Pope prefers Communion
on the tongue, Msgr.
Marini says
Vatican City, Jun 25,
2008 / 04:51 pm (CNA).-
In interview published in the
Wednesday edition of
L'Osservatore Romano,
Pope Benedict’s new
Master of Pontifical Liturgical
Celebrations, Monsignor Guido
Marini, says he believes that
people receiving Communion
kneeling and on the tongue will
become common practice at the
Vatican.
Msgr.
Marini’s comments were made
during an interview with
Gianluca Biccini on some of
Pope Benedict XVI’s
recent liturgical decisions and
their meaning.
Biccini noted
in the exchange that Pope
Benedict distributed Holy
Communion to people who knelt
and received the host on their
tongues during his visit to
Brindisi (Southern Italy) last
week.
When he was
asked if this would become a
common practice at the Vatican,
Marini responded, "I believe
so."
"In this
regard it is necessary not to
forget the fact that the
distribution of Communion on the
hand remains, up to now, from
the juridical standpoint, an
exception (indult) to the
universal law, conceded by the
Holy See to those bishops'
conferences who requested it,”
the liturgical master of
ceremonies reminded.
Canada,
Mexico, the Philippines and the
United States are all countries
that have been granted an
exception from the universal
practice of receiving Communion
on the tongue.
It seems
though that the Pope wants to
provide an example for the
Church, according to Msgr.
Marini, “The form adopted by
Benedict XVI is meant to
highlight the force of this
valid norm for the whole
Church."
"It could
also be noted that the (Pope's)
preference for such form of
distribution which, without
taking anything away from the
other one, better highlights the
truth of the real presence in
the Eucharist, helps the
devotion of the faithful, and
introduces more easily to the
sense of mystery. Aspects which,
in our times, pastorally
speaking, it is urgent to
highlight and recover."