I will never forget the priest dropping the Host during my first ever communion in a Latin church. I thought at the time, "OK God. So it's going to be like this if I hang around Latins?" LOL.
Wow! They've got instructions for priests dying or becoming sick during Mass, and just about every other imaginable scenario! I remember someone dropping holy water during my uncle's funeral Mass...I was only 7 when he died, but the sound of glass shattering on a marble floor was unforgettable.
It always make me think what circumstances made it necessary to put certain things in canon law / liturgical rubrics. Like the law which says you can't marry someone if you have killed their spouse to make them available.
Though I do appreciate cleverness and humor, a lot, I must say that I found the title of the thread somewhat disconcerting. It's quite simple, pick up the sacrament and consume it. It wasn't too long ago a parishioner walked up to me and a friend (an EMHC) with a consecrated Host the lady'd found on the asphalt parking lot. The lady was very consternated. My friend asked for it immediately and without thought or delay consumed it. That's faith, that's God.
@Bonnie: I was thinking the same thing, especially with what to do if there is a flood or the church is going to collapse. :-O These things must have been an issue more than once to be included in the laws!
Sorry about the 'disconcerting' title of the thread. It was the first thing that popped into my mind. It is a bit humorous I guess, very much unlike the actual situation when you find yourself in it. From the moment Jesus fell off the altar (actually the host rolled off... straight off the front... ugh!) I couldn't think of anything else but that spot on the floor until it was purified after Mass.
I think it is worthwhile to remember that no one can do actual violence to God. Desecration and sacrilege are sinful because of the harm done to the person who perpetrates them. God is not so fragile or precious.
I've been working on training all our servers to have the purificator ready on the credence table for host drops (one happens every few weeks). It's something all servers, at least more senior servers and MCs, should know.
At least at my parish, where I train all the servers, we try to have two servers (in addition to the celebrant who distributes and the paten bearer) watching during communion for dropped hosts, as well as people walking away with hosts. One stands just in front of the sedilia, and the other stands on the opposite side.
Once when I had to assist with the distribution of communion, I had to chase someone down, almost to the main doors of the church, because they were walking off with the blessed sacrament still in their hands. We were trained to watch communicants actually consume the host.
At our parish, our ushers are trained to watch for that as well as those who distribute Communion.
As an aside, when my uncle was ordained to the permanent diaconate a couple of years ago along with 8 other men, one of his fellow ordinands tripped down the stairs of the sanctuary and spilled the chalice full of the Precious Blood all over another ordinand's dalmatic.
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