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the laity did not routinely remove the bread and the wine from the service. What’s more, by church decree three hundred years later, the laity no longer were allowed to even touch the elements. One of the theological reasons given was that only something that was consecrated (the priest’s hands anointed at ordination) should touch the body and blood, and thus the paten and the cup. No one but a priest or a bishop (not even a deacon) was ordinarily even allowed to remove from or to place anything upon the holy altar.

      St. Thomas Aquinas makes the reasons for this very clear much later, in the mid-thirteenth century:

      This idea that the consecrated hands of the priests and bishops were the only ones holy enough to touch the eucharist became the basis for placing the body on the communicant’s tongue instead of in her palm, although it was not a universal practice until a church decree in 650.

      Though in most of the rest of the world, Roman Catholics still receive the bread upon their tongues, in 1977 Pope Paul VI allowed the U.S. Bishops to return to the practice of giving the host into communicants’ palms.

      

DOCTRINE OF CONCOMITANCE

      Anglicans have been receiving both the bread and wine since the founding of the Church of England in the sixteenth century. For the Reformers, one of the problems with Roman Catholicism was that the elements were not available in both “kinds” or “species.”

      The Council of Trent (1545) put forth the Doctrine of Concomitance in reaction to the Reformers’ insistence that the laity have access to the cup. Anglicans, like Roman Catholics, still uphold this doctrine, which says that the consecrated bread and wine each contain entirely both the body and blood of Christ. A congregant who just receives the bread or just receives the wine has received Christ in the body and the blood.

       SPIRITUAL COMMUNION

       Spiritual Communion is a communion of desire, meaning that a Christian inwardly shares in the eucharist, though the body and blood are not physically present.

       The first BCP (1549) recommended spiritual communion for those who could not attend because of illness or for those who could not swallow the elements. Eucharistic Visitors now take care of many of these pastoral situations.

      Why does this matter to Eucharistic Ministers?

      Often EMs serve persons at the altar rail who choose to receive only the bread or (less often) only the wine. Thus, EMs who are aware of this doctrine can assure alcoholics who abstain from the consecrated wine, for instance, that they have received the fullness of communion in the bread. Conversely, people who drink only the consecrated wine because they cannot digest the gluten in the bread used for the eucharist, have also received the full benefit of communion.

      

“CHURCHPERSONSHIP,” FORMERLY KNOWN AS “CHURCHMANSHIP”

      In the mid-twentieth century, Sunday schools and camps often taught various versions of this song to illustrate some of the truths of our Anglican identity:

      I Am an Anglican Sung to “God Bless America” Author: probably wanted to remain anonymous

      I am an Anglican.

      I am P.E. (Protestant Episcopal) I am High Church, And Low Church I am Protestant and Catholic and free. Not a Presby, Nor a Luth’ran Nor a Baptist, white with foam. I am an Anglican, Just one step from Rome. I am an Anglican, Via media’s my home.

      Using this lighthearted synopsis, here is a very brief sketch of some of the areas in which we differ but remain wonderfully—and even miraculously—united.

      People who visit Episcopal churches often wonder how services using the same Book of Common Prayer can contain so much variety. Shouldn’t it always be exactly the same? Thankfully, not so! Styles of worship often differ, and these differences reflect some very real theological differences within our one denomination. The old-school way of referring to these differences was High Church, Low Church (see song above), and Broad Church—or churchmanship.

      This word still has not really changed. Although Episcopalians are more aware of inclusive language than ever, “churchpersonship” is a mouthful!

      One way of looking at Episcopalians is along a spectrum with Protestant on one end and Roman Catholic on the other. Such a spectrum has nothing to do with a conservative/liberal range but is a spiritual orientation. As a matter of fact, the Anglican Church is the only church to claim to be both Protestant and Catholic at the same time, since it is a product of an (English) Reformation (a “Protestant” is one who protests) as surely as are our Lutheran brothers and sisters. On the other hand, we use the term “Catholic” in much the same way as the “Roman Catholic” church originally used it starting in the fifteenth century—to mean “universal.”

      Along that spectrum from High Church to Low Church is a middle ground often referred to as Broad Church. Episcopalians are famous for taking the via media, or middle way, the gift of being able to seek a balance of views instead of seeing black and white or right and wrong. So a great many of our congregations are what we call Broad Church.

      Congregations that are High Church are closer to the Roman Catholic or Eastern Orthodox end of the spectrum. They use icons and “smells and bells” (incense and sanctus bells) in chanted liturgies. Their vestments and other trappings can be breathtaking, and some lucky laypersons (subdeacons) get to wear and use them! Some of these Episcopal churches even add historical elements to services, such as the Angelus. This High Church orientation is also known as Anglo-Catholic.

      Broad Church is in the middle and combines elements of High and Low churches. These congregations might use incense on festive occasions such as Christmas

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