teach us to think as he
himself does;[13] by conforming our minds to these words, we raise our
hearts to the Lord. All that is said in this Instruction is directed toward
such a conformity of our own understanding with that of Christ, as expressed
in the words and the rites of the Liturgy.
[6.] For abuses “contribute to the obscuring of the Catholic faith and
doctrine concerning this wonderful sacrament”.[14] Thus, they also hinder
the faithful from “re-living in a certain way the experience of the two
disciples of Emmaus: ‘and their eyes were opened, and they recognized him’”.[15]
For in the presence of God’s power and divinity[16] and the splendour of his
goodness, made manifest especially in the Sacrament of the Eucharist, it is
fitting that all the faithful should have and put into practice that power
of acknowledging God’s majesty that they have received through the saving
Passion of the Only-Begotten Son.[17]
[7.] Not infrequently, abuses are rooted in a false understanding of
liberty. Yet God has not granted us in Christ an illusory liberty by which
we may do what we wish, but a liberty by which we may do that which is
fitting and right.[18] This is true not only of precepts coming directly
from God, but also of laws promulgated by the Church, with appropriate
regard for the nature of each norm. For this reason, all should conform to
the ordinances set forth by legitimate ecclesiastical authority.
[8.] It is therefore to be noted with great sadness that “ecumenical
initiatives which are well-intentioned, nevertheless indulge at times in
Eucharistic practices contrary to the discipline by which the Church
expresses her faith”. Yet the Eucharist “is too great a gift to tolerate
ambiguity or depreciation”. It is therefore necessary that some things be
corrected or more clearly delineated so that in this respect as well “the
Eucharist will continue to shine forth in all its radiant mystery”.[19]
[9.] Finally, abuses are often based on ignorance, in that they involve a
rejection of those elements whose deeper meaning is not understood and whose
antiquity is not recognized. For “the liturgical prayers, orations and songs
are pervaded by the inspiration and impulse” of the Sacred Scriptures
themselves, “and it is from these that the actions and signs receive their
meaning”.[20] As for the visible signs “which the Sacred Liturgy uses in
order to signify the invisible divine realities, they have been chosen by
Christ or by the Church”.[21] Finally, the structures and forms of the
sacred celebrations according to each of the Rites of both East and West are
in harmony with the practice of the universal Church also as regards
practices received universally from apostolic and unbroken tradition,[22]
which it is the Church’s task to transmit faithfully and carefully to future
generations. All these things are wisely safeguarded and protected by the
liturgical norms.
[10.] The Church herself has no power over those things which were
established by Christ himself and which constitute an unchangeable part of
the Liturgy.[23] Indeed, if the bond were to be broken which the Sacraments
have with Christ himself who instituted them, and with the events of the
Church’s founding,[24] it would not be beneficial to the faithful but rather
would do them grave harm. For the Sacred Liturgy is quite intimately
connected with principles of doctrine,[25] so that the use of unapproved
texts and rites necessarily leads either to the attenuation or to the
disappearance of that necessary link between the lex orandi and the lex
credendi.[26]
[11.] The Mystery of the Eucharist “is too great for anyone to permit
himself to treat it according to his own whim, so that its sacredness and
its universal ordering would be obscured”.[27] On the contrary, anyone who
acts thus by giving free reign to his own inclinations, even if he is a
Priest, injures the substantial unity of the Roman Rite, which ought to be
vigorously preserved,[28] and becomes responsible for actions that are in no
way consistent with the hunger and thirst for the living God that is
experienced by the people today. Nor do such actions serve authentic
pastoral care or proper liturgical renewal; instead, they deprive Christ’s
faithful of their patrimony and their heritage. For arbitrary actions are
not conducive to true renewal,[29] but are detrimental to the right of
Christ’s faithful to a liturgical celebration that is an expression of the
Church’s life in accordance with her tradition and discipline. In the end,
they introduce elements of distortion and disharmony into the very
celebration of the Eucharist, which is oriented in its own lofty way and by
its very nature to signifying and wondrously bringing about the communion of
divine life and the unity of the People of God.[30] The result is
uncertainty in matters of doctrine, perplexity and scandal on the part of
the People of God, and, almost as a necessary consequence, vigorous
opposition, all of which greatly confuse and sadden many of Christ’s
faithful in this age of ours when Christian life is often particularly
difficult on account of the inroads of “secularization” as well.[31]
[12.] On the contrary, it is the right of all of Christ’s faithful that the
Liturgy, and in particular the celebration of Holy Mass, should truly be as
the Church wishes, according to her stipulations as prescribed in the
liturgical books and in the other laws and norms. Likewise, the Catholic
people have the right that the Sacrifice of the Holy Mass should be
celebrated for them in an integral manner, according to the entire doctrine
of the Church’s Magisterium. Finally, it is the Catholic community’s right
that the celebration of the Most Holy Eucharist should be carried out for it
in such a manner that it truly stands out as a sacrament of unity, to the
exclusion of all blemishes and actions that might engender divisions and
factions in the Church.[32]
[13.] All of the norms and exhortations set forth in this Instruction are
connected, albeit in various ways, with the mission of the Church, whose
task it is to be vigilant concerning the correct and worthy celebration of
so great a mystery. The last chapter of the present Instruction will treat
of the varying degrees to which the individual norms are bound up with the
supreme norm of all ecclesiastical law, namely concern for the salvation of
souls.[33]
Chapter I
THE REGULATION OF THE SACRED LITURGY
[14.] “The regulation of the Sacred Liturgy depends solely on the authority
of the Church, which rests specifically with the Apostolic See and,
according to the norms of law, with the Bishop.[34]
[15.] The Roman Pontiff, “the Vicar of Christ and the Pastor of the
universal Church on earth, by virtue of his supreme office enjoys full,
immediate and universal ordinary power, which he may always freely exercise”[35],
also by means of communication with the pastors and with the members of the
flock.
[16.] “It pertains to the Apostolic See to regulate the Sacred Liturgy of
the universal Church, to publish the liturgical books and to grant the
recognitio for their translation into vernacular languages, as well as to
ensure that the liturgical regulations, especially those governing the
celebration of the most exalted celebration of the Sacrifice of the Mass,
are everywhere faithfully observed”.[36]
[17.] “The Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the
Sacraments attends to those matters that pertain to the Apostolic See as
regards the regulation and promotion of the Sacred Liturgy, and especially
the Sacraments, with due regard for the competence of the Congregation for
the Doctrine of the Faith. It fosters and enforces sacramental discipline,
especially as regards their validity and their licit celebration”. Finally,
it “carefully seeks to ensure that the liturgical regulations are observed
with precision, and that abuses are prevented or eliminated whenever they
are detected”[37]. In this regard, according to the tradition of the
universal Church, pre-eminent solicitude is accorded the celebration of Holy
Mass, and also to the worship that is given to the Holy Eucharist even
outside Mass.
[18.] Christ’s faithful have the right that ecclesiastical authority should
fully and efficaciously regulate the Sacred Liturgy lest it should ever seem
to be “anyone’s private property, whether of the celebrant or of the
community in which the mysteries are celebrated”[38].
1. The Diocesan Bishop, High Priest of his Flock
[19.] The diocesan Bishop, the first steward of the mysteries of God in the
particular Church entrusted to him, is the moderator, promoter and guardian
of her whole liturgical life.[39] For “the Bishop, endowed with the fullness
of the Sacrament of Order, is ‘the steward of the grace of the high
Priesthood’,[40] especially in the Eucharist which he either himself offers
or causes to be offered,[41] by which the Church continually lives and grows”.[42]
[20.] Indeed, the pre-eminent manifestation of the Church is found whenever
the rites of Mass are celebrated, especially in the Cathedral Church, “with
the full and active participation of the entire holy People of God, joined
in one act of prayer, at one altar at which the Bishop presides”, surrounded
by his presbyterate with the Deacons and ministers.[43] Furthermore, “every
lawful celebration of the Eucharist is directed by the Bishop, to whom is
entrusted the office of presenting the worship of the Christian religion to
the Divine Majesty and ordering it according to the precepts of the Lord and
the laws of the Church, further specified by his own particular judgement
for the Diocese”.[44]
[21.] It pertains to the diocesan Bishop, then, “within the limits of his
competence, to set forth liturgical norms in his Diocese, by which all are
bound”.[45] Still, the Bishop must take care not to allow the removal of
that liberty foreseen by the norms of the liturgical books so that the
celebration may be adapted in an intelligent manner to the Church building,
or to the group of the faithful who are present, or to particular pastoral
circumstances in such a way that the universal sacred rite is truly
accommodated to human understanding.[46]
[22.] The Bishop governs the particular Church entrusted to him,[47] and it
is his task to regulate, to direct, to encourage, and sometimes also to
reprove;[48] this is a sacred task that he has received through episcopal
Ordination,[49] which he fulfills in order to build up his flock in truth
and holiness.[50] He should elucidate the inherent meaning of the rites and
the liturgical texts, and nourish the spirit of the Liturgy in the Priests,
Deacons and lay faithful[51] so that they are all led to the active and
fruitful celebration of the Eucharist,[52] and in like manner he should take
care to ensure that the whole body of the Church is able to grow in the same
understanding, in the unity of charity, in the diocese, in the nation and in
the world.[53]
[23.] The faithful “should cling to the Bishop as the Church does to Jesus
Christ, and as Jesus Christ does to the Father, so that all may be in
harmonious unity, and that they may abound to the glory of God”.[54] All,
including members of Institutes of consecrated life and Societies of
apostolic life as well as those of all ecclesial associations and movements
of any kind, are subject to the authority of the diocesan Bishop in all
liturgical matters,[55] apart from rights that have been legitimately
conceded. To the diocesan Bishop therefore falls the right and duty of
overseeing and attending to Churches and oratories in his territory in
regard to liturgical matters, and this is true also of those which are
founded by members of the above-mentioned institutes or under their
direction, provided that the faithful are accustomed to frequent them.[56]
[24.] It is the right of the Christian people themselves that their diocesan
Bishop should take care to prevent the occurrence of abuses in
ecclesiastical discipline, especially as regards the ministry of the word,
the celebration of the sacraments and sacramentals, the worship of God and
devotion to the Saints.[57]
[25.] Commissions as well as councils or committees established by the
Bishop to handle “the promotion of the Liturgy, sacred music and art in his
diocese” should act in accordance with the intentions and the norms of the
Bishop; they must rely on his authority and his approval so that they may
carry out their office in a suitable manner[58] and so that the effective
governance of the Bishop in his diocese will be preserved. As regards all
these sorts of bodies and other entities and all undertakings in liturgical
matters, there has long been the need for the Bishops to consider whether
their working has been fruitful thus far,[59] and to consider carefully
which changes or improvements should be made in their composition and
activity[60]so that they might find new vigour. It should be borne in mind
that the experts are to be chosen from among those whose soundness in the
Catholic faith and knowledge of theological and cultural matters are evident.
2. The Conference of Bishops
[26.] The same holds for those commissions of this kind which have been
established by the Conference of Bishops in accordance with the will of the
Council,[61] commissions whose members consist of Bishops who are clearly
distinguished from their expert helpers. Where the number of members of a
Conference of Bishops is not sufficient for the effective establishment of a
liturgical commission from among their own number, then a council or group
of experts should be named, always under the presidency of a Bishop, which
is to fulfill the same role insofar as possible, albeit without the name of
“liturgical commission”.
[27.] As early as the year 1970, the Apostolic See announced the cessation
of all experimentation as regards the celebration of Holy Mass[62] and
reiterated the same in 1988.[63] Accordingly, individual Bishops and their
Conferences do not have the faculty to permit experimentation with
liturgical texts or the other matters that are prescribed in the liturgical
books. In order to carry out experimentation of this kind in the future, the
permission of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the
Sacraments is required. It must be in writing, and it is to be requested by
the Conference of Bishops. In fact, it will not be granted without serious
reason. As regards projects of inculturation in liturgical matters, the
particular norms that have been established are strictly and comprehensively
to be observed.[64]
[28.] All liturgical norms that a Conference of Bishops will have
established for its territory in accordance with the law are to be submitted
to the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments
for the recognitio, without which they lack any binding force.[65]
3. Priests
[29.] Priests, as capable, prudent and indispensable co-workers of the order
of Bishops,[66] called to the service of the People of God, constitute one
presbyterate with their Bishop,[67] though charged with differing offices.
“In each local congregation of the faithful, in a certain way, they make
present the Bishop with whom they are associated in trust and in generosity
of heart; according to their rank, they take upon themselves his duties and
his solicitude, and they carry these out in their daily work”. And “because
of this participation in the Priesthood and mission, Priests should
recognize the Bishop as truly their father and obey him reverently”[68].
Furthermore, “ever intent upon the good of God’s children, they should seek
to contribute to the pastoral mission of the whole diocese, and indeed of
the whole Church”.[69]
[30.] The office “that belongs to Priests in particular in the celebration
of the Eucharist” is a great one, “for it is their responsibility to preside
at the Eucharist in persona Christi and to provide a witness to and a
service of communion not only for the community directly taking part in the
celebration, but also for the universal Church, which is always brought into
play within the context of the Eucharist. It must be lamented that,
especially in the years following the post-Conciliar liturgical reform, as a
result of a misguided sense of creativity and adaptation, there have been a
number of abuses which have been a source of suffering for many”.[70]
[31.] In keeping with the solemn promises that they have made in the rite of
Sacred Ordination and renewed each year in the Mass of the Chrism, let
Priests celebrate “devoutly and faithfully the mysteries of Christ for the
praise of God and the sanctification of the Christian people, according to
the tradition of the Church, especially in the Eucharistic Sacrifice and in
the Sacrament of Reconciliation”.[71] They ought not to detract from the
profound meaning of their own ministry by corrupting the liturgical
celebration either through alteration or omission, or through arbitrary
additions.[72] For as St. Ambrose said, “It is not in herself . . . but in
us that the Church is injured. Let us take care so that our own failure may
not cause injury to the Church”.[73] Let the Church of God not be injured,
then, by Priests who have so solemnly dedicated themselves to the ministry.
Indeed, under the Bishop’s authority let them faithfully seek to prevent
others as well from committing this type of distortion.
[32.] “Let the Parish Priest strive so that the Most Holy Eucharist will be
the center of the parish congregation of the faithful; let him work to
ensure that Christ’s faithful are nourished through the devout celebration
of the Sacraments, and in particular, that they frequently approach the Most
Holy Eucharist and the Sacrament of Penance; let him strive, furthermore, to
ensure that the faithful are encouraged to offer prayers in their families
as well, and to participate consciously and actively in the Sacred Liturgy,
which the Parish Priest, under the authority of the diocesan Bishop, is
bound to regulate and supervise in his parish lest abuses occur”.[74]
Although it is appropriate that he should be assisted in the effective
preparation of the liturgical celebrations by various members of Christ’s
faithful, he nevertheless must not cede to them in any way those things that
are proper to his own office.
[33.] Finally, all “Priests should go to the trouble of properly cultivating
their liturgical knowledge and ability, so that through their liturgical
ministry, God the Father, Son and Holy Spirit will be praised in an ever
more excellent manner by the Christian communities entrusted to them”.[75]
Above all, let them be filled with that wonder and amazement that the
Paschal Mystery, in being celebrated, instills in the hearts of the faithful.[76]
4. Deacons
[34.] Deacons “upon whom hands are imposed not for the Priesthood but for
the ministry”,[77] as men of good repute,[78] must act in such a way that
with the help of God they may be recognized as the true disciples[79] of him
“who came not to be served but to serve”[80], and who was among his
disciples “as one who serves”.[81] Strengthened by the gift of the Holy
Spirit through the laying on of hands, they are in service to the People of
God, in communion with the Bishop and his presbyterate.[82] They should
therefore consider the Bishop as a father, and give assistance to him and to
the Priests “in the ministry of the word, of the altar, and of charity”.[83]
[35.] Let them never fail, “as the Apostle says, to hold the mystery of
faith with a clear conscience,[84] and to proclaim this faith by word and
deed according to the Gospel and the tradition of the Church”,[85]in
wholehearted, faithful and humble service to the Sacred Liturgy as the
source and summit of ecclesial life, “so that all, made children of God
through faith and Baptism, may come together as one, praising God in the
midst of the Church, to participate in the Sacrifice and to eat the Lord’s
Supper”.[86] Let all Deacons, then, do their part so that the Sacred Liturgy
will be celebrated according to the norms of the duly approved liturgical
books.
