I have actually been offered Communion at the organ bench a couple of times!
--The term "extraordinary" is no longer applied to Eucharistic Ministers.
It seems to me that full and active participation involves receiving Communion during the Mass; singing more fully should not involve communicating less.
Choir members should receive hosts consecrated at the Mass. As liturgical ministers, they should receive from the altar, not from the tabernacle. If a concelebrant, for example, were to receive from the tabernacle, it would make defective his Mass (but not his Communion).
Ministers should support other ministries. Those with the charism to sing should be supportive of those commissioned to distribute Communion. Otherwise they should not sing.
The term "extraordinary" is no longer applied to Eucharistic Ministers.
The recipients should have at least 60 seconds of silent time to make a personal thanksgiving before rushing to the next event (Communion music).
Having Eucharistic Ministers among the choir members seems a good solution, though the combining of ministries in one person is discouraged in general.
If there are a number of acolytes at the Mass, one of them can carry a lighted candle ahead of the Minister up into the choir loft, and extinguish the candle when the last Host has been received. This was traditional when carrying viaticum to the sick.
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