Adam,
Being blunt: since Episcopalians receive bread and wine, and not the Body and Blood of Christ, does it matter how they receive, or when?
Since the question seems predicated on practical issues of moving bodies around, I should say my input is at least as valuable as anyone else's (especially anyone else who isn't singing the Communion Proper, as most aren't).
Remember, you Latins are the ones claiming Rome sits at the right hand of God and is incapable of any wrongdoing.
Birkenstocks and black socks
Birkenstocks and black socks
Once Transubstantiation has occurred (whether in the EF, OF, Anglican Use, or any other rite duly promulgated/approved by the Holy See) the Holy Sacrament subsists no matter where it is reserved, or who administers it.
There isn't more or less Jesus if you recieve from a priest or an especially comissioned layman, it isn't the priest we are recieving, it is Christ.
Then someone else attached to a previous liturgy of the Latin Church chastises everyone for not following his own anachronistic attachments and preferences. No one should ever feel obligated to follow anything other than the current regulations of the particular rite to which they are joined. If you are joined to the EF, observe EF rules - and please keep them to yourself.
is the practice of the Episcopal Church relevant to the practice of the Catholic Church, in any matter other than singing?
've seen the Un-necessary Ministers solution, and I don't think it works. If choir isn't a second-class citizen location, why can't the choir receive from the hand of a priest, while kneeling, and on the tongue?
The Church hasn't determined them unnecessary
they are essential in my place with eighty-year-olds in the choir. The pastor, btw, has great mobility problems as well, and he is only a couple of years away from being eighty.
Why would the choir insist on receiving from the hand of a priest while kneeling and on the tongue, in preference to any other way? That is not even accepted form any more, but an intrusion from one rite into another.
It doesn't help the original poster, who may not be asking about EF practices, to begin with. He didn't say.
I'm sorry to go on like this, but truly it distresses me that choirmasters are asking only the "practical" details, ignoring theological realities.
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