Chapter II
THE PARTICIPATION OF THE LAY CHRISTIAN FAITHFUL
IN THE EUCHARISTIC CELEBRATION
1. Active and Conscious Participation
[36.] The celebration of the Mass, as the action of Christ and of the Church,
is the center of the whole Christian life for the universal as well as the
particular Church, and also for the individual faithful,[87] who are
involved “in differing ways according to the diversity of orders, ministries,
and active participation.[88] In this way the Christian people, “a chosen
race, a royal priesthood, a holy people, a people God has made his own”,[89]
manifests its coherent and hierarchical ordering”.[90] “For the common
priesthood of the faithful and the ministerial or hierarchical Priesthood,
though they differ in essence and not only in degree, are ordered to one
another, for both partake, each in its own way, of the one Priesthood of
Christ”.[91]
[37.] All of Christ’s faithful, freed from their sins and incorporated into
the Church through Baptism, are deputed by means of a sacramental character
for the worship of the Christian religion,[92] so that by virtue of their
royal priesthood,[93] persevering in prayer and praising God,[94] they may
offer themselves as a living and holy sacrifice pleasing to God and attested
to others by their works,[95] giving witness to Christ throughout the earth
and providing an answer to those who ask concerning their hope of eternal
life that is in them.[96] Thus the participation of the lay faithful too in
the Eucharist and in the other celebrations of the Church’s rites cannot be
equated with mere presence, and still less with a passive one, but is rather
to be regarded as a true exercise of faith and of the baptismal dignity.
[38.] The constant teaching of the Church on the nature of the Eucharist not
only as a meal, but also and pre-eminently as a Sacrifice, is therefore
rightly understood to be one of the principal keys to the full participation
of all the faithful in so great a Sacrament.[97] For when “stripped of its
sacrificial meaning, the mystery is understood as if its meaning and
importance were simply that of a fraternal banquet”.[98]
[39.] For promoting and elucidating active participation, the recent renewal
of the liturgical books according to the mind of the Council fostered
acclamations of the people, responses, psalmody, antiphons, and canticles,
as well as actions or movements and gestures, and called for sacred silence
to be maintained at the proper times, while providing rubrics for the parts
of the faithful as well.[99] In addition, ample flexibility is given for
appropriate creativity aimed at allowing each celebration to be adapted to
the needs of the participants, to their comprehension, their interior
preparation and their gifts, according to the established liturgical norms.
In the songs, the melodies, the choice of prayers and readings, the giving
of the homily, the preparation of the prayer of the faithful, the occasional
explanatory remarks, and the decoration of the Church building according to
the various seasons, there is ample possibility for introducing into each
celebration a certain variety by which the riches of the liturgical
tradition will also be more clearly evident, and so, in keeping with
pastoral requirements, the celebration will be carefully imbued with those
particular features that will foster the recollection of the participants.
Still, it should be remembered that the power of the liturgical celebrations
does not consist in frequently altering the rites, but in probing more
deeply the word of God and the mystery being celebrated.[100]
[40.] Nevertheless, from the fact that the liturgical celebration obviously
entails activity, it does not follow that everyone must necessarily have
something concrete to do beyond the actions and gestures, as if a certain
specific liturgical ministry must necessarily be given to the individuals to
be carried out by them. Instead, catechetical instruction should strive
diligently to correct those widespread superficial notions and practices
often seen in recent years in this regard, and ever to instill anew in all
of Christ’s faithful that sense of deep wonder before the greatness of the
mystery of faith that is the Eucharist, in whose celebration the Church is
forever passing from what is obsolete into newness of life: “in novitatem a
vetustate”.[101] For in the celebration of the Eucharist, as in the whole
Christian life which draws its power from it and leads toward it, the Church,
after the manner of Saint Thomas the Apostle, prostrates herself in
adoration before the Lord who was crucified, suffered and died, was buried
and arose, and perpetually exclaims to him who is clothed in the fullness of
his divine splendour: “My Lord and my God!”[102]
[41.] For encouraging, promoting and nourishing this interior understanding
of liturgical participation, the continuous and widespread celebration of
the Liturgy of the Hours, the use of the sacramentals and exercises of
Christian popular piety are extremely helpful. These latter exercises –
which “while not belonging to the Liturgy in the strict sense, possess
nonetheless a particular importance and dignity” – are to be regarded as
having a certain connection with the liturgical context, especially when
they have been lauded and attested by the Magisterium itself,[103] as is the
case especially of the Marian Rosary.[104] Furthermore, since these
practices of piety lead the Christian people both to the reception of the
sacraments – especially the Eucharist – and “to meditation on the mysteries
of our Redemption and the imitation of the excellent heavenly examples of
the Saints, they are therefore not without salutary effects for our
participation in liturgical worship ”.[105]
[42.] It must be acknowledged that the Church has not come together by human
volition; rather, she has been called together by God in the Holy Spirit,
and she responds through faith to his free calling (thus the word ekklesia
is related to klesis, or “calling”).[106] Nor is the Eucharistic Sacrifice
to be considered a “concelebration”, in the univocal sense, of the Priest
along with the people who are present.[107] On the contrary, the Eucharist
celebrated by the Priests “is a gift which radically transcends the power of
the community. . . . The community that gathers for the celebration of the
Eucharist absolutely requires an ordained Priest, who presides over it so
that it may truly be a eucharistic convocation. On the other hand, the
community is by itself incapable of providing an ordained minister”.[108]
There is pressing need of a concerted will to avoid all ambiguity in this
matter and to remedy the difficulties of recent years. Accordingly, terms
such as “celebrating community” or “celebrating assembly” (in other
languages “asamblea celebrante”, “assemblée célébrante”, assemblea
celebrante”) and similar terms should not be used injudiciously.
2. The Ministries of the Lay Christian Faithful in the Celebration of Holy
Mass
[43.] For the good of the community and of the whole Church of God, some of
the lay faithful according to tradition have rightly and laudably exercised
ministries in the celebration of the Sacred Liturgy.[109] It is appropriate
that a number of persons distribute among themselves and exercise various
ministries or different parts of the same ministry.[110]
[44.] Apart from the duly instituted ministries of acolyte and lector,[111]
the most important of these ministries are those of acolyte[112] and lector[113]
by temporary deputation. In addition to these are the other functions that
are described in the Roman Missal,[114] as well as the functions of
preparing the hosts, washing the liturgical linens, and the like. All,
“whether ordained ministers or lay faithful, in exercising their own office
or ministry should do exclusively and fully that which pertains to them”.[115]
In the liturgical celebration itself as well as in its preparation, they
should do what is necessary so that the Church’s Liturgy will be carried out
worthily and appropriately.
[45.] To be avoided is the danger of obscuring the complementary
relationship between the action of clerics and that of laypersons, in such a
way that the ministry of laypersons undergoes what might be called a certain
“clericalization”, while the sacred ministers inappropriately assume those
things that are proper to the life and activity of the lay faithful.[116]
[46.] The lay Christian faithful called to give assistance at liturgical
celebrations should be well instructed and must be those whose Christian
life, morals and fidelity to the Church’s Magisterium recommend them. It is
fitting that such a one should have received a liturgical formation in
accordance with his or her age, condition, state of life, and religious
culture.[117] No one should be selected whose designation could cause
consternation for the faithful.[118]
[47.] It is altogether laudable to maintain the noble custom by which boys
or youths, customarily termed servers, provide service of the altar after
the manner of acolytes, and receive catechesis regarding their function in
accordance with their power of comprehension.[119] Nor should it be
forgotten that a great number of sacred ministers over the course of the
centuries have come from among boys such as these.[120] Associations for
them, including also the participation and assistance of their parents,
should be established or promoted, and in such a way greater pastoral care
will be provided for the ministers. Whenever such associations are
international in nature, it pertains to the competence of the Congregation
for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments to establish them or
to approve and revise their statutes.[121] Girls or women may also be
admitted to this service of the altar, at the discretion of the diocesan
Bishop and in observance of the established norms.[122]
Chapter III
THE PROPER CELEBRATION OF MASS
1. The Matter of the Most Holy Eucharist
[48.] The bread used in the celebration of the Most Holy Eucharistic
Sacrifice must be unleavened, purely of wheat, and recently made so that
there is no danger of decomposition.[123] It follows therefore that bread
made from another substance, even if it is grain, or if it is mixed with
another substance different from wheat to such an extent that it would not
commonly be considered wheat bread, does not constitute valid matter for
confecting the Sacrifice and the Eucharistic Sacrament.[124] It is a grave
abuse to introduce other substances, such as fruit or sugar or honey, into
the bread for confecting the Eucharist. Hosts should obviously be made by
those who are not only distinguished by their integrity, but also skilled in
making them and furnished with suitable tools.[125]
[49.] By reason of the sign, it is appropriate that at least some parts of
the Eucharistic Bread coming from the fraction should be distributed to at
least some of the faithful in Communion. “Small hosts are, however, in no
way ruled out when the number of those receiving Holy Communion or other
pastoral needs require it”,[126] and indeed small hosts requiring no further
fraction ought customarily to be used for the most part.
[50.] The wine that is used in the most sacred celebration of the
Eucharistic Sacrifice must be natural, from the fruit of the grape, pure and
incorrupt, not mixed with other substances.[127] During the celebration
itself, a small quantity of water is to be mixed with it. Great care should
be taken so that the wine intended for the celebration of the Eucharist is
well conserved and has not soured.[128] It is altogether forbidden to use
wine of doubtful authenticity or provenance, for the Church requires
certainty regarding the conditions necessary for the validity of the
sacraments. Nor are other drinks of any kind to be admitted for any reason,
as they do not constitute valid matter.
2. The Eucharistic Prayer
[51.] Only those Eucharistic Prayers are to be used which are found in the
Roman Missal or are legitimately approved by the Apostolic See, and
according to the manner and the terms set forth by it. “It is not to be
tolerated that some Priests take upon themselves the right to compose their
own Eucharistic Prayers”[129] or to change the same texts approved by the
Church, or to introduce others composed by private individuals.[130]
[52.] The proclamation of the Eucharistic Prayer, which by its very nature
is the climax of the whole celebration, is proper to the Priest by virtue of
his Ordination. It is therefore an abuse to proffer it in such a way that
some parts of the Eucharistic Prayer are recited by a Deacon, a lay minister,
or by an individual member of the faithful, or by all members of the
faithful together. The Eucharistic Prayer, then, is to be recited by the
Priest alone in full.[131]
[53.] While the Priest proclaims the Eucharistic Prayer “there should be no
other prayers or singing, and the organ or other musical instruments should
be silent”,[132] except for the people’s acclamations that have been duly
approved, as described below.
[54.] The people, however, are always involved actively and never merely
passively: for they “silently join themselves with the Priest in faith, as
well as in their interventions during the course of the Eucharistic Prayer
as prescribed, namely in the responses in the Preface dialogue, the Sanctus,
the acclamation after the consecration and the “Amen” after the final
doxology, and in other acclamations approved by the Conference of Bishops
with the recognitio of the Holy See”.[133]
[55.] In some places there has existed an abuse by which the Priest breaks
the host at the time of the consecration in the Holy Mass. This abuse is
contrary to the tradition of the Church. It is reprobated and is to be
corrected with haste.
[56.] The mention of the name of the Supreme Pontiff and the diocesan Bishop
in the Eucharistic Prayer is not to be omitted, since this is a most ancient
tradition to be maintained, and a manifestation of ecclesial communion. For
“the coming together of the eucharistic community is at the same time a
joining in union with its own Bishop and with the Roman Pontiff”.[134]
3. The Other Parts of the Mass
[57.] It is the right of the community of Christ’s faithful that especially
in the Sunday celebration there should customarily be true and suitable
sacred music, and that there should always be an altar, vestments and sacred
linens that are dignified, proper, and clean, in accordance with the norms.
[58.] All of Christ’s faithful likewise have the right to a celebration of
the Eucharist that has been so carefully prepared in all its parts that the
word of God is properly and efficaciously proclaimed and explained in it;
that the faculty for selecting the liturgical texts and rites is carried out
with care according to the norms; and that their faith is duly safeguarded
and nourished by the words that are sung in the celebration of the Liturgy.
[59.] The reprobated practice by which Priests, Deacons or the faithful here
and there alter or vary at will the texts of the Sacred Liturgy that they
are charged to pronounce, must cease. For in doing thus, they render the
celebration of the Sacred Liturgy unstable, and not infrequently distort the
authentic meaning of the Liturgy.
[60.] In the celebration of Mass, the Liturgy of the Word and the Liturgy of
the Eucharist are intimately connected to one another, and form one single
act of worship. For this reason it is not licit to separate one of these
parts from the other and celebrate them at different times or places.[135]
Nor is it licit to carry out the individual parts of Holy Mass at different
times of the same day.
[61.] In selecting the biblical readings for proclamation in the celebration
of Mass, the norms found in the liturgical books are to be followed,[136] so
that indeed “a richer table of the word of God will be prepared for the
faithful, and the biblical treasures opened up for them”.[137]
[62.] It is also illicit to omit or to substitute the prescribed biblical
readings on one’s own initiative, and especially “to substitute other,
non-biblical texts for the readings and responsorial Psalm, which contain
the word of God”.[138]
[63.] “Within the celebration of the Sacred Liturgy, the reading of the
Gospel, which is “the high point of the Liturgy of the Word”,[139] is
reserved by the Church’s tradition to an ordained minister.[140] Thus it is
not permitted for a layperson, even a religious, to proclaim the Gospel
reading in the celebration of Holy Mass, nor in other cases in which the
norms do not explicitly permit it.[141]
[64.] The homily, which is given in the course of the celebration of Holy
Mass and is a part of the Liturgy itself,[142] “should ordinarily be given
by the Priest celebrant himself. He may entrust it to a concelebrating
Priest or occasionally, according to circumstances, to a Deacon, but never
to a layperson.[143] In particular cases and for a just cause, the homily
may even be given by a Bishop or a Priest who is present at the celebration
but cannot concelebrate”.[144]
[65.] It should be borne in mind that any previous norm that may have
admitted non-ordained faithful to give the homily during the eucharistic
celebration is to be considered abrogated by the norm of canon 767 §1.[145]
This practice is reprobated, so that it cannot be permitted to attain the
force of custom.
[66.] The prohibition of the admission of laypersons to preach within the
Mass applies also to seminarians, students of theological disciplines, and
those who have assumed the function of those known as “pastoral assistants”;
nor is there to be any exception for any other kind of layperson, or group,
or community, or association.[146]
[67.] Particular care is to be taken so that the homily is firmly based upon
the mysteries of salvation, expounding the mysteries of the Faith and the
norms of Christian life from the biblical readings and liturgical texts
throughout the course of the liturgical year and providing commentary on the
texts of the Ordinary or the Proper of the Mass, or of some other rite of
the Church.[147] It is clear that all interpretations of Sacred Scripture
are to be referred back to Christ himself as the one upon whom the entire
economy of salvation hinges, though this should be done in light of the
specific context of the liturgical celebration. In the homily to be given,
care is to be taken so that the light of Christ may shine upon life’s events.
Even so, this is to be done so as not to obscure the true and unadulterated
word of God: for instance, treating only of politics or profane subjects, or
drawing upon notions derived from contemporary pseudo-religious currents as
a source.[148]
[68.] The diocesan Bishop must diligently oversee the preaching of the
homily,[149] also publishing norms and distributing guidelines and auxiliary
tools to the sacred ministers, and promoting meetings and other projects for
this purpose so that they may have the opportunity to consider the nature of
the homily more precisely and find help in its preparation.
[69.] In Holy Mass as well as in other celebrations of the Sacred Liturgy,
no Creed or Profession of Faith is to be introduced which is not found in
the duly approved liturgical books.
[70.] The offerings that Christ’s faithful are accustomed to present for the
Liturgy of the Eucharist in Holy Mass are not necessarily limited to bread
and wine for the eucharistic celebration, but may also include gifts given
by the faithful in the form of money or other things for the sake of charity
toward the poor. Moreover, external gifts must always be a visible
expression of that true gift that God expects from us: a contrite heart, the
love of God and neighbour by which we are conformed to the sacrifice of
Christ, who offered himself for us. For in the Eucharist, there shines forth
most brilliantly that mystery of charity that Jesus brought forth at the
Last Supper by washing the feet of the disciples. In order to preserve the
dignity of the Sacred Liturgy, in any event, the external offerings should
be brought forward in an appropriate manner. Money, therefore, just as other
contributions for the poor, should be placed in an appropriate place which
should be away from the eucharistic table.[150] Except for money and
occasionally a minimal symbolic portion of other gifts, it is preferable
that such offerings be made outside the celebration of Mass.
