Tradition or tyrrany?
Last week, a Roman Catholic bishop in New Jersey declined to reverse
a decision, barring a 9-year-old girl from consuming a rice wafer as
part of communion. Haley Pelly-Waldman has celiac-sprue disease, a
genetic condition that prevents her from eating gluten -- a protein
found in wheat, barley and rye, but not in rice. Catholic teaching is
that priests can turn bread and wine into Jesus’ body and blood, and
that the bread Jesus consecrated was unleavened wheat. A spokesman
for the bishop said the girl could consume a low-gluten wafer,
partake of a drink made of partially fermented grapes or touch her
mouth to consecrated wine. Elizabeth Pelly-Waldman, the girl’s
mother, rejected all three options, saying she didn’t want her
daughter to consume any gluten or alcohol. How far should a religious
group go to maintain a tradition, when it may cause harm to a
parishioner?
Breaking bread together -- sharing a meal -- is a universal way of
experiencing the meaning of family and community. In a very few
years, as a young teen, Haley will undoubtedly make her own decisions
about Communion, the Catholic Church and her mother’s wishes.
Meantime, her mother and the bishop have dug in their heels about
their issues.
At the Last Supper, Jesus did not hand his disciples one-inch
round wafers, whether wheat, rice or low gluten. He broke bread. The
bread was an unleavened type, somewhat like pita.
What is important is that this was ordinary table bread --
natural, humble, simple daily bread that was to become “the bread of
life.”
The tradition has already radically changed throughout the
centuries and has adapted itself to modern manufacturing and
distribution methods in order to serve large numbers of congregants.
In my senior year in college, I lived in a Catholic monastery,
where the nuns baked altar breads to make their living. The water and
flour was poured onto sheets, then pressed to keep it from rising
(like a waffle iron), and later perforated by a cookie cutter type of
device to make the small round disks.
During the years following Vatican II and in the ‘70