XXIX
Can a
non-Catholic receive Communion at a
Catholic parish or a Catholic may take the "Lord's Supper" at a
non-Catholic church?
Canon 844 of
the Code of Canon Law makes it clear. That canon has five sections. The first
says that "Catholic ministers may licitly administer the sacraments to
Catholic members of the Christian faithful only and, likewise, the latter may
licitly receive the sacraments only from Catholic ministers." But there
are exceptions, and those are handled in the following three sections of the
code.
Section 2
permits a Catholic to receive Communion in a non-Catholic church if that church
has a valid Eucharist. Since no Protestant church, including the Anglican, has
a valid Eucharist, Catholics who sit through the "Lord's Supper" at,
say, a Baptist church may not partake of the bread and wine there.
The problem
is that the bread and wine are just that bread and wine and not the body and
blood of Christ. Protestant churches have no valid Eucharist because they have
no valid priesthood, because the l6th-century reformers did away with the
episcopacy.
By contrast
the Eastern Orthodox churches have maintained a valid episcopacy and priesthood
and thus have all seven sacraments. These are the non-Catholic churches at
which a Catholic might receive Communion provided "it is physically or
morally impossible" for the Catholic "to approach a Catholic
minister." This could occur if the Catholic were living for a long time in
an area, such as Siberia, where there are few or no Catholic parishes.
Section 2 is
not applicable to Catholics in this country who simply want to
"sample" another religion. The permission is given only when
"necessity requires" and "provided that the danger of error or
indifferentism is avoided. Almost no American Catholic will ever be in a
position to take advantage of Section 2. After all, if a Catholic in the United
States can make it to an Eastern Orthodox parish, he likely can make it to a
Catholic parish.
Section 3
deals mainly with Eastern Orthodox who want to receive sacraments at a Catholic
parish. It says that Catholic ministers may give penance, anointing of the
sick, or the Eucharist "to members of the oriental churches which do not
have full communion with the Catholic Church."
This holds
also for members of other churches, which in the judgment of the Apostolic See
are in the same condition as the oriental churches as far as these sacraments
are concerned.
Non-Catholics
who qualify under Section 3 must "ask on their own for the
sacraments" this means there can be no general invitation to them and they
must be "properly disposed," which means in the state of grace.
The
possibility of a Catholic receiving from the minister of another church, when
the first three conditions are fulfilled, is limited to the Orthodox Churches,
other Oriental Churches, Old Catholics, Polish National and others whose
sacraments are recognized by the Holy See.
Section 4
applies mainly to Protestants. (Anglican, Episcopalian, Presbyterian,
Methodist, Baptist etc.), none of whom have valid sacred orders, and therefore,
a valid Eucharist. This Section says that "if the danger of death is
present or other grave necessity," and if the diocesan bishop approves,
Catholic ministers may give the three sacraments to Christians who are neither
Catholic nor Eastern Orthodox. Such people must not be able to approach a
minister of their own community, must ask for the sacraments on their own
(again, there is to be no general invitation to non-Catholics to "come up
and receive Communion"), must be in the state of grace, and must
"manifest Catholic faith in these sacraments."
This means
their understanding of the Real Presence, for example, must be the Catholic
understanding. Several Protestant churches describe what they have as the Real
Presence though in fact none of them have it and they do not mean by the term
the same thing we mean. This causes no end of confusions.
Some
Protestants who profess belief in the Real Presence have in mind a "really
meaningful" symbolism. Others say Jesus is "really," though only
"spiritually," present at their churches' celebration of the
"Lord's Supper." Not a single Protestant church teaches the Catholic
doctrine, though a few individual Protestants have come to accept the Catholic
understanding on their own. It is for them that this Section makes provision.
Section 5 says that no diocesan bishop or conference of bishops may institute
general norms regarding the four preceding sections of Canon 844 "except
after consultation with at least the local competent authority of the
interested non-Catholic church or community."
We don't
want to step on anyone's toes, and we don't want anyone to step on ours.
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