[71.] The practice of the Roman Rite is to be maintained according to which
the peace is extended shortly before Holy Communion. For according to the
tradition of the Roman Rite, this practice does not have the connotation
either of reconciliation or of a remission of sins, but instead signifies
peace, communion and charity before the reception of the Most Holy Eucharist.[151]
It is rather the Penitential Act to be carried out at the beginning of Mass
(especially in its first form) which has the character of reconciliation
among brothers and sisters.
[72.] It is appropriate “that each one give the sign of peace only to those
who are nearest and in a sober manner”. “The Priest may give the sign of
peace to the ministers but always remains within the sanctuary, so as not to
disturb the celebration. He does likewise if for a just reason he wishes to
extend the sign of peace to some few of the faithful”. “As regards the sign
to be exchanged, the manner is to be established by the Conference of
Bishops in accordance with the dispositions and customs of the people”, and
their acts are subject to the recognitio of the Apostolic See.[152]
[73.] In the celebration of Holy Mass the breaking of the Eucharistic Bread
– done only by the Priest celebrant, if necessary with the help of a Deacon
or of a concelebrant – begins after the exchange of peace, while the Agnus
Dei is being recited. For the gesture of breaking bread “carried out by
Christ at the Last Supper, which in apostolic times gave the whole
eucharistic action its name, signifies that the faithful, though they are
many, are made one Body in the communion of the one Bread of Life who is
Christ, who died and rose for the world’s salvation” (cf. 1 Cor 10,17).[153]
For this reason the rite must be carried out with great reverence.[154] Even
so, it should be brief. The abuse that has prevailed in some places, by
which this rite is unnecessarily prolonged and given undue emphasis, with
laypersons also helping in contradiction to the norms, should be corrected
with all haste.[155]
[74.] If the need arises for the gathered faithful to be given instruction
or testimony by a layperson in a Church concerning the Christian life, it is
altogether preferable that this be done outside Mass. Nevertheless, for
serious reasons it is permissible that this type of instruction or testimony
be given after the Priest has proclaimed the Prayer after Communion. This
should not become a regular practice, however. Furthermore, these
instructions and testimony should not be of such a nature that they could be
confused with the homily,[156] nor is it permissible to dispense with the
homily on their account.
4. On the Joining of Various Rites with the Celebration of Mass
[75.] On account of the theological significance inherent in a particular
rite and the Eucharistic Celebration, the liturgical books sometimes
prescribe or permit the celebration of Holy Mass to be joined with another
rite, especially one of those pertaining to the Sacraments.[157] The Church
does not permit such a conjoining in other cases, however, especially when
it is a question of trivial matters.
[76.] Furthermore, according to a most ancient tradition of the Roman
Church, it is not permissible to unite the Sacrament of Penance to the Mass
in such a way that they become a single liturgical celebration. This does
not exclude, however, that Priests other than those celebrating or
concelebrating the Mass might hear the confessions of the faithful who so
desire, even in the same place where Mass is being celebrated, in order to
meet the needs of those faithful.[158] This should nevertheless be done in
an appropriate manner.
[77.] The celebration of Holy Mass is not to be inserted in any way into the
setting of a common meal, nor joined with this kind of banquet. Mass is not
to be celebrated without grave necessity on a dinner table[159] nor in a
dining room or banquet hall, nor in a room where food is present, nor in a
place where the participants during the celebration itself are seated at
tables. If out of grave necessity Mass must be celebrated in the same place
where eating will later take place, there is to be a clear interval of time
between the conclusion of Mass and the beginning of the meal, and ordinary
food is not to be set before the faithful during the celebration of Mass.
[78.] It is not permissible to link the celebration of Mass to political or
secular events, nor to situations that are not fully consistent with the
Magisterium of the Catholic Church. Furthermore, it is altogether to be
avoided that the celebration of Mass should be carried out merely out of a
desire for show, or in the manner of other ceremonies including profane
ones, lest the Eucharist should be emptied of its authentic meaning.
[79.] Finally, it is strictly to be considered an abuse to introduce into
the celebration of Holy Mass elements that are contrary to the prescriptions
of the liturgical books and taken from the rites of other religions.
Chapter IV
HOLY COMMUNION
1. Dispositions for the Reception of Holy Communion
[80.] The Eucharist is to be offered to the faithful, among other reasons,
“as an antidote, by which we are freed from daily faults and preserved from
mortal sins”,[160]as is brought to light in various parts of the Mass. As
for the Penitential Act placed at the beginning of Mass, it has the purpose
of preparing all to be ready to celebrate the sacred mysteries;[161]even so,
“it lacks the efficacy of the Sacrament of Penance”,[162] and cannot be
regarded as a substitute for the Sacrament of Penance in remission of graver
sins. Pastors of souls should take care to ensure diligent catechetical
instruction, so that Christian doctrine is handed on to Christ’s faithful in
this matter.
[81.] The Church’s custom shows that it is necessary for each person to
examine himself at depth,[163] and that anyone who is conscious of grave sin
should not celebrate or receive the Body of the Lord without prior
sacramental confession, except for grave reason when the possibility of
confession is lacking; in this case he will remember that he is bound by the
obligation of making an act of perfect contrition, which includes the
intention to confess as soon as possible”.[164]
[82.] Moreover, “the Church has drawn up norms aimed at fostering the
frequent and fruitful access of the faithful to the Eucharistic table and at
determining the objective conditions under which Communion may not be
given”.[165]
[83.] It is certainly best that all who are participating in the celebration
of Holy Mass with the necessary dispositions should receive Communion.
Nevertheless, it sometimes happens that Christ’s faithful approach the altar
as a group indiscriminately. It pertains to the Pastors prudently and firmly
to correct such an abuse.
[84.] Furthermore when Holy Mass is celebrated for a large crowd - for
example, in large cities - care should be taken lest out of ignorance
non-Catholics or even non-Christians come forward for Holy Communion,
without taking into account the Church’s Magisterium in matters pertaining
to doctrine and discipline. It is the duty of Pastors at an opportune moment
to inform those present of the authenticity and the discipline that are
strictly to be observed.
[85.] Catholic ministers licitly administer the Sacraments only to the
Catholic faithful, who likewise receive them licitly only from Catholic
ministers, except for those situations for which provision is made in can.
844 §§ 2,3, and 4, and can. 861 § 2.[166] In addition, the conditions
comprising can. 844 § 4, from which no dispensation can be given,[167]
cannot be separated; thus, it is necessary that all of these conditions be
present together.
[86.] The faithful should be led insistently to the practice whereby they
approach the Sacrament of Penance outside the celebration of Mass,
especially at the scheduled times, so that the Sacrament may be administered
in a manner that is tranquil and truly beneficial to them, so as not to be
prevented from active participation at Mass. Those who are accustomed to
receiving Communion often or daily should be instructed that they should
approach the Sacrament of Penance at appropriate intervals, in accordance
with the condition of each.[168]
[87.] The First Communion of children must always be preceded by sacramental
confession and absolution.[169] Moreover First Communion should always be
administered by a Priest and never outside the celebration of Mass. Apart
from exceptional cases, it is not particularly appropriate for First
Communion to be administered on Holy Thursday of the Lord’s Supper. Another
day should be chosen instead, such as a Sunday between the Second and the
Sixth Sunday of Easter, or the Solemnity of the Body and Blood of Christ, or
the Sundays of Ordinary Time, since Sunday is rightly regarded as the day of
the Eucharist.[170] “Children who have not attained the age of reason, or
those whom” the Parish Priest “has determined to be insufficiently prepared”
should not come forward to receive the Holy Eucharist.[171] Where it
happens, however, that a child who is exceptionally mature for his age is
judged to be ready for receiving the Sacrament, the child must not be denied
First Communion provided he has received sufficient instruction.
2. The distribution of Holy Communion
[88.] The faithful should normally receive sacramental Communion of the
Eucharist during Mass itself, at the moment laid down by the rite of
celebration, that is to say, just after the Priest celebrant’s
Communion.[172] It is the Priest celebrant’s responsibility to minister
Communion, perhaps assisted by other Priests or Deacons; and he should not
resume the Mass until after the Communion of the faithful is concluded. Only
when there is a necessity may extraordinary ministers assist the Priest
celebrant in accordance with the norm of law.[173]
[89.] “So that even by means of the signs Communion may stand out more
clearly as a participation in the Sacrifice being celebrated”,[174] it is
preferable that the faithful be able to receive hosts consecrated in the
same Mass.[175]
[90.] “The faithful should receive Communion kneeling or standing, as the
Conference of Bishops will have determined”, with its acts having received
the recognitio of the Apostolic See. “However, if they receive Communion
standing, it is recommended that they give due reverence before the
reception of the Sacrament, as set forth in the same norms”.[176]
[91.] In distributing Holy Communion it is to be remembered that “sacred
ministers may not deny the sacraments to those who seek them in a reasonable
manner, are rightly disposed, and are not prohibited by law from receiving
them”.[177] Hence any baptized Catholic who is not prevented by law must be
admitted to Holy Communion. Therefore, it is not licit to deny Holy
Communion to any of Christ’s faithful solely on the grounds, for example,
that the person wishes to receive the Eucharist kneeling or standing.
[92.] Although each of the faithful always has the right to receive Holy
Communion on the tongue, at his choice,[178] if any communicant should wish
to receive the Sacrament in the hand, in areas where the Bishops’ Conference
with the recognitio of the Apostolic See has given permission, the sacred
host is to be administered to him or her. However, special care should be
taken to ensure that the host is consumed by the communicant in the presence
of the minister, so that no one goes away carrying the Eucharistic species
in his hand. If there is a risk of profanation, then Holy Communion should
not be given in the hand to the faithful.[179]
[93.] The Communion-plate for the Communion of the faithful should be
retained, so as to avoid the danger of the sacred host or some fragment of
it falling.[180]
[94.] It is not licit for the faithful “to take . . . by themselves . . .
and, still less, to hand . . . from one to another” the sacred host or the
sacred chalice.[181] Moreover, in this regard, the abuse is to be set aside
whereby spouses administer Holy Communion to each other at a Nuptial Mass.
[95.] A lay member of Christ’s faithful “who has already received the Most
Holy Eucharist may receive it again on the same day only within a
Eucharistic Celebration in which he or she is participating, with due regard
for the prescriptions of can. 921 § 2.”[182]
[96.] The practice is reprobated whereby either unconsecrated hosts or other
edible or inedible things are distributed during the celebration of Holy
Mass or beforehand after the manner of Communion, contrary to the
prescriptions of the liturgical books. For such a practice in no way accords
with the tradition of the Roman Rite, and carries with it the danger of
causing confusion among Christ’s faithful concerning the Eucharistic
doctrine of the Church. Where there exists in certain places by concession a
particular custom of blessing bread after Mass for distribution, proper
catechesis should very carefully be given concerning this action. In fact,
no other similar practices should be introduced, nor should unconsecrated
hosts ever be used for this purpose.
3. The Communion of Priests
[97.] 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.[183]
[98.] The Communion of Priest concelebrants should proceed according to the
norms prescribed in the liturgical books, always using hosts consecrated at
the same Mass[184] and always with Communion under both kinds being received
by all of the concelebrants. It is to be noted that if the Priest or Deacon
hands the sacred host or chalice to the concelebrants, he says nothing; that
is to say, he does not pronounce the words “The Body of Christ” or “The
Blood of Christ”.
[99.] Communion under both kinds is always permitted “to Priests who are not
able to celebrate or concelebrate Mass”.[185]
4. Communion under Both Kinds
[100.] So that the fullness of the sign may be made more clearly evident to
the faithful in the course of the Eucharistic banquet, lay members of
Christ’s faithful, too, are admitted to Communion under both kinds, in the
cases set forth in the liturgical books, preceded and continually
accompanied by proper catechesis regarding the dogmatic principles on this
matter laid down by the Ecumenical Council of Trent.[186]
[101.] In order for Holy Communion under both kinds to be administered to
the lay members of Christ’s faithful, due consideration should be given to
the circumstances, as judged first of all by the diocesan Bishop. It is to
be completely excluded where even a small danger exists of the sacred
species being profaned.[187] With a view to wider co-ordination, the
Bishops’ Conferences should issue norms, once their decisions have received
the recognitio of the Apostolic See through the Congregation for Divine
Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, especially as regards “the
manner of distributing Holy Communion to the faithful under both kinds, and
the faculty for its extension”.[188]
[102.] The chalice should not be ministered to lay members of Christ’s
faithful where there is such a large number of communicants[189]that it is
difficult to gauge the amount of wine for the Eucharist and there is a
danger that “more than a reasonable quantity of the Blood of Christ remain
to be consumed at the end of the celebration”.[190] The same is true
wherever access to the chalice would be difficult to arrange, or where such
a large amount of wine would be required that its certain provenance and
quality could only be known with difficulty, or wherever there is not an
adequate number of sacred ministers or extraordinary ministers of Holy
Communion with proper formation, or where a notable part of the people
continues to prefer not to approach the chalice for various reasons, so that
the sign of unity would in some sense be negated.
[103.] The norms of the Roman Missal admit the principle that in cases where
Communion is administered under both kinds, “the Blood of the Lord may be
received either by drinking from the chalice directly, or by intinction, or
by means of a tube or a spoon”.[191] As regards the administering of
Communion to lay members of Christ’s faithful, the Bishops may exclude
Communion with the tube or the spoon where this is not the local custom,
though the option of administering Communion by intinction always remains.
If this modality is employed, however, hosts should be used which are
neither too thin nor too small, and the communicant should receive the
Sacrament from the Priest only on the tongue.[192]
[104.] The communicant must not be permitted to intinct the host himself in
the chalice, nor to receive the intincted host in the hand. As for the host
to be used for the intinction, it should be made of valid matter, also
consecrated; it is altogether forbidden to use non-consecrated bread or
other matter.
[105.] If one chalice is not sufficient for Communion to be distributed
under both kinds to the Priest concelebrants or Christ’s faithful, there is
no reason why the Priest celebrant should not use several chalices.[193] For
it is to be remembered that all Priests in celebrating Holy Mass are bound
to receive Communion under both kinds. It is praiseworthy, by reason of the
sign value, to use a main chalice of larger dimensions, together with
smaller chalices.
[106.] However, the pouring of the Blood of Christ after the consecration
from one vessel to another is completely to be avoided, lest anything should
happen that would be to the detriment of so great a mystery. Never to be
used for containing the Blood of the Lord are flagons, bowls, or other
vessels that are not fully in accord with the established norms.
[107.] In accordance with what is laid down by the canons, “one who throws
away the consecrated species or takes them away or keeps them for a
sacrilegious purpose, incurs a latae sententiae excommunication reserved to
the Apostolic See; a cleric, moreover, may be punished by another penalty,
not excluding dismissal from the clerical state”.[194] To be regarded as
pertaining to this case is any action that is voluntarily and gravely
disrespectful of the sacred species. Anyone, therefore, who acts contrary to
these norms, for example casting the sacred species into the sacrarium or in
an unworthy place or on the ground, incurs the penalties laid down.[195]
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, while the consecrated hosts
that are left are to be consumed by the Priest at the altar or carried to
the place for the reservation of the Eucharist.[196]
Chapter V
CERTAIN OTHER MATTERS CONCERNING
THE EUCHARIST
1. The Place for the Celebration of Holy Mass
[108.] “The celebration of the Eucharist is to be carried out in a sacred
place, unless in a particular case necessity requires otherwise. In this
case the celebration must be in a decent place.”[197] The diocesan Bishop
shall be the judge for his diocese concerning this necessity, on a
case-by-case basis.
[109.] It is never lawful for a Priest to celebrate in a temple or sacred
place of any non-Christian religion.
2. Various Circumstances Relating to the Mass
[110.] “Remembering always that in the mystery of the Eucharistic Sacrifice
the work of redemption is constantly being carried out, Priests should
celebrate frequently. Indeed, daily celebration is earnestly recommended,
because, even if it should not be possible to have the faithful present, the
celebration is an act of Christ and of the Church, and in carrying it out,
Priests fulfill their principal role.”[198]
[111.] A Priest is to be permitted to celebrate or concelebrate the
Eucharist “even if he is not known to the rector of the church, provided he
presents commendatory letters” (i.e., a celebret) not more than a year old
from the Holy See or his Ordinary or Superior “or unless it can be prudently
judged that he is not impeded from celebrating”.[199] Let the Bishops take
measures to put a stop to any contrary practice.
