The Devil is attacking the Eucharist as part of his attack on the Church, the head of the Vatican department dealing with liturgy has said.
In the preface to a book on the subject, Cardinal Robert Sarah laments the lack of reverence for the Blessed Sacrament.
“The most insidious, diabolical attack consists in trying to extinguish faith in the Eucharist, sowing errors and favouring an unsuitable manner of receiving it,” the cardinal writes.
“Truly the war between Michael and his Angels on one side, and Lucifer on the other, continues in the heart of the faithful: Satan’s target is the Sacrifice of the Mass and the Real Presence of Jesus in the consecrated Host.
The cardinal also criticised some common liturgical practices. “Why do we insist on communicating standing in the hand?” he asked. “Why this attitude of lack of submission to the signs of God? [Receiving kneeling and on the tongue] is much more suited to the sacrament itself. I hope there can be a rediscovery and promotion of the beauty and pastoral value of this manner.
“In my opinion and judgment, this is an important question on which the Church today must reflect. This is a further act of adoration and love that each of us can offer to Jesus Christ.”
The cardinal’s preface appears in the new book The distribution of Communion on the hand: a historical, juridical and pastoral survey by Don Federico Bortoli.
Communion in the hand, the cardinal writes, “involves a great dispersion of fragments” of the Host, which, although small, are still Christ’s body. Failure to respect this can weaken Catholics’ belief in the Real Presence, leading them to think: ‘If even the parish priest does not pay attention to the fragments, if he administers the Communion so that the fragments can be dispersed, then it means that Jesus is not in them or only ‘up to a certain point’ ”.
He said that kneeling for Communion was the “example of the saints”, asking: “Is it really too humiliating to bow down and kneel before the Lord Jesus Christ?”
Cardinal Sarah also criticises “outrages” against the Blessed Sacrament. These includes not only satanic “Black Masses”, but also sacrilegious Communions, received while in a state of mortal sin, and “some formes” of intercommunion – that is, Communion received by non-Catholics.
One million Koreans back Church over abortion law
A million people in South Korea have signed a Church petition calling for abortion to remain largely illegal in the country.
The petition was presented at a Mass at Myeongdong Cathedral in Seoul celebrated by Cardinal Andrew Yeom Soo-jung. It dwarfs a rival petition, circulated last year, calling for abortion to be legalised, which was signed by 230,000 people. Abortion is outlawed in South Korea except in cases of rape or when there is a risk to the mother’s health.
The campaign to gather signatures only began in December, according to UCA News. The cardinal said the speed at which the signatures were gathered “shows how desperate the Church is to fulfil its mission of protecting all forms of life”. He said the petition was “an appeal to society” that “even a foetus is a reflection of God, a citizen of our society, and a human life that should be respected”.
The bishops’ conference is now embarking on a second phase of its campaign raising awareness of the dangers of a “culture of death”.
More than a quarter of the South Korean population is Christian. About eight per cent identifies as Catholic.
Catholics mourn Billy Graham
Archbishop of New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan has paid tribute to preacher Billy Graham, who has died at the age of 99.
Cardinal Dolan said that, even though he grew up in a Catholic family, “there was always respect and admiration for Billy Graham and the work he was doing”.
The cardinal prayed that God would grant Graham “eternal rest.”
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