Can a non-Catholic receive Communion?
The smarty-pants answer is that it happens all the time. There’s no security check at Communion stations. Ushers seldom rack up more than a couple of Communion-line tackles in a long career. So every Sunday just about everyplace, a Lutheran or Presbyterian or Druid sneaks in. Perhaps the person has not read the statement of the U.S. bishops printed in the worship aid about who’s in and who’s out when it comes to Holy Communion. Perhaps they are operating on the theology of their own churches, which can be summed up by saying that once you’re in the water, you’re at the table.
At a Catholic Mass Orthodox Christians are officially welcome to receive, but they probably shouldn’t, since their own church sometimes levies a sentence of excommunication for those who receive Communion with us. Polish National Catholics and the Assyrians of the East are likewise welcome, and we can receive the sacraments from them if we are gravely ill. So far, that’s it, with some exceptions.
There are five conditions set down in canon law by which a baptized Christian who is not Roman Catholic can receive with us. Like all church law these conditions are meant to be interpreted through the lens of charity.
Two of these conditions are that the person first must share our Catholic faith in the meaning of the Eucharist, and they must lack normal access to a minister of their own faith tradition. Think of the widow of a Catholic at his funeral, or a devout lady who is gravely ill in a nursing home whose minister never visits, the prisoner isolated from the church community, or a soldier who worships at Mass with his or her comrades on the eve of a dangerous mission. In each case the canonical provisions suggest that the desire to receive sometimes trumps our Catholics-only policy.
But at this point in ecumenical relations, each situation has to be handled individually, normally in consultation with a priest, and ideally in dialogue with the bishop. This remains a pastoral problem that is under constant investigation and study.
For now a diocesan bishop is free to resolve individual cases and to craft general norms that do not conflict with current church law. One who expresses a desire to receive Communion or an attraction to the Eucharist may in fact be articulating a desire to be received into the full communion of the Catholic Church. For many new Catholics the desire to receive was the first step into the life of our community of faith, and their hunger and thirst for the Lord has helped many lifelong Catholics see how tremendous a gift we have in the Eucharist.
Father James Field is the former director of the Office for Worship for the Archdiocese of Boston. This article appeared in the December 2008 (Volume 73, Number 12; page 41) issue of U.S. Catholic.
Comments (2)
communion
By Rick Loader (not verified) on Wednesday, December 10, 2008Since the 1960's I have felt the pain of the division that exists between the Roman Catholic church and the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ). As a Disciples minister since 1977, I have been outspoken in recognizing all Christians as a part of the body of Christ. I have resisted those who had been baptized into the Catholic church as infants and now wanting to be immersed with a "believer's baptism." I have encouraged them to accept their baptism along with their confirmation as having fullfilled the call to be baptised since the days of John.
But from what I have read, we are no closer together than we ever were. In fact as the Catholic church has taken upon itself to articulate its beliefs more clearly, it is clear that not only am I not welcomed to take the Eucharist in the Roman Catholic church, but the Catholics are being instructed not to take it in our church.
Presently, I am involved in formal and informal conversations with the Roman Catholic church about a variety of practices and theologies, but if I read the Catholic church literature correctly, the Catholic members and priests talking with us can do little more than patronizing listening, because they have no authority to do more.
I wonder if any Catholic feels the disappointment and ache I feel on this. My fear is that the disappoint the Catholics feel is in our ignorance in not recognizing them as the only true church.
And if any do feel that frustration in the division, I wonder what if anything is being done about it.
I could not be more serious. I hope I have been respectful. And I would love a response.
Thank you for this opportunity to write.
Dr. Rick Loader
First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)
P.O. Box 2175
Bardstown, KY 40004
502-510-1225
Catholics, Other Christians, and Communion
By Bryan Cones on Monday, December 15, 2008Thank you for your thoughtful and heartfelt comments. I can only add that many Catholics express similar frustrations, especially those married to a Christian of another Communion. There has been, as you point out, very little official movement on this issue from the Roman Catholic side, though I imagine there is a substantial amount of "ecumenism from below," on this issue, with individual Christians of various faiths making their own decisions about whether to receive Communion.

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