[112.] Mass is celebrated either in Latin or in another language, provided
that liturgical texts are used which have been approved according to the
norm of law. Except in the case of celebrations of the Mass that are
scheduled by the ecclesiastical authorities to take place in the language of
the people, Priests are always and everywhere permitted to celebrate Mass in
Latin.[200]
[113.] When Mass is concelebrated by several Priests, a language known both
to all the concelebrating Priests and to the gathered people should be used
in the recitation of the Eucharist Prayer. Where it happens that some of the
Priests who are present do not know the language of the celebration and
therefore are not capable of pronouncing the parts of the Eucharistic Prayer
proper to them, they should not concelebrate, but instead should attend the
celebration in choral dress in accordance with the norms.[201]
[114.] “At Sunday Masses in parishes, insofar as parishes are ‘Eucharistic
communities’, it is customary to find different groups, movements,
associations, and even the smaller religious communities present in the
parish.”[202] While it is permissible that Mass should be celebrated for
particular groups according to the norm of law,[203] these groups are
nevertheless not exempt from the faithful observance of the liturgical
norms.
[115.] The abuse is reprobated by which the celebration of Holy Mass for the
people is suspended in an arbitrary manner contrary to the norms of the
Roman Missal and the healthy tradition of the Roman Rite, on the pretext of
promoting a “fast from the Eucharist”.
[116.] Masses are not to be multiplied contrary to the norm of law, and as
regards Mass stipends, all those things are to be observed which are
otherwise laid down by law.[204]
3. Sacred Vessels
[117.] Sacred vessels for containing the Body and Blood of the Lord must be
made in strict conformity with the norms of tradition and of the liturgical
books.[205]The Bishops’ Conferences have the faculty to decide whether it is
appropriate, once their decisions have been given the recognitio by the
Apostolic See, for sacred vessels to be made of other solid materials as
well. It is strictly required, however, that such materials be truly noble
in the common estimation within a given region,[206]so that honour will be
given to the Lord by their use, and all risk of diminishing the doctrine of
the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharistic species in the eyes of the
faithful will be avoided. Reprobated, therefore, is any practice of using
for the celebration of Mass common vessels, or others lacking in quality, or
devoid of all artistic merit or which are mere containers, as also other
vessels made from glass, earthenware, clay, or other materials that break
easily. This norm is to be applied even as regards metals and other
materials that easily rust or deteriorate.[207]
[118.] Before they are used, sacred vessels are to be blessed by a Priest
according to the rites laid down in the liturgical books.[208] It is
praiseworthy for the blessing to be given by the diocesan Bishop, who will
judge whether the vessels are worthy of the use to which they are destined.
[119.] The Priest, once he has returned to the altar after the distribution
of Communion, standing at the altar or at the credence table, purifies the
paten or ciborium over the chalice, then purifies the chalice in accordance
with the prescriptions of the Missal and wipes the chalice with the
purificator. Where a Deacon is present, he returns with the Priest to the
altar and purifies the vessels. It is permissible, however, especially if
there are several vessels to be purified, to leave them, covered as may be
appropriate, on a corporal on the altar or on the credence table, and for
them to be purified by the Priest or Deacon immediately after Mass once the
people have been dismissed. Moreover a duly instituted acolyte assists the
Priest or Deacon in purifying and arranging the sacred vessels either at the
altar or the credence table. In the absence of a Deacon, a duly instituted
acolyte carries the sacred vessels to the credence table and there purifies,
wipes and arranges them in the usual way.[209]
[120.] Let Pastors take care that the linens for the sacred table,
especially those which will receive the sacred species, are always kept
clean and that they are washed in the traditional way. It is praiseworthy
for this to be done by pouring the water from the first washing, done by
hand, into the church’s sacrarium or into the ground in a suitable place.
After this a second washing can be done in the usual way.
4. Liturgical Vesture
[121.] “The purpose of a variety of colour of the sacred vestments is to
give effective expression even outwardly to the specific character of the
mysteries of faith being celebrated and to a sense of Christian life’s
passage through the course of the liturgical year”.[210] On the other hand,
the variety “of offices in the celebration of the Eucharist is shown
outwardly by the diversity of sacred vestments. In fact, these “sacred
vestments should also contribute to the beauty of the sacred action
itself”.[211]
[122.] “The alb” is “to be tied at the waist with a cincture unless it is
made so as to fit even without a cincture. Before the alb is put on, if it
does not completely cover the ordinary clothing at the neck, an amice should
be put on”.[212]
[123.] “The vestment proper to the Priest celebrant at Mass, and in other
sacred actions directly connected with Mass unless otherwise indicated, is
the chasuble, worn over the alb and stole.”[213] Likewise the Priest, in
putting on the chasuble according to the rubrics, is not to omit the stole.
All Ordinaries should be vigilant in order that all usage to the contrary be
eradicated.
[124.] A faculty is given in the Roman Missal for the Priest concelebrants
at Mass other than the principal concelebrant (who should always put on a
chasuble of the prescribed colour), for a just reason such as a large number
of concelebrants or a lack of vestments, to omit “the chasuble, using the
stole over the alb”.[214] Where a need of this kind can be foreseen,
however, provision should be made for it insofar as possible. Out of
necessity the concelebrants other than the principal celebrant may even put
on white chasubles. For the rest, the norms of the liturgical books are to
be observed.
[125.] The proper vestment of the Deacon is the dalmatic, to be worn over an
alb and stole. In order that the beautiful tradition of the Church may be
preserved, it is praiseworthy to refrain from exercising the option of
omitting the dalmatic.[215]
[126.] The abuse is reprobated whereby the sacred ministers celebrate Holy
Mass or other rites without sacred vestments or with only a stole over the
monastic cowl or the common habit of religious or ordinary clothes, contrary
to the prescriptions of the liturgical books, even when there is only one
minister participating.[216] In order that such abuses be corrected as
quickly as possible, Ordinaries should take care that in all churches and
oratories subject to their jurisdiction there is present an adequate supply
of liturgical vestments made in accordance with the norms.
[127.] A special faculty is given in the liturgical books for using sacred
vestments that are festive or more noble on more solemn occasions, even if
they are not of the colour of the day.[217] However, this faculty, which is
specifically intended in reference to vestments made many years ago, with a
view to preserving the Church’s patrimony, is improperly extended to
innovations by which forms and colours are adopted according to the
inclination of private individuals, with disregard for traditional practice,
while the real sense of this norm is lost to the detriment of the tradition.
On the occasion of a feastday, sacred vestments of a gold or silver colour
can be substituted as appropriate for others of various colours, but not for
purple or black.
[128.] Holy Mass and other liturgical celebrations, which are acts of Christ
and of the people of God hierarchically constituted, are ordered in such a
way that the sacred ministers and the lay faithful manifestly take part in
them each according to his own condition. It is preferable therefore that
“Priests who are present at a Eucharistic Celebration, unless excused for a
good reason, should as a rule exercise the office proper to their Order and
thus take part as concelebrants, wearing the sacred vestments. Otherwise,
they wear their proper choir dress or a surplice over a cassock.”[218] It is
not fitting, except in rare and exceptional cases and with reasonable cause,
for them to participate at Mass, as regards to externals, in the manner of
the lay faithful.
Chapter VI
THE RESERVATION OF THE MOST HOLY EUCHARIST
AND EUCHARISTIC WORSHIP OUTSIDE MASS
1. The Reservation of the Most Holy Eucharist
[129.] “The celebration of the Eucharist in the Sacrifice of the Mass is
truly the origin and end of the worship given to the Eucharist outside the
Mass. Furthermore the sacred species are reserved after Mass principally so
that the faithful who cannot be present at Mass, above all the sick and
those advanced in age, may be united by sacramental Communion to Christ and
his Sacrifice which is offered in the Mass.”[219] In addition, this
reservation also permits the practice of adoring this great Sacrament and
offering it the worship due to God. Accordingly, forms of adoration that are
not only private but also public and communitarian in nature, as established
or approved by the Church herself, must be greatly promoted.[220]
[130.] “According to the structure of each church building and in accordance
with legitimate local customs, the Most Holy Sacrament is to be reserved in
a tabernacle in a part of the church that is noble, prominent, readily
visible, and adorned in a dignified manner” and furthermore “suitable for
prayer” by reason of the quietness of the location, the space available in
front of the tabernacle, and also the supply of benches or seats and
kneelers.[221] In addition, diligent attention should be paid to all the
prescriptions of the liturgical books and to the norm of law,[222]
especially as regards the avoidance of the danger of profanation.[223]
[131.] Apart from the prescriptions of canon 934 § 1, it is forbidden to
reserve the Blessed Sacrament in a place that is not subject in a secure way
to the authority of the diocesan Bishop, or where there is a danger of
profanation. Where such is the case, the diocesan Bishop should immediately
revoke any permission for reservation of the Euchari st that may already
have been granted.[224]
[132.] No one may carry the Most Holy Eucharist to his or her home, or to
any other place contrary to the norm of law. It should also be borne in mind
that removing or retaining the consecrated species for a sacrilegious
purpose or casting them away are graviora delicta, the absolution of which
is reserved to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.[225]
[133.] A Priest or Deacon, or an extraordinary minister who takes the Most
Holy Eucharist when an ordained minister is absent or impeded in order to
administer it as Communion for a sick person, should go insofar as possible
directly from the place where the Sacrament is reserved to the sick person’s
home, leaving aside any profane business so that any danger of profanation
may be avoided and the greatest reverence for the Body of Christ may be
ensured. Furthermore the Rite for the administration of Communion to the
sick, as prescribed in the Roman Ritual, is always to be used.[226]
2. Certain Forms of Worship of the Most Holy Eucharist Outside Mass
[134.] “The worship of the Eucharist outside the Sacrifice of the Mass is a
tribute of inestimable value in the life of the Church. Such worship is
closely linked to the celebration of the Eucharistic Sacrifice.”[227]
Therefore both public and private devotion to the Most Holy Eucharist even
outside Mass should be vigorously promoted, for by means of it the faithful
give adoration to Christ, truly and really present,[228] the “High Priest of
the good things to come”[229] and Redeemer of the whole world. “It is the
responsibility of sacred Pastors, even by the witness of their life, to
support the practice of Eucharistic worship and especially exposition of the
Most Holy Sacrament, as well as prayer of adoration before Christ present
under the eucharistic species.”[230]
[135.] The faithful “should not omit making visits during the day to the
Most Holy Sacrament, as a proof of gratitude, a pledge of love, and a debt
of the adoration due to Christ the Lord who is present in it.”[231] For the
contemplation of Jesus present in the Most Holy Sacrament, as a communion of
desire, powerfully joins the faithful to Christ, as is splendidly evident in
the example of so many Saints.[232] ‘Unless there is a grave reason to the
contrary, a church in which the Most Holy Eucharist is reserved should be
open to the faithful for at least some hours each day, so that they can
spend time in prayer before the Most Holy Sacrament.”[233]
[136.] The Ordinary should diligently foster Eucharistic adoration, whether
brief or prolonged or almost continuous, with the participation of the
people. For in recent years in so many places “adoration of the Most Holy
Sacrament is also an important daily practice and becomes an inexhaustible
source of holiness”, although there are also places “where there is evident
almost a total lack of regard for worship in the form of eucharistic
adoration.”[234]
[137.] Exposition of the Most Holy Eucharist must always be carried out in
accordance with the prescriptions of the liturgical books.[235] Before the
Most Holy Sacrament either reserved or exposed, the praying of the Rosary,
which is admirable “in its simplicity and even its profundity”, is not to be
excluded either.[236] Even so, especially if there is Exposition, the
character of this kind of prayer as a contemplation of the mystery of the
life of Christ the Redeemer and the Almighty Father’s design of salvation
should be emphasized, especially by making use of readings taken from Sacred
Scripture.[237]
[138.] Still, the Most Holy Sacrament, when exposed, must never be left
unattended even for the briefest space of time. It should therefore be
arranged that at least some of the faithful always be present at fixed
times, even if they take alternating turns.
[139.] Where the diocesan Bishop has sacred ministers or others whom he can
assign to this purpose, the faithful have a right to visit the Most Holy
Sacrament of the Eucharist frequently for adoration, and to take part in
adoration before the Most Holy Eucharist exposed at least at some time in
the course of any given year.
[140.] It is highly recommended that at least in the cities and the larger
towns the diocesan Bishop should designate a church building for perpetual
adoration; in it, however, Holy Mass should be celebrated frequently, even
daily if possible, while the Exposition should rigorously be interrupted
while Mass is being celebrated.[238] It is fitting that the host to be
exposed for adoration should be consecrated in the Mass immediately
preceding the time of adoration, and that it should be placed in the
monstrance upon the altar after Communion.[239]
[141.] The diocesan Bishop should acknowledge and foster insofar as possible
the right of the various groups of Christ’s faithful to form guilds or
associations for the carrying out of adoration, even almost continuous
adoration. Whenever such associations assume an international character, it
pertains to the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the
Sacraments to erect them and to approve their statutes.[240]
3. Eucharistic Congresses and Eucharistic Processions
[142.] “It is for the diocesan Bishop to establish regulations about
processions in order to provide for participation in them and for their
being carried out in a dignified way”[241] and to promote adoration by the
faithful.
[143.] “Wherever it is possible in the judgement of the diocesan Bishop, a
procession through the public streets should be held, especially on the
Solemnity of the Body and Blood of Christ as a public witness of reverence
for the Most Holy Sacrament”,[242] for the “devout participation of the
faithful in the eucharistic procession on the Solemnity of the Body and
Blood of Christ is a grace from the Lord which yearly fills with joy those
who take part in it”.[243]
[144.] Although this cannot be done in some places, the tradition of holding
eucharistic processions should not be allowed to be lost. Instead, new ways
should be sought of holding them in today’s conditions: for example, at
shrines, or in public gardens if the civil authority agrees.
[145.] The pastoral value of Eucharistic Congresses should be highly
esteemed, and they “should be a genuine sign of faith and charity”.[244] Let
them be diligently prepared and carried out in accordance with what has been
laid down,[245] so that Christ’s faithful may have the occasion to worship
the sacred mysteries of the Body and Blood of the Son of God in a worthy
manner, and that they may continually experience within themselves the
fruits of the Redemption.[246]
Chapter VII
EXTRAORDINARY FUNCTIONS
OF LAY FAITHFUL
[146.] There can be no substitute whatsoever for the ministerial Priesthood.
For if a Priest is lacking in the community, then the community lacks the
exercise and sacramental function of Christ the Head and Shepherd, which
belongs to the essence of its very life.[247] For “the only minister who can
confect the sacrament of the Eucharist in persona Christi is a validly
ordained Priest”.[248]
[147.] When the Church’s needs require it, however, if sacred ministers are
lacking, lay members of Christ’s faithful may supply for certain liturgical
offices according to the norm of law.[249] Such faithful are called and
appointed to carry out certain functions, whether of greater or lesser
weight, sustained by the Lord’s grace. Many of the lay Christian faithful
have already contributed eagerly to this service and still do so, especially
in missionary areas where the Church is still of small dimensions or is
experiencing conditions of persecution,[250] but also in areas affected by a
shortage of Priests and Deacons.
[148.] Particular importance is to be attached to the training of
catechists, who by means of great labours have given and still give
outstanding and altogether necessary help in the spreading of the faith and
of the Church.[251]
[149.] More recently, in some dioceses long since evangelized, members of
Christ’s lay faithful have been appointed as “pastoral assistants”, and
among them many have undoubtedly served the good of the Church by providing
assistance to the Bishop, Priests and Deacons in the carrying out of their
pastoral activity. Let care be taken, however, lest the delineation of this
function be assimilated too closely to the form of pastoral ministry that
belongs to clerics. That is to say, attention should be paid to ensuring
that “pastoral assistants” do not take upon themselves what is proper to the
ministry of the sacred ministers.
[150.] The activity of a pastoral assistant should be directed to
facilitating the ministry of Priests and Deacons, to ensuring that vocations
to the Priesthood and Diaconate are awakened and that lay members of
Christ’s faithful in each community are carefully trained for the various
liturgical functions, in keeping with the variety of charisms and in
accordance with the norm of law.
