Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I was in a church with someone who could not take communion, I would decline communion and stay back to support them. They need it.
I attended Mass for years as a non-Catholic. I stayed in my seat during communion. Why would I need support? I was never shunned. I never received strange looks. Honestly, I used the time to silently pray on my own. It was peaceful.
I’d tell anybody who offered to stay back with me that I don’t need that support. Why should my presence take them away from the Eucharist?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was raised very catholic and I’m not a practicing catholic as an adult. If I attend a wedding or funeral or some special situation where there is a mass, I receive communion. I do not believe that a priest is any different than any mortal man. My faith is strong, I pray the rosary daily and have a close and intimate relationship with God.
I also know people who have been sexually abused by priests. I feel the Catholic Church turned its back on humanity by the way they handled what they knew to be true.
It really doesn’t matter what anyone thinks.
If a priest is “[no] different than any [other] mortal man,” how does the Eucharist get confected or sins get forgiven, or do you not believe in those Sacraments either?
Anonymous wrote:I was raised very catholic and I’m not a practicing catholic as an adult. If I attend a wedding or funeral or some special situation where there is a mass, I receive communion. I do not believe that a priest is any different than any mortal man. My faith is strong, I pray the rosary daily and have a close and intimate relationship with God.
I also know people who have been sexually abused by priests. I feel the Catholic Church turned its back on humanity by the way they handled what they knew to be true.
It really doesn’t matter what anyone thinks.
Anonymous wrote:If I was in a church with someone who could not take communion, I would decline communion and stay back to support them. They need it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Catholics being judgey?? I’m shocked. Shocked I tell you.
The pattern on DCUM is this
Someone posts asking whether most Catholics would judge someone for doing X.
Many Catholics post saying no.
One or two Protestants post things judging the Catholics for doing things differently than how they do it.
People who appear not to be Catholic post things like the above.
I know you wish that were the case but I am Catholic. And kudos for casting dispersion on another religion while claiming that Catholics aren’t judgy!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well your relative would have hated my college priest who allowed me to take communion at mass as a Lutheran. It wasn’t about man’s rules for him. It was about my relationship with Christ that he was happy to help foster. So Jesus of him.
There are narrow circumstances in which non-Catholics are permitted to receive communion in a Catholic Church, if they share the Catholic belief in the Real Presence (via transubstantiation) and cannot reasonably access their own ministers.
To the extent those circumstances do not apply, a priest distributing the Eucharist to a non-Catholic would be following his own (i.e., “man’s”) rules, not the regulations of the divinely instituted Church.
I didn’t and I don’t. Still think that he was following the spirit rather than the letter of the “law”. The spirit is what’s important. Do you think Jesus would deny anyone willing communion?
I think he was pretty clear, both directly and through the Apostles, about what “communion” entails and the consequences of receiving the Eucharist when not properly disposed. The essence of ecclesial communion is shared belief, which is entirely absent when a person who does not believe what the Church teaches about the Eucharist receives it nonetheless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Catholics being judgey?? I’m shocked. Shocked I tell you.
The pattern on DCUM is this
Someone posts asking whether most Catholics would judge someone for doing X.
Many Catholics post saying no.
One or two Protestants post things judging the Catholics for doing things differently than how they do it.
People who appear not to be Catholic post things like the above.
Anonymous wrote:Catholics being judgey?? I’m shocked. Shocked I tell you.
Anonymous wrote:If I was in a church with someone who could not take communion, I would decline communion and stay back to support them. They need it.
Anonymous wrote:If you see someone partake that you are pretty sure is not in good standing, or are Christian but not Catholic, what do you think? Personally I do not care, but it really bothers a relative of mine.