[151.] Only out of true necessity is there to be recourse to the assistance
of extraordinary ministers in the celebration of the Liturgy. Such recourse
is not intended for the sake of a fuller participation of the laity but
rather, by its very nature, is supplementary and provisional.[252]
Furthermore, when recourse is had out of necessity to the functions of
extraordinary ministers, special urgent prayers of intercession should be
multiplied that the Lord may soon send a Priest for the service of the
community and raise up an abundance of vocations to sacred Orders.[253]
[152.] These purely supplementary functions must not be an occasion for
disfiguring the very ministry of Priests, in such a way that the latter
neglect the celebration of Holy Mass for the people for whom they are
responsible, or their personal care of the sick, or the baptism of children,
or assistance at weddings or the celebration of Christian funerals, matters
which pertain in the first place to Priests assisted by Deacons. It must
therefore never be the case that in parishes Priests alternate
indiscriminately in shifts of pastoral service with Deacons or laypersons,
thus confusing what is specific to each.
[153.] Furthermore, it is never licit for laypersons to assume the role or
the vesture of a Priest or a Deacon or other clothing similar to such
vesture.
1. The Extraordinary Minister of Holy Communion
[154.] As has already been recalled, “the only minister who can confect the
Sacrament of the Eucharist in persona Christi is a validly ordained
Priest”.[254] Hence the name “minister of the Eucharist” belongs properly to
the Priest alone. Moreover, also by reason of their sacred Ordination, the
ordinary ministers of Holy Communion are the Bishop, the Priest and the
Deacon,[255] to whom it belongs therefore to administer Holy Communion to
the lay members of Christ’s faithful during the celebration of Mass. In this
way their ministerial office in the Church is fully and accurately brought
to light, and the sign value of the Sacrament is made complete.
[155.] In addition to the ordinary ministers there is the formally
instituted acolyte, who by virtue of his institution is an extraordinary
minister of Holy Communion even outside the celebration of Mass. If,
moreover, reasons of real necessity prompt it, another lay member of
Christ’s faithful may also be delegated by the diocesan Bishop, in
accordance with the norm of law,[256] for one occasion or for a specified
time, and an appropriate formula of blessing may be used for the occasion.
This act of appointment, however, does not necessarily take a liturgical
form, nor, if it does take a liturgical form, should it resemble sacred
Ordination in any way. Finally, in special cases of an unforeseen nature,
permission can be given for a single occasion by the Priest who presides at
the celebration of the Eucharist.[257]
[156.] This function is to be understood strictly according to the name by
which it is known, that is to say, that of extraordinary minister of Holy
Communion, and not “special minister of Holy Communion” nor “extraordinary
minister of the Eucharist” nor “special minister of the Eucharist”, by which
names the meaning of this function is unnecessarily and improperly
broadened.
[157.] If there is usually present a sufficient number of sacred ministers
for the distribution of Holy Communion, extraordinary ministers of Holy
Communion may not be appointed. Indeed, in such circumstances, those who may
have already been appointed to this ministry should not exercise it. The
practice of those Priests is reprobated who, even though present at the
celebration, abstain from distributing Communion and hand this function over
to laypersons.[258]
[158.] Indeed, the extraordinary minister of Holy Communion may administer
Communion only when the Priest and Deacon are lacking, when the Priest is
prevented by weakness or advanced age or some other genuine reason, or when
the number of faithful coming to Communion is so great that the very
celebration of Mass would be unduly prolonged.[259] This, however, is to be
understood in such a way that a brief prolongation, considering the
circumstances and culture of the place, is not at all a sufficient reason.
[159.] It is never allowed for the extraordinary minister of Holy Communion
to delegate anyone else to administer the Eucharist, as for example a parent
or spouse or child of the sick person who is the communicant.
[160.] Let the diocesan Bishop give renewed consideration to the practice in
recent years regarding this matter, and if circumstances call for it, let
him correct it or define it more precisely. Where such extraordinary
ministers are appointed in a widespread manner out of true necessity, the
diocesan Bishop should issue special norms by which he determines the manner
in which this function is to be carried out in accordance with the law,
bearing in mind the tradition of the Church.
2. Preaching
[161.] As was already noted above, the homily on account of its importance
and its nature is reserved to the Priest or Deacon during Mass.[260] As
regards other forms of preaching, if necessity demands it in particular
circumstances, or if usefulness suggests it in special cases, lay members of
Christ’s faithful may be allowed to preach in a church or in an oratory
outside Mass in accordance with the norm of law.[261] This may be done only
on account of a scarcity of sacred ministers in certain places, in order to
meet the need, and it may not be transformed from an exceptional measure
into an ordinary practice, nor may it be understood as an authentic form of
the advancement of the laity.[262] All must remember besides that the
faculty for giving such permission belongs to the local Ordinary, and this
as regards individual instances; this permission is not the competence of
anyone else, even if they are Priests or Deacons.
3. Particular Celebrations carried out in the Absence of a Priest
[162.] On the day known as the Lord’s Day, the Church faithful gathers
together to commemorate the Lord’s Resurrection and the whole Paschal
Mystery, especially by the celebration of Mass.[263] For “no Christian
community is built up unless it is rooted in and hinges upon the celebration
of the Most Holy Eucharist”.[264] Hence it is the Christian people’s right
to have the Eucharist celebrated for them on Sunday, and whenever holydays
of obligation or other major feasts occur, and even daily insofar as this is
possible. Therefore when it is difficult to have the celebration of Mass on
a Sunday in a parish church or in another community of Christ’s faithful,
the diocesan Bishop together with his Priests should consider appropriate
remedies.[265] Among such solutions will be that other Priests be called
upon for this purpose, or that the faithful transfer to a church in a nearby
place so as to participate in the Eucharistic mystery there.[266]
[163.] All Priests, to whom the Priesthood and the Eucharist are entrusted
for the sake of others,[267] should remember that they are enjoined to
provide the faithful with the opportunity to satisfy the obligation of
participating at Mass on Sundays.[268] For their part, the lay faithful have
the right, barring a case of real impossibility, that no Priest should ever
refuse either to celebrate Mass for the people or to have it celebrated by
another Priest if the people otherwise would not be able to satisfy the
obligation of participating at Mass on Sunday or the other days of precept.
[164.] “If participation at the celebration of the Eucharist is impossible
on account of the absence of a sacred minister or for some other grave
cause,”[269] then it is the Christian people’s right that the diocesan
Bishop should provide as far as he is able for some celebration to be held
on Sundays for that community under his authority and according to the
Church’s norms. Sunday celebrations of this specific kind, however, are to
be considered altogether extraordinary. All Deacons or lay members of
Christ’s faithful who are assigned a part in such celebrations by the
diocesan Bishop should strive “to keep alive in the community a genuine
‘hunger’ for the Eucharist, so that no opportunity for the celebration of
Mass will ever be missed, also taking advantage of the occasional presence
of a Priest who is not impeded by Church law from celebrating Mass”.[270]
[165.] It is necessary to avoid any sort of confusion between this type of
gathering and the celebration of the Eucharist.[271] The diocesan Bishops,
therefore, should prudently discern whether Holy Communion ought to be
distributed in these gatherings. The matter would appropriately be
determined in view of a more ample co-ordination in the Bishops’ Conference,
to be put into effect after the recognitio of the acts by the Apostolic See
through the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the
Sacraments. It will be preferable, moreover, when both a Priest and a Deacon
are absent, that the various parts be distributed among several faithful
rather than having a single lay member of the faithful direct the whole
celebration alone. Nor is it ever appropriate to refer to any member of the
lay faithful as “presiding” over the celebration.
[166.] Likewise, especially if Holy Communion is distributed during such
celebrations, the diocesan Bishop, to whose exclusive competence this matter
pertains, must not easily grant permission for such celebrations to be held
on weekdays, especially in places where it was possible or would be possible
to have the celebration of Mass on the preceding or the following Sunday.
Priests are therefore earnestly requested to celebrate Mass daily for the
people in one of the churches entrusted to their care.
[167.] “Similarly, it is unthinkable on the Lord’s Day to substitute for
Holy Mass either ecumenical celebrations of the word or services of common
prayer with Christians from the . . . Ecclesial Communities, or even
participation in these Communities’ liturgical services.”[272] Should the
diocesan Bishop out of necessity authorize the participation of Catholics
for a single occasion, let pastors take care lest confusion arise among the
Catholic faithful concerning the necessity of taking part at Mass at another
hour of the day even in such circumstances, on account of the
obligation.[273]
4. Those Who Have Left the Clerical State
[168.] “A cleric who loses the clerical state in accordance with the law . .
. is prohibited from exercising the power of order”.[274] It is therefore
not licit for him to celebrate the sacraments under any pretext whatsoever
save in the exceptional case set forth by law,[275] nor is it licit for
Christ’s faithful to have recourse to him for the celebration, since there
is no reason which would permit this according to canon 1335.[276] Moreover,
these men should neither give the homily[277] nor ever undertake any office
or duty in the celebration of the sacred Liturgy, lest confusion arise among
Christ’s faithful and the truth be obscured.
Chapter VIII
REMEDIES
[169.] Whenever an abuse is committed in the celebration of the sacred
Liturgy, it is to be seen as a real falsification of Catholic Liturgy. St
Thomas wrote, “the vice of falsehood is perpetrated by anyone who offers
worship to God on behalf of the Church in a manner contrary to that which is
established by the Church with divine authority, and to which the Church is
accustomed”.[278]
[170.] In order that a remedy may be applied to such abuses, “there is a
pressing need for the biblical and liturgical formation of the people of
God, both pastors and faithful”,[279] so that the Church’s faith and
discipline concerning the sacred Liturgy may be accurately presented and
understood. Where abuses persist, however, proceedings should be undertaken
for safeguarding the spiritual patrimony and rights of the Church in
accordance with the law, employing all legitimate means.
[171.] Among the various abuses there are some which are objectively
graviora delicta or otherwise constitute grave matters, as well as others
which are nonetheless to be carefully avoided and corrected. Bearing in mind
everything that is treated especially in Chapter I of this Instruction,
attention should be paid to what follows.
1. Graviora delicta
[172.] Graviora delicta against the sanctity of the Most August Sacrifice
and Sacrament of the Eucharist are to be handled in accordance with the
‘Norms concerning graviora delicta reserved to the Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith’,[280] namely:
a) taking away or retaining the consecrated species for sacrilegious ends,
or the throwing them away;[281]
b) the attempted celebration of the liturgical action of the Eucharistic
Sacrifice or the simulation of the same;[282]
c) the forbidden concelebration of the Eucharistic Sacrifice with ministers
of Ecclesial Communities that do not have the apostolic succession nor
acknowledge the sacramental dignity of priestly Ordination;[283]
d) the consecration for sacrilegious ends of one matter without the other in
the celebration of the Eucharist or even of both outside the celebration of
the Eucharist.[284]
2. Grave Matters
[173.] Although the gravity of a matter is to be judged in accordance with
the common teaching of the Church and the norms established by her,
objectively to be considered among grave matters is anything that puts at
risk the validity and dignity of the Most Holy Eucharist: namely, anything
that contravenes what is set out above in nn. 48-52, 56, 76-77, 79, 91-92,
94, 96, 101-102, 104, 106, 109, 111, 115, 117, 126, 131-133, 138, 153 and
168. Moreover, attention should be given to the other prescriptions of the
Code of Canon Law, and especially what is laid down by canons 1364, 1369,
1373, 1376, 1380, 1384, 1385, 1386, and 1398.
3. Other Abuses
[174.] Furthermore, those actions that are brought about which are contrary
to the other matters treated elsewhere in this Instruction or in the norms
established by law are not to be considered of little account, but are to be
numbered among the other abuses to be carefully avoided and corrected.
[175.] The things set forth in this Instruction obviously do not encompass
all the violations against the Church and its discipline that are defined in
the canons, in the liturgical laws and in other norms of the Church for the
sake of the teaching of the Magisterium or sound tradition. Where something
wrong has been committed, it is to be corrected according to the norm of
law.
4. The Diocesan Bishop
[176.] The diocesan Bishop, “since he is the principal dispenser of the
mysteries of God, is to strive constantly so that Christ’s faithful
entrusted to his care may grow in grace through the celebration of the
sacraments, and that they may know and live the Paschal Mystery”.[285] It is
his responsibility, “within the limits of his competence, to issue norms on
liturgical matters by which all are bound”.[286]
[177.] “Since he must safeguard the unity of the universal Church, the
Bishop is bound to promote the discipline common to the entire Church and
therefore to insist upon the observance of all ecclesiastical laws. He is to
be watchful lest abuses encroach upon ecclesiastical discipline, especially
as regards the ministry of the Word, the celebration of the Sacraments and
sacramentals, the worship of God and the veneration of the Saints”.[287]
[178.] Hence whenever a local Ordinary or the Ordinary of a religious
Institute or of a Society of apostolic life receives at least a plausible
notice of a delict or abuse concerning the Most Holy Eucharist, let him
carefully investigate, either personally or by means of another worthy
cleric, concerning the facts and the circumstances as well as the
imputability.
[179.] Delicts against the faith as well as graviora delicta committed in
the celebration of the Eucharist and the other Sacraments are to be referred
without delay to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, which
“examines [them] and, if necessary, proceeds to the declaration or
imposition of canonical sanctions according to the norm of common or proper
law”.[288]
[180.] Otherwise the Ordinary should proceed according the norms of the
sacred canons, imposing canonical penalties if necessary, and bearing in
mind in particular that which is laid down by canon 1326. If the matter is
serious, let him inform the Congregation for Divine Worship and the
Discipline of the Sacraments.
5. The Apostolic See
[181.] Whenever the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of
the Sacraments receives at least a plausible notice of a delict or an abuse
concerning the Most Holy Eucharist, it informs the Ordinary so that he may
investigate the matter. When the matter turns out to be serious, the
Ordinary should send to the same Dicastery as quickly as possible a copy of
the acts of the inquiry that has been undertaken, and where necessary, the
penalty imposed.
[182.] In more difficult cases the Ordinary, for the sake of the good of the
universal Church in the care for which he too has a part by virtue of his
sacred Ordination, should not fail to handle the matter, having previously
taken advice from the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of
the Sacraments. For its part, this Congregation, on the strength of the
faculties given to it by the Roman Pontiff, according to the nature of the
case, will assist the Ordinary, granting him the necessarydispensations[289]
or giving him instructions or prescriptions, which he is to follow
diligently.
6. Complaints Regarding Abuses in Liturgical Matters
[183.] In an altogether particular manner, let everyone do all that is in
their power to ensure that the Most Holy Sacrament of the Eucharist will be
protected from any and every irreverence or distortion and that all abuses
be thoroughly corrected. This is a most serious duty incumbent upon each and
every one, and all are bound to carry it out without any favouritism.
[184.] Any Catholic, whether Priest or Deacon or lay member of Christ’s
faithful, has the right to lodge a complaint regarding a liturgical abuse to
the diocesan Bishop or the competent Ordinary equivalent to him in law, or
to the Apostolic See on account of the primacy of the Roman Pontiff.[290] It
is fitting, however, insofar as possible, that the report or complaint be
submitted first to the diocesan Bishop. This is naturally to be done in
truth and charity.
CONCLUSION
[185.] “Against the seeds of discord which daily experience shows to be so
deeply ingrained in human nature as a result of sin, there stands the
creative power of the unity of Christ’s body. For it is precisely by
building up the Church that the Eucharist establishes fellowship among
men.”[291] It is therefore the hope of this Congregation for Divine Worship
and the Discipline of the Sacraments that also, by the diligent application
of those things that are recalled in this Instruction, human weakness may
come to pose less of an obstacle to the action of the Most Holy Sacrament of
the Eucharist, and that with all distortion set aside and every reprobated
practice removed,[292] through the intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary,
“Woman of the Eucharist”, the saving presence of Christ in the Sacrament of
his Body and Blood may shine brightly upon all people.
[186.] Let all Christ’s faithful participate in the Most Holy Eucharist as
fully, consciously and actively as they can,[293] honouring it lovingly by
their devotion and the manner of their life. Let Bishops, Priests and
Deacons, in the exercise of the sacred ministry, examine their consciences
as regards the authenticity and fidelity of the actions they have performed
in the name of Christ and the Church in the celebration of the Sacred
Liturgy. Let each one of the sacred ministers ask himself, even with
severity, whether he has respected the rights of the lay members of Christ’s
faithful, who confidently entrust themselves and their children to him,
relying on him to fulfill for the faithful those sacred functions that the
Church intends to carry out in celebrating the sacred Liturgy at Christ’s
command.[294] For each one should always remember that he is a servant of
the Sacred Liturgy.[295]
All things to the contrary notwithstanding.
This Instruction, prepared by the Congregation for Divine Worship and the
Discipline of the Sacraments by mandate of the Supreme Pontiff John Paul II
in collaboration with the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, was
approved by the same Pontiff on the Solemnity of St. Joseph, 19 March 2004,
and he ordered it to be published and to be observed immediately by all
concerned.
From the offices of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline
of the Sacraments, Rome, on the Solemnity of the Annunciation of the Lord,
25 March 2004.
Francis Card. Arinze
Prefect
Domenico Sorrentino
Archbishop Secretary
NOTES
[1] Cf. Missale Romanum, ex decreto sacrosancti Oecumenici Concilii Vaticani
II instauratum, auctoritate Pauli Pp. VI promulgatum, Ioannis Pauli Pp. II
cura recognitum, editio typica tertia, diei 20 aprilis 2000, Typis
Vaticanis, 2002, Missa votiva de Dei misericordia, oratio super oblata, p.
1159.
[2] Cf. 1 Cor 11, 26; Missale Romanum, Prex Eucharistica, acclamatio post
consecrationem, p. 576; Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter, Ecclesia de
Eucharistia, 17 April 2003, nn. 5, 11, 14, 18: AAS 95 (2003) pp. 436,
440-441, 442, 445.
[3] Cf. Is 10: 33; 51, 22; Missale Romanum, In sollemnitate Domini nostri
Iesu Christi, universorum Regis, Praefatio, p. 499.
[4] Cf.1 Cor 5: 7; Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Decree on the Ministry
and Life of Priests, Presbyterorum ordinis, 7 December 1965, n. 5; John Paul
II, Apostolic Exhortation., Ecclesia in Europa, n. 75: AAS 95 (2003) pp.
649-719, here p. 693.
[5] Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the
Church, Lumen gentium, 21 November 1964, n. 11.
[6] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Ecclesia de Eucharistia, 17
April 2003, n. 21: AAS 95 (2003) p. 447.
[7] Ibidem: AAS 95 (2003) pp. 433-475.
[8] Ibidem, n. 52: AAS 95 (2003) p. 468.
[9] Ibidem.
[10] Ibidem, n. 10: AAS 95 (2003) p. 439.
[11] Ibidem; cf. Pope John Paul II, Apostolic Letter, Vicesimus quintus
annus, 4 December 1988, nn. 12-13: AAS 81 (1989)pp. 909-910; cf. also Second
Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, Sacrosanctum
Concilium, 4 December 1963 n. 48.
[12] Missale Romanum, Prex Eucharistica III, p. 588; cf. 1 Cor 12: 12-13;
Eph 4: 4.
[13] Cf. Phil 2,5.
[14] Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Ecclesia de Eucharistia, n. 10:
AAS 95 (2003), p. 439.
[15] Ibidem, n. 6: AAS 95 (2003) p. 437; cf. Lk 24: 31.
[16] Cf. Rom 1: 20.
[17] Cf. Missale Romanum, Praefatio I de Passione Domini, p. 528.
[18] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Veritatis splendor, 6 August
1993, n. 35: AAS 85 (1993) pp. 1161-1162; Homily given at Camden Yards, 9
October 1995, n. 7: Insegnamenti di Giovanni Paolo II, XVII, 2 (1995),
Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 1998, p. 788.
[19] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Ecclesia de Eucharistia, n.
10: AAS 95 (2003) p. 439.
[20] Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy,
Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 24; cf. Congregation for Divine Worship and the
Discipline of the Sacraments, Instruction Varietates legitimae, 25 January
1994, nn. 19 and 23: AAS 87 (1995) pp. 295-296, 297.
[21] Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy,
Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 33.
[22] Cf. St Irenaeus, Adversus Haereses, III, 2: SCh.., 211, 24-31; St
Augustine, Epistula ad Ianuarium: 54,I: PL 33,200: «Illa autem quae non
scripta, sed tradita custodimus, quae quidem toto terrarum orbe servantur,
datur intellegi vel ab ipsis Apostolis, vel plenariis conciliis, quorum est
Ecclesia saluberrima auctoritas, commendata atque statuta retineri.»; Pope
John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Redemptoris missio, 7 December 1990, nn.
53-54: AAS 83 (1991) pp. 300-302; Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith, Letter to the Bishops of the Catholic Church on Certain Aspects of
the Church as Communion, Communionis notio, 28 May 1992, nn. 7-10: AAS 85
(1993) pp. 842-844; Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of
the Sacraments, Instruction Varietates legitimae, n. 26: AAS 87 (1995) pp.
298-299.
[23] Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution on the Sacred
Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 21.
[24] Cf. Pope Pius XII, Apostolic Constitution Sacramentum Ordinis, 30
November 1947: AAS 40 (1948) p. 5; Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith, Declaration Inter insigniores, 15 October 1976, part IV: AAS 69
(1977) pp. 107-108; Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of
the Sacraments, Instruction Varietates legitimae, n. 25: AAS 87 (1995) p.
298.
[25] Cf. Pope Pius XII, Encyclical Letter Mediator Dei, 20 November 1947:
AAS 39 (1947) p. 540.
[26] Cf. S. Congregation for the Sacraments and Divine Worship, Instruction
Inaestimabile donum, 3 April 1980: AAS 72 (1980) p. 333.
[27] Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Ecclesia de Eucharistia, n. 52:
AAS 95 (2003), p. 468.
[28] Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy,
Sacrosanctum Concilium, nn. 4,38; Decree on the Catholic Eastern Churches,
Orientalium Ecclesiarum, 21 November 1964, nn. 1,2,6; Pope Paul VI,
Apostolic Constitution Missale Romanum: AAS 61 (1969) pp. 217-222; Missale
Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 399; Congregation for Divine Worship and
the Discipline of the Sacraments, Instruction Liturgiam authenticam, 28
March 2001, n. 4: AAS 93 (2001) pp. 685-726, here p. 686.
[29] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Apostolic Exhortation Ecclesia in Europa, n. 72:
AAS 95 (2003) p. 000.
[30] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Ecclesia de Eucharistia, n.
23: AAS 95 (2003) pp. 448-449; S. Congregation of Rites, Instruction
Eucharisticum mysterium, 25 May 1967, n. 6: AAS 59 (1967) p. 545.
[31] S. Congregation for the Sacraments and Divine Worship, Instruction
Inaestimabile donum: AAS 72 (1980) pp. 332-333.
[32] Cf. 1 Cor 11,17-34; Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter, Ecclesia de
Eucharistia, n. 52: AAS 95 (2003) pp. 467-468.
[33] Cf. Code of C anon Law, 25 January 1983, can. 1752.
[34] Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy,
Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 22 §1; cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 838 §1.
[35] Code of Canon Law, can. 331; cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council,
Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, Lumen gentium, n. 22.
[36] Code of Canon Law, can. 838 §2.
[37] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Apostolic Constitution, Pastor bonus, 28 June
1988: AAS 80 (1988) pp. 841-924, here artt. 62, 63, and 66, pp. 876-877.
[38] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter, Ecclesia de Eucharistia, n.
52: AAS 95 (2003) p. 468.
[39] Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Decree on the Pastoral Office of
Bishops, Christus Dominus, 28 October 1965, n. 15; cf. also the Constitution
on the Sacred Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 41; Code of Canon Law,
can. 387.
[40] Prayer for the Consecration of a Bishop in the Byzantine Rite:
Euchologion to mega, Rome, 1873, p. 139.
[41] Cf. St. Ignatius of Antioch, Ad Smyrn. 8,1: ed. F.X. Funk, I, p. 282.
[42] Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church,
Lumen gentium, n. 26; cf. S. Congregation of Rites, Instruction,
Eucharisticum mysterium, n. 7: AAS 59 (1967) p. 545; cf. also Pope John Paul
II, Apostolic Exhortation, Pastores gregis, 16 October 2003, nn. 32-41:
L’Osservatore Romano, 17 October 2003, pp. 6-8.
[43] Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution on the Sacred
Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 41; cf. St. Ignatius of Antioch, Ad
Magn. 7, Ad Philad. 4, Ad Smyrn. 8: ed. F.X. Funk, I, pp. 236, 266, 281;
Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 22; cf. also Code of Canon Law,
can. 389.
[44] Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy,
Lumen gentium, n. 26.
[45] Code of Canon Law, can. 838 §4.
[46] Cf. Consilium for Implementing the Constitution on the Liturgy, Dubium:
Notitiae 1 (1965) p. 254.
[47] Cf. Acts 20,28; Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic
Constitution on the Church, Lumen gentium, nn. 21 and 27; Decree on the
Pastoral Office of Bishops in the Church, Christus Dominus, n. 3.
[48] Cf. S. Congregation for Divine Worship, Instruction, Liturgicae
instaurationes, 5 September 1970: AAS 62 (1970) p. 694.
[49] Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the
Church, Lumen gentium, n. 21; Decree on the Pastoral Office of Bishops in
the Church, Christus Dominus, n. 3.
[50] Cf. Caeremoniale Episcoporum ex decreto sacrosancti Oecumenici Concilii
Vaticani II instauratum, auctoritate Ioannis Pauli Pp. II promulgatum,
editio typica, 14 September 1984, Vatican Polyglot Press, 1985, n. 10
[51] Cf. Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 387.
[52] Cf. ibidem, n. 22.
[53] Cf. S. Congregation for Divine Worship, Instruction, Liturgicae
instaurationes: AAS 62 (1970) p. 694.
[54] Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church,
Lumen gentium, n. 27; cf. 2 Cor 4,15.
[55] Cf. Code of Canon Law, canons 397 §1; 678 §1.
[56] Cf. ibidem, canon 683 §1.
[57]Ibidem, canon 392.
[58] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Apostolic Letter Vicesimus quintus annus, n. 21:
AAS 81 (1989) p. 917; Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution on the
Sacred Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium, nn. 45-46; Pope Pius XII, Encyclical
Letter Mediator Dei: AAS 39 (1947) p. 562.
[59] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Apostolic Letter Vicesimus quintus annus, n. 20:
AAS 81 (1989) p. 916.
[60] Cf. ibidem.
[61] Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution on the Sacred
Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 44; Congregation for Bishops, Letter
sent to the Presidents of the Conferences of Bishops together with the
Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples, 21 June 1999, n. 9: AAS 91
(1999) p. 999.
[62] Cf. Congregation for Divine Worship, Instruction Liturgicae
instaurationis, n. 12: AAS 62 (1970) pp. 692-704; cf., here p. 703.
[63] Cf. Congregation For Divine Worship, Declaration on Eucharistic Prayers
and liturgical experimentation, 21 March 1988: Notitiae 24 (1988) pp.
234-236.
[64] Cf. Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the
Sacraments, Instruction Varietates legitimae: AAS 87 (1995) pp. 288-314.
[65] Cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 838 § 3; S. Congregation of Rites,
Instruction Inter Oecumenici, 26 September 1964, n. 31: AAS 56 (1964) p.
883; Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments,
Instruction Liturgiam authenticam, nn. 79-80: AAS 93 (2001) pp. 711-713.
[66] Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Decree on the Ministry and Life
of Priests, Presbyterorum ordinis, 7 December 1965, n. 7; Pontificale
Romanum, ed. 1962: Ordo consecrationis sacerdotalis, in Praefatione;
Pontificale Romanum ex decreto sacrosancti Oecumenici Concilii Vaticani II
renovatum, auctoritate Pauli Pp. VI editum, Ioannis Pauli Pp. II cura
recognitum: De Ordinatione Episcopi, presbyterorum et diaconorum, editio
typica altera, 29 June 1989, Typis Polyglottis Vaticanis, 1990, cap. II: De
Ordin. presbyterorum, Praenotanda, n. 101.
[67] St. Ignatius of Antioch, Ad Philad., 4: ed. F.X. Funk, I, p. 266; Pope
St. Cornelius I, cited by St. Cyprian, Letter 48,2: ed. G. Hartel, III,2, p.
610.
[68] Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church,
Lumen gentium, n. 28.
[69] Cf. ibidem.
[70] John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Ecclesia de Eucharistia, n. 52; cf. n.
29: AAS 95 (2003) pp. 467-468; 452-435.
[71] Pontificale Romanum, De Ordinatione Episcopi, presbyterorum et
diaconorum, editio typica altera: De Ordinatione Presbyterorum, n. 124; cf.
Missale Romanum, Feria V in Hebdomada Sancta: Ad Missam chrismatis,
Renovatio promissionum sacerdotalium, p. 292.
[72] Cf. Ecumenical Council of Trent, Session VII, 3 March 1547, Decree on
the Sacraments, canon 13, DS 1613; Second Vatican Ecumenical Council,
Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 22; Pope Pius
XII, Encyclical Letter Mediator Dei: AAS 39 (1947) pp. 544, 546-547, 562;
Codex Iuris Canonici, can 846, § 1; Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis,
n. 24.
[73] St. Ambrose, De Virginitate, n. 48: PL 16, 278.
[74] Code of Canon Law, can. 528 § 2.
[75] Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Decree on the Ministry and Life of
Priests, Presbyterorum Ordinis, n. 5.
[76] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Ecclesia de Eucharistia, n. 5:
AAS 95 (2003) p. 436.
[77] Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church,
Lumen gentium, n. 29; cf. Constitutiones Ecclesiae Aegypticae, III, 2: ed.
F.X. Funk, Didascalia, II, p. 103; Statuta Ecclesiae Ant., 37-41: ed. D.
Mansi 3, 954.
[78] Cf. Acts 6,3.
[79] Jn 13,35.
[80] Matt 20,28.
[81] Cf. Luke 22,27.
[82] Cf. Caeremoniale Episcoporum, nn. 9, 23. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, Lumen gentium, n. 29.
[83] Cf. Pontificale Romanum, De Ordinatione Episcopi, presbyterorum et
diaconorum, editio typica altera, cap. III, De Ordin. diaconorum, n. 199.
[84] Cf. 1 Tim 3,9.
[85] Cf. Pontificale Romanum, De Ordinatione Episcopi, presbyterorum et
diaconorum, editio typica altera, cap. III, De Ordin. diaconorum, n. 200.
[86] Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy,
Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 10.
[87] Cf. ibidem, n. 41; Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic
Constitution on the Church, Lumen gentium, n. 11; Decree on the Ministry and
Life of Priests, Presbyterorum ordinis, nn. 2,5,6; Decree on the Pastoral
Office of Bishops, Christus Dominus, n. 30, Decree on Ecumenism, Unitatis
redintegratio, 21 November 1964, n. 15; S. Congregation of Rites,
Instruction Eucharisticum mysterium, nn. 3e, 6: AAS 59 (1967) pp. 542,
544-545; Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 16.
[88] Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution on the Sacred
Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 26; Missale Romanum, Institutio
Generalis, n. 91.
[89] 1 Pet 2,9; cf. 2,4-5.
[90] Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 91; cf. Second Vatican
Ecumenical Council, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, Sacrosanctum
Concilium, n. 41.
[91] Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church,
Lumen gentium, n. 10.
[92] Cf. St. Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologica, III, q. 63, a. 2.
[93] Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church,
Lumen gentium, n. 10; cf. Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Ecclesia de
Eucharistia, n. 28: AAS 95 (2003) p. 452.
[94] Cf. Acts 2,42-47.
[95] Cf. Rom 12,1.
[96] Cf. 1 Pet 3,15; 2,4-10.
[97] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Ecclesia de Eucharistia, nn.
12-18: AAS 95 (2003) p. 441-445; Letter Dominicae Cenae, 24 February 1980,
n. 9: AAS 72 (1980) pp. 129-133.
[98] Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Ecclesia de Eucharistia, n. 10:
AAS 95 (2003) p. 439.
[99] Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution on the Sacred
Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium, nn. 30-31.
[100] Cf. S. Congregation for Divine Worship, Instruction Liturgicae
instaurationes, n. 1: AAS 62 (1970) p. 695.
[101] Cf. Missale Romanum, Feria secunda post Dominica V in Quadragesima,
Collecta, p. 258.
[102] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Apostolic Letter Novo Millennio ineunte, 6
January 2001, n. 21: AAS 93 (2001) p. 280; cf. Jn 20,28.
[103] Cf. Pope Pius XII, Encyclical Letter Mediator Dei: AAS 39 (1947) p.
586; cf. also Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on
the Church, Lumen gentium, n. 67; Pope Paul VI, Apostolic Exhortation
Marialis cultus, 11 February 1974, n. 24: AAS 66 (1974) pp. 113-168, here p.
134; Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments,
Direttorio su pietà popolare e Liturgia, 17 December 2001.
[104] Pope John Paul II, Apostolic Letter, Rosarium Virginis Mariae, 16
October 2002: AAS 95 (2003) pp. 5-36.
[105] Cf. Pope Pius XII, Encyclical Letter Mediator Dei: AAS 39 (1947) p.
586-587.
[106] Cf. Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the
Sacraments, Instruction, Varietates legitimae, n. 22: AAS 87 (1995) p. 297.
[107] Cf. Pope Pius XII, Encyclical Letter, Mediator Dei: AAS 39 (1947) p.
553.
[108] Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter, Ecclesia de Eucharistia, n. 29:
AAS 95 (2003) p. 453; cf. Fourth Lateran Ecumenical Council, 11-30 November
1215, Chapter I: DS 802; Ecumenical Council of Trent, Session XXIII, 15 July
1563, Doctrine and Canons on Sacred Order, Chapter 4: DS 1767-1770; Pope
Pius XII, Encyclical Letter, Mediator Dei: AAS 39 (1947) p. 553.
[109] Cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 230 § 2; cf. also the Missale Romanum,
Institutio Generalis, n. 97.
[110] Cf. Missale Romanum, General Instruction, n. 109.
[111] Cf. Pope Paul VI, Apostolic Letter (Motu Proprio) Ministeria quaedam,
15 August 1972, nn. VI-XII; Pontificale Romanum ex decreto sacrosancti
oecumenici Concilii Vaticani II instauratum, auctoritate Pauli Pp. VI
promulgatum, De institutione lectorum et acolythorum, de admissione inter
candidatos ad diaconatum et presbyteratum, de sacro caelibatu amplectendo,
editio typica, 3 December 1972, Typis Polyglottis Vaticanis, 1973, p. 10:
AAS 64 (1972) pp. 529-534, here pp. 532-533; Code of Canon Law, can. 230 §1;
Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, nn. 98-99, 187-193.
[112] Cf. Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, nn. 187-190, 193; Code of
Canon Law, can. 230 §2-3.
[113] Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution on the Sacred
Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 24; S. Congregation for the Sacraments
and Divine Worship, Instruction, Inaestimabile donum, nn. 2 and 18: AAS 72
(1980) pp. 334, 338; Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, nn. 101,
194-198; Code of Canon Law, can 230 §2-3.
[114] Cf. Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, nn. 100-107.
[115] Ibidem, n. 91; cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution on
the Sacred Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 28.
[116] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Allocution to the Conference of Bishops of the
Antilles, 7 May 2002, n. 2: AAS 94 (2002) pp. 575-577; Post-Synodal
Apostolic Exhortation, Christifideles laici, 30 December 1988, n. 23: AAS 81
(1989) pp. 393-521, here pp. 429-431; Congregation for the Clergy et al.,
Instruction, Ecclesiae de mysterio, 15 August 1997, Theological Principles,
n. 4: AAS 89 (1997) pp. 860-861.
[117] Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution on the Sacred
Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 19.
[118] S. Congregation for Divine Worship, Instruction, Immensae caritatis,
29 January 1973: AAS 65 (1973) p. 266.
[119] Cf. S. Congregation of Rites, Instruction, De Musica sacra, 3
September 1958, n. 93c: AAS 50 (1958) p. 656.
[120] Cf. Pontifical Council for the Interpretation of Legislative Texts,
Response to dubium, 11 July 1992: AAS 86 (1994) pp. 541-542; Congregation
for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, Letter to the
Presidents of Conferences of Bishops on the liturgical service of
laypersons, 15 March 1994: Notitiae 30 (1994) pp. 333-335, 347-348.
[121] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Apostolic Constitution, Pastor Bonus, art. 65:
AAS 80 (1988) p. 877.
[122] Cf. Pontifical Council for the Interpretation of Legislative Texts,
Response to dubium, 11 July 1992: AAS 86 (1994) pp. 541-542; Congregation
for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, Letter to the
Presidents of the Conferences of Bishops concerning the liturgical service
of laypersons, 15 March 1994: Notitiae 30 (1994) pp. 333-335, 347-348;
Letter to a Bishop, 27 July 2001: Notitiae 38 (2002) 46-54.
[123] Cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 924 §2; Missale Romanum, Institutio
Generalis, n. 320.
[124] Cf. S. Congregation for the Discipline of the Sacraments, Instruction,
Dominus Salvator noster, 26 March 1929, n. 1: AAS 21 (1929) pp. 631-642,
here p. 632.
[125] Cf. ibidem, n. II: AAS 21 (1929) p. 635.
[126] Cf. Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 321.
[127] Cf. Lk 22,18; Code of Canon Law, can. 924 §§ 1, 3; Missale Romanum,
Institutio Generalis, n. 322.
[128] Cf. Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 323.
[129] Pope John Paul II, Apostolic Letter, Vicesimus quintus annus, n. 13,
AAS 81 (1989)
[130] S. Congregation for the Sacraments and Divine Worship, Instruction,
Inaestimabile donum, n. 5: AAS 72 (1980) pp. 335.
[131] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter, Ecclesia de Eucharistia, n.
28: AAS 95 (2003) p. 452; Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 147; S.
Congregation for Divine Worship, Instruction, Liturgicae instaurationes, n.
4: AAS 62 (1970) p. 698; S. Congregation for the Sacraments and Divine
Worship, Instruction, Inaestimabile donum, n. 4: AAS 72 (1980) p. 334.
[132]Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 32.
[133] Ibidem, n. 147; cf. Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter, Ecclesia de
Eucharistia, n. 28: AAS 95 (2003) p. 452; cf. also Congregation for the
Sacraments and Divine Worship, Instruction, Inaestimabile donum, n. 4: AAS
72 (1980) pp. 334-335.
[134] Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter, Ecclesia de Eucharistia, n. 39:
AAS 95 (2003) p. 459.
[135] Cf. S. Congregation for Divine Worship, Instruction, Liturgicae
instaurationes, n. 2b: AAS 62 (1970) p. 696.
[136] Cf. Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, nn. 356-362.
[137] Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution on the Sacred
Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 51.
[138] Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 57; cf. Pope John Paul II,
Apostolic Letter, Vicesimus quintus annus, n. 13: AAS 81 (1989) p. 910;
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Declaration, Dominus Iesus, on
the unicity and salvific universality of Jesus Christ and the Church, 6
August 2000: AAS 92 (2000) pp. 742-765.
[139] Missale Romanum, General Instruction, n. 60.
[140] Cf. ibidem, nn. 59-60.
[141] Cf., e.g., Rituale Romanum, ex decreto sacrosancti Oecumenici Concilii
Vaticani II renovatum, auctoritate Pauli Pp. VI editum Ioannis Pauli Pp. II
cura recognitum: Ordo celebrandi Matrimonium, editio typica altera, 19 March
1990, Typis Polyglottis Vaticanis 1991, n. 125; Roman Ritual, renewed by
decree of the Second Vatican Ecumenical Council and promulgated by authority
of Pope Paul VI: Order for Anointing of the Sick and for their Pastoral
Care, editio typica, 7 December 1972, Vatican Polyglot Press, 1972, n. 72.
[142] Cf. Code of Canon Law, can 767 §1.
[143] Cf. Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 66; cf. also the Code of
Canon Law, can. 6, §1, 2; also can. 767 §1, regarding which other noteworthy
prescriptions may be found in Congregation for the Clergy et al.,
Instruction, Ecclesiae de mysterio, Practical Provisions, art. 3 § 1: AAS 89
(1997) p. 865.
[144] Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 66; cf. also the Code of
Canon Law, can 767 §1.
[145] Cf. Congregation for the Clergy et al., Instruction, Ecclesiae de
mysterio, Practical Provisions, art. 3 §1: AAS 89 (1997) p. 865; cf. also
the Code of Canon Law, can. 6 §1, 2; Pontifical Commission for the Authentic
Interpretation of the Code of Canon Law, Response to dubium, 20 June 1987:
AAS 79 (1987) p. 1249.
[146] Cf. Congregation for the Clergy et al., Instruction, Ecclesiae de
mysterio, Practical Provisions, art. 3 § 1: AAS 89 (1997) pp. 864-865.
[147] Cf. Ecumenical Council of Trent, Session XXII, 17 September 1562, on
the Most Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, Chapter 8: DS 1749; Missale Romanum,
Institutio Generalis, n. 65.
[148] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Allocution to a number of Bishops from the
United States of America who had come to Rome for a visit “ad Limina
Apostolorum”, 28 May 1993, n. 2: AAS 86 (1994) p. 330.
[149] Cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 386 §1.
[150] Cf. Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 73.
[151] Cf. ibidem, n. 154.
[152] Cf. ibidem, nn. 82, 154.
[153] Cf. ibidem, n. 83.
[154] Cf. S. Congregation for Divine Worship, Instruction, Liturgicae
instaurationes, n. 5: AAS 62 (1970) p. 699.
[155] Cf. Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, nn. 83, 240, 321.
[156] Cf. Congregation For the Clergy et al., Instruction, Ecclesiae de
mysterio, Practical Provisions, art. 3 §2: AAS 89 (1997) p. 865.
[157] Cf. especially the General Instruction of the Liturgy of the Hours,
nn. 93-98; Roman Ritual, revised by decree of the Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council and published by authority of Pope John Paul II: Book of Blessings,
editio typica, 31 May 1984, General Introduction, n. 28; Order of Crowning
an Image of the Blessed Virgin Mary, editio typica, 25 March 1981, nn. 10
and 14; S. Congregation for Divine Worship, Instruction, on Masses with
Particular Groups, Actio pastoralis, 15 May 1969: AAS 61 (1969) pp. 806-811;
Directory for Masses with Children, Pueros baptizatos, 1 November 1973:AAS
66 (1974) pp. 30-46; Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 21.
[158] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Apostolic Letter (Motu Proprio), Misericordia
Dei, 7 April 2002, n. 2: AAS 94 (2002) p. 455; Cf. Congregation for Divine
Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, Response to Dubium: Notitiae
37 (2001) pp. 259-260.
[159] Cf. S. Congregation for Divine Worship, Instruction, Liturgicae
instaurationes, n. 9: AAS 62 (1970) p. 702.
[160] Ecumenical Council of Trent, Session XIII, 11 October 1551, Decree on
the Most Holy Eucharist, Chapter 2: DS 1638; cf. Session XXII, 17 September
1562, On the Most Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, Chapters 1-2: DS 1740, 1743;
S. Congregation of Rites, Instruction, Eucharisticum mysterium, n. 35: AAS
59 (1967) p. 560.
[161] Cf. Missale Romanum, Ordo Missae, n. 4, p. 505.
[162]Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 51.
[163] Cf. 1 Cor 11: 28.
[164]Cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 916; cf. Ecumenical Council of Trent,
Session XIII, 11 October 1551, Decree on the Most Holy Eucharist, Chapter 7:
DS 1646-1647; Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter, Ecclesia de Eucharistia,
n. 36: AAS 95 (2003) pp. 457-458; S. Congregation of Rites, Instruction,
Eucharisticum mysterium, n. 35: AAS 59 (1967) p. 561.
[165] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter, Ecclesia de Eucharistia, n.
42: AAS 95 (2003) p. 461.
[166] Cf. Code of Canon Law, n. 844 § 1; Pope John Paul II, Encyclical
Letter Ecclesia de Eucharistia, nn. 45-46: AAS 95 (2003) pp. 463-464; cf.
also Pontifical Council for the Promotion of Christian Unity, Directory for
the application of the principles and norms on ecumenism, La recherche de
l’unité, nn. 130-131: AAS 85 (1993) 1039-1119, here p. 1089.
[167] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Ecclesia de Eucharistia, n.
46: AAS 95 (2003) pp. 463-464.
[168] Cf. S. Congregation of Rites, Instruction, Eucharisticum mysterium, n.
35: AAS 59 (1967) p. 561.
[169] Cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 914; S. Congregation for the Discipline of
the Sacraments, Declaration, Sanctus Pontifex, diei 24 maii 1973: AAS 65
(1973) p. 410; S. Congregation for the Sacraments and Divine Worship and S.
Congregation for the Clergy, Letter to the Presidents of the Bishops’
Conferences. Episcoporum, In quibusdam, 31 March 1977: Enchiridion
Documentorum Instaurationis Liturgicae, II, pp. 142-144; S. Congregation for
the Sacraments and Divine Worship and S. Congregation for the Clergy,
Response to dubium, 20 May 1977: AAS 69 (1977) p. 427.
[170] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Apostolic Letter, Dies Domini, 31 May 1998, nn.
31-34: AAS 90 (1998) pp. 713-766, here pp. 731-734.
[171] Cf. Code of Canon Law,can. 914.
[172] Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution on the Sacred
Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 55.
[173] Cf. S. Congregation of Rites, Instruction, Eucharisticum mysterium, n.
31: AAS 59 (1967) p. 558; Pontifical Commission for the Authentic
Interpretation of the Code of Canon Law, Response to dubium, 1 June 1988:
AAS 80 (1988) p. 1373.
[174]Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 85.
[175] Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution on the Sacred
Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 55; S. Congregation of Rites,
Instruction, Eucharisticum mysterium, n. 31: AAS 59 (1967) p. 558; Missale
Romanum, Institutio Generalis, nn. 85, 157, 243.
[176] Cf. Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 160.
[177]Code of Canon Law, can. 843 § 1; cf. can. 915.
[178] Cf. Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 161.
[179]Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments,
Dubium: Notitiae 35 (1999) pp. 160-161.
[180]Cf. Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 118.
[181]Ibidem, n. 160.
[182] Cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 917; Pontifical Commission for the
Authentic Interpretation of the Code of Canon Law, Response to Dubium, 11
July 1984: AAS 76 (1984) p. 746.
[183] Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution on the Sacred
Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 55; Missale Romanum, General
Instruction, nn. 158-160, 243-244, 246.
[184] Cf. Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, nn. 237-249; cf. also nn.
85, 157.
[185] Cf. ibidem, n. 283a.
[186] Cf. Ecumenical Council of Trent, Session XXI, 16 July 1562, Decree on
Eucharistic Communion, Chapters 1-3: DS 1725-1729; Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 55;
Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, nn. 282-283.
[187] Cf. Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 283.
[188] Cf. ibidem.
[189] Cf. S. Congregation for Divine Worship,Instruction, Sacramentali
Communione, 29 June 1970: AAS 62 (1970) p. 665;Instruction, Liturgicae
instaurationes, n. 6a: AAS 62 (1970) p. 699.
[190]Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 285a.
[191]Ibidem, n. 245.
[192] Cf. ibidem, nn. 285b and 287.
[193]Cf. ibidem, nn. 207 and 285a.
[194] Cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 1367.
[195] Cf. Pontifical Council for the Interpretation of Legislative Texts,
Response to dubium, 3 July 1999: AAS 91 (1999) p. 918.
[196]Cf. Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, nn. 163, 284.
[197]Code of Canon Law, can. 932 § 1; S. Congregation for Divine Worship,
Instruction, Liturgicae instaurationes, n. 9: AAS 62 (1970) p. 701.
[198] Code of Canon Law, can. 904; cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council,
Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, Lumen gentium, n. 3; Decree on the
Ministry and Life of Priests, Presbyterorum ordinis, n. 13; cf. also
Ecumenical Council of Trent, Session XXII, 17 September 1562, On the Most
Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, Chapter6: DS 1747; Pope Paul Pp. VI, Encyclical
Letter Mysterium fidei, 3 September 1965: AAS 57 (1965) pp. 753-774, here
pp. 761-762; cf. Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter, Ecclesia de
Eucharistia, n. 11: AAS 95 (2003) pp. 440-441; S. Congregation of Rites,
Instruction, Eucharisticum mysterium, n. 44: AAS 59 (1967) p. 564; Missale
Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 19.
[199] Cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 903; Missale Romanum, Institutio
Generalis, n. 200.
[200] Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution on the Sacred
Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 36 § 1; Code of Canon Law, can. 928.
[201] Cf.Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 114.
[202] Pope John Paul II, Apostolic Letter Dies Domini, n. 36: AAS 90 (1998)
p. 735; cf. also S. Congregation of Rites, Instruction Eucharisticum
mysterium, n. 27: AAS 59 (1967) p. 556.
[203] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Apostolic Letter Dies Domini, esp. n. 36: AAS
90 (1998) pp. 713-766, here pp. 735-736; S. Congregation for Divine Worship,
Instruction Actio pastoralis: AAS 61 (1969) pp. 806-811.
[204]Cf. Code of Canon Law, cann. 905, 945-958; cf. Congregation for the
Clergy, Decree, Mos iugiter, 22 February 1991: AAS 83 (1991), pp. 443-446.
[205] Cf. Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, nn. 327-333.
[206] Cf. ibidem, n. 332.
[207] Cf. ibidem, n. 332; Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline
of the Sacraments,, Instruction, Inaestimabile donum, n. 16: AAS 72 (1980)
p. 338.
[208] Cf. Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 333; Appendix IV. Ordo
benedictionis calicis et patenae intra Missam adhibendus, pp. 1255-1257;
Pontificale Romanum ex decreto sacrosancti Oecumenici Concilii Vaticani II
instauratum, auctoritate Pauli Pp. VI promulgatum, Ordo Dedicationis
ecclesiae et altaris, editio typica, diei 29 maii 1977, Typis Polyglottis
Vaticanis, 1977, cap. VII, pp. 125-132.
[209] Cf. Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, nn. 163, 183, 192.
[210] Ibidem, n. 345.
[211] Ibidem, n. 335.
[212] Cf. ibidem, n. 336.
[213] Cf. ibidem, n. 337.
[214] Cf. ibidem, n. 209.
[215] Cf. ibidem, n. 338.
[216] Cf. S. Congregation for Divine Worship, Instruction, Liturgicae
Instaurationes, n. 8c: AAS 62 (1970) p. 701.
[217] Cf. Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 346g.
[218] Ibidem, n. 114 cf. nn. 16-17.
[219] S. Congregation for Divine Worship, Decree, Eucharistiae sacramentum,
21 June 1973: AAS 65 (1973) 610.
[220] Cf. ibidem.
[221] Cf. S. Congregation of Rites, Instruction, Eucharisticum mysterium, n.
54: AAS 59 (1967) p. 568; Instruction, Inter Oecumenici, 26 September 1964,
n. 95: AAS 56 (1964) pp. 877-900, here p. 898; Missale Romanum, Institutio
Generalis,n. 314.
[222] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Letter, Dominicae Cenae, n. 3: AAS 72 (1980)
pp. 117-119; S. Congregation of Rites, Instruction, Eucharisticum mysterium,
n. 53: AAS 59 (1967) p. 568; Code of Canon Law, can. 938 § 2; Roman Ritual,
Holy Communion and Worship of the Eucharist Outside Mass, Introduction, n.
9; Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, nn. 314-317.
[223] Cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 938 §§ 3-5.
[224] S. Congregation for the Discipline of the Sacraments, Instruction,
Nullo unquam, diei 26 maii 1938, n. 10d: AAS 30 (1938), pp. 198-207, here p.
206.
[225] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Apostolic Letter (Motu Proprio), Sacramentorum
sanctitatis tutela, 30 April 2001: AAS 93 (2001) pp. 737-739; Congregation
for the Doctrine of the Faith, Ep. ad totius Catholicae Ecclesiae Episcopos
aliosque Ordinarios et Hierarchas quorum interest: de delictis gravioribus
eidem Congregationi pro Doctrina Fidei reservatis: AAS 93 (2001) p. 786.
[226] Cf. Roman Ritual, Holy Communion and Worship of the Eucharist Outside
Mass, nn. 26-78.
[227] Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter, Ecclesia de Eucharistia, n. 25:
AAS 95 (2003) pp. 449-450.
[228] Cf. Ecumenical Council of Trent,, Sessio XIII, 11 October 1551, Decree
on the Most Holy Eucharist, Chapter 5: DS 1643; Pius Pp. XII, Encyclical
Letter Mediator Dei: AAS 39 (1947) p. 569; Pope Paul Pp. VI, Encyclical
Letter Mysterium Fidei, 3 September 1965: AAS 57 (1965) pp. 751-774, here
769-770; S. Congregation of Rites, Instruction, Eucharisticum mysterium, n.
3f: AAS 59 (1967) p. 543; S. Congregation for the Sacraments and Divine
Worship, Instruction, Inaestimabile donum, n. 20: AAS 72 (1980) p. 339; Pope
John Paul II, Encyclical Letter, Ecclesia de Eucharistia, n. 25: AAS 95
(2003) pp. 449-450.
[229] Cf. Heb 9,:11; Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter, Ecclesia de
Eucharistia, n. 3: AAS 95 (2003) p. 435.
[230] Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter, Ecclesia de Eucharistia, n. 25:
AAS 95 (2003) p. 450.
[231] Pope Paul. VI, Encyclical Letter Mysterium fidei: AAS 57 (1965) p.
771.
[232] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter, Ecclesia de Eucharistia, n.
25: AAS 95 (2003) pp. 449-450.
[233] Code of Canon Law, can. 937.
[234] Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter, Ecclesia de Eucharistia, n. 10:
AAS 95 (2003) p. 439.
[235] Cf. Roman Ritual, Holy Communion and Worship of the Eucharist Outside
Mass, nn. 82-100; Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 317; Code of
Canon Law, can. 941 § 2.
[236] Pope John Paul II, Apostolic Letter, Rosarium Virginis Mariae, diei 16
octobris 2002: AAS 95 (2003) pp. 5-36; here n. 2, p. 6.
[237] Cf. Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the
Sacraments, Letter of the Congregation, 15 January 1997: Notitiae 34 (1998)
pp. 506-510; Apostolic Penitentiary, Letter to a Priest, 8 March 1996:
Notitiae 34 (1998) p. 511.
[238] Cf. S. Congregation of Rites, Instruction, Eucharisticum mysterium, n.
61: AAS 59 (1967) p. 571; Roman Ritual, Holy Communion and Worship of the
Eucharist Outside Mass, n. 83; Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n.
317; Code of Canon Law, can. 941 § 2.
[239] Cf. Roman Ritual, Holy Communion and Worship of the Eucharist Outside
Mass, n. 94.
[240] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Apostolic Constitution, Pastor bonus, art. 65:
AAS 80 (1988) p. 877.
[241] Code of Canon Law, can. 944 § 2; cf. Roman Ritual, Holy Communion and
Worship of the Eucharist Outside Mass, Introduction, n. 102; Missale
Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 317.
[242] Code of Canon Law, can. 944 § 1; cf. Roman Ritual, Holy Communion and
Worship of the Eucharist Outside Mass, Introduction, nn. 101-102; Missale
Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 317.
[243] Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter, Ecclesia de Eucharistia, n. 10:
AAS 95 (2003) p. 439
[244] Cf. Roman Ritual, Holy Communion and Worship of the Eucharist Outside
Mass, Introduction, n. 109.
[245] Cf. ibidem, nn. 109-112.
[246] Cf. Missale Romanum, In sollemnitate sanctissimi Corporis et Sanguinis
Christi, Collecta, p. 489.
[247] Cf. Congregation for the Clergy, and others, Instruction, Ecclesiae de
mysterio, Theological Principles, n. 3: AAS 89 (1997) p. 859.
[248] Cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 900 § 1; cf. Fourth Lateran Ecumenical
Council, 11-30 November 1215, Chapter 1: DS802; Pope Clement VI, Letter to
Mekhitar, Catholicos of the Armenians, Super quibusdam, 29 September 1351:
DS 1084; Ecumenical Council of Trent, Sessio XXIII, 15 July 1563, Doctrine
and Canons on Sacred Orders., Chapter 4: DS 1767-1770; Pope Pius XII,
Encyclical Letter, Mediator Dei: AAS 39 (1947) p. 553.
[249] Cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 230 § 3; Pope John Paul II, Allocution
during a Symposium concerning the collaboration of laypersons in the
pastoral ministry of Priests, 22 April 1994, n. 2: L’Osservatore Romano, 23
April 1994; Congregation for the Clergy et al., Instruction, Ecclesiae de
mysterio, Prooemium: AAS 89 (1997) pp. 852-856.
[250] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter, Redemptoris missio, nn.
53-54: AAS 83 (1991) pp. 300-302; Congregation for the Clergy et al.,
Instruction, Ecclesiae de mysterio, Prooemium: AAS 89 (1997) pp. 852-856.
[251] Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Decree on the Missionary
Activity of the Church, Ad gentes, 7 December 1965, n. 17; Pope John Paul
II, Encyclical Letter Redemptoris missio, n. 73: AAS 83 (1991) p. 321.
[252] Cf. Congregation for the Clergy et al., Instruction, Ecclesiae de
mysterio, Practical Provisions, art. 8 § 2: AAS 89 (1997) p. 872.
[253] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter, Ecclesia de Eucharistia, n.
32: AAS 95 (2003) p. 455.
[254] Cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 900 § 1.
[255] Cf. ibidem, can. 910 § 1; cf. also Pope John Paul II, Letter,
Dominicae Cenae, n. 11: AAS 72 (1980) p. 142; Congregation for the Clergy et
al., Instruction, Ecclesiae de mysterio, Practical Provisions, art. 8 § 1:
AAS 89 (1997) pp. 870-871.
[256] Cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 230 § 3.
[257] Cf. S. Congregation for the Discipline of the Sacraments, Instruction,
Immensae caritatis, prooemium: AAS 65 (1973) p. 264; Pope Paul VI, Apostolic
Letter (Motu Proprio), Ministeria quaedam, 15 August 1972: AAS 64 (1972) p.
532; Missale Romanum, Appendix III: Ritus ad deputandum ministrum sacrae
Communionis ad actum distribuendae, p. 1253; Congregation for the Clergy et
al., Instruction, Ecclesiae de mysterio, Practical Provisions, art. 8 § 1:
AAS 89 (1997) p. 871.
[258] S. Congregation for the Sacraments and Divine Worship, Instruction,
Inaestimabile donum, n. 10: AAS 72 (1980) p. 336; Pontifical Commission for
the Authentic Interpretation of the Code of Canon Law, Response to dubium,
11 July 1984: AAS 76 (1984) p. 746.
[259] Cf. S. Congregation for the Discipline of the Sacraments, Instruction,
Immensae caritatis, n. 1: AAS 65 (1973) pp. 264-271, here pp. 265-266;
Pontifical Commission for the Authentic Interpretation of the Code of Canon
Law, Responsio ad propositum dubium, 1 June 1988: AAS 80 (1988) p. 1373;
Congregation for the Clergy et al., Instruction, Ecclesiae de mysterio,
Practical Provisions, art. 8 § 2: AAS 89 (1997) p. 871.
[260] Cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 767 § 1.
[261] Cf. ibidem, can. 766.
[262] Cf. Congregation for the Clergy et al., Instruction, Ecclesiae de
mysterio, Practical Provisions, art. 2 §§ 3-4: AAS 89 (1997) p. 865.
[263] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Apostolic Letter, Dies Domini, esp. nn. 31-51:
AAS 90 (1998) pp. 713-766, here pp. 731-746; Pope John Paul II, Apostolic
Letter, Novo Millennio ineunte, diei 6 ianuarii 2001, nn. 35-36: AAS 93
(2001) pp. 290-292; Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter, Ecclesia de
Eucharistia, n. 41: AAS 95 (2003) pp. 460-461.
[264] Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Decree on the Ministry and Life of
Priests, Presbyterorum ordinis, n. 6; cf. Pope John Paul II, Encyclical
Letter, Ecclesia de Eucharistia, nn. 22, 33: AAS 95 (2003) pp. 448, 455-456.
[265] Cf. S. Congregation of Rites, Instruction, Eucharisticum mysterium, n.
26: AAS 59 (1967) pp. 555-556; Congregation for Divine Worship, Directory
for Sunday Celebrations in the Absence of a Priest, Christi Ecclesia, 2 June
1988, nn. 5 and 25: Notitiae 24 (1988) pp. 366-378, here pp. 367, 372.
[266] Cf. Congregation for Divine Worship, Directory for Sunday Celebrations
in the Absence of a Priest, Christi Ecclesia, n. 18: Notitiae 24 (1988) p.
370.
[267] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Letter, Dominicae Cenae, n. 2: AAS 72 (1980) p.
116.
[268] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Apostolic Letter, Dies Domini, n. 49: AAS 90
(1998) p. 744; Encyclical Letter, Ecclesia de Eucharistia, n. 41: AAS 95
(2003) pp. 460-461; Code of Canon Law, cann. 1246-1247.
[269] Cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 1248 § 2; Congregation for Divine Worship,
Directory for Sunday Celebrations in the Absence of a Priest, Christi
Ecclesia, nn. 1-2: Notitiae 24 (1988) p. 366.
[270] Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter, Ecclesia de Eucharistia, n. 33:
AAS 95 (2003) pp. 455-456.
[271] Cf. Congregation for Divine Worship, Directory for Sunday Celebrations
in the Absence of a Priest, Christi Ecclesia, n. 22: Notitiae 24 (1988) p.
371.
[272] Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter, Ecclesia de Eucharistia, n. 30:
AAS 95 (2003) pp. 453-454; cf. also Pontifical Council for the Promotion of
Christian Unity, Directory for the application of the principles and norms
on ecumenism, La recherche de l’unité, 25 March 1993, n. 115: AAS 85 (1993)
pp. 1039-1119, here p. 1085.
[273] Cf. Pontifical Council for the Promotion of Christian Unity, Directory
for the application of the principles and norms on ecumenism, La recherche
de l’unité, n. 115: AAS 85 (1993) p. 1085.
[274] Cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 292; Pontifical Council for the
Interpretation of Legislative Texts, Declaration de recta interpretatione
can. 1335, secundae partis, C.I.C., 15 May 1997, n. 3: AAS 90 (1998) p. 64.
[275] Cf. Code of Canon Law, cann. 976; 986 § 2.
[276] Cf. Pontifical Council for the Interpretation of Legislative Texts,
Declaratio de recta interpretatione can. 1335, secundae partis, C.I.C., 15
May 1997, nn. 1-2: AAS 90 (1998) pp. 63-64.
[277] As regards Priests who have obtained the dispensation from celibacy,
cf. S. Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Normae de dispensatione a
sacerdotali caelibatu ad instantiam partis, Normae substantiales, 14 October
1980, art. 5; cf. also Congregation for the Clergy et al., Instruction,
Ecclesiae de mysterio, Practical Provisions, art. 3 § 5: AAS 89 (1997) p.
865.
[278] St Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theol., II, 2, q. 93, a. 1.
[279] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Apostolic Letter, Vicesimus quintus annus, n.
15: AAS 81 (1989) p. 911; cf. also Second Vatican Ecumenical Council,
Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium, nn. 15-19.
[280] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Apostolic Letter (Motu Proprio), Sacramentorum
sanctitatis tutela: AAS 93 (2001) pp. 737-739; Congregation for the Doctrine
of the Faith, Ep. ad totius Catholicae Ecclesiae Episcopos aliosque
Ordinarios et Hierarchas quorum interest: de delictis gravioribus eidem
Congregationi pro Doctrina Fidei reservatis: AAS 93 (2001) p. 786.
[281] Cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 1367; Pontifical Council for the
Interpretation of Legislative Texts, Responsio ad propositum dubium, 3 July
1999: AAS 91 (1999) p. 918; Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Ep.
ad totius Catholicae Ecclesiae Episcopos aliosque Ordinarios et Hierarchas
quorum interest: de delictis gravioribus eidem Congregationi pro Doctrina
Fidei reservatis: AAS 93 (2001) p. 786.
[282] Cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 1378 § 2 n. 1 et 1379; Congregation for
the Doctrine of the Faith, Ep. ad totius Catholicae Ecclesiae Episcopos
aliosque Ordinarios et Hierarchas quorum interest: de delictis gravioribus
eidem Congregationi pro Doctrina Fidei reservatis: AAS 93 (2001) p. 786.
[283] Cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 908 et 1365; Congregation for the Doctrine
of the Faith, Ep. ad totius Catholicae Ecclesiae Episcopos aliosque
Ordinarios et Hierarchas quorum interest: de delictis gravioribus eidem
Congregationi pro Doctrina Fidei reservatis: AAS 93 (2001) p. 786.
[284] Cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 927; Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith, Ep. ad totius Catholicae Ecclesiae Episcopos aliosque Ordinarios et
Hierarchas quorum interest: de delictis gravioribus eidem Congregationi pro
Doctrina Fidei reservatis: AAS 93 (2001) p. 786.
[285] Code of Canon Law, can. 387.
[286] Ibidem, can. 838 § 4.
[287] Ibidem,can. 392.
[288] Cf. Pope John Paul II, Apostolic Constitution, Pastor bonus, art. 52:
AAS 80 (1988) p. 874.
[289] Cf. ibidem, n. 63: AAS 80 (1988) p. 876.
[290] Cf. ibidem, can. 1417 § 1.
[291] Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter, Ecclesia de Eucharistia, n. 24:
AAS 95 (2003) p. 449.
[292] Cf. ibidem, nn. 53-58: AAS 95 (2003) pp. 469-472.
[293] Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution on the Sacred
Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 14; cf. also nn. 11, 41, et 48.
[294] Cf. S. Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theol., III, q. 64, a. 9 ad 1.
[295] Cf. Missale Romanum, Institutio Generalis, n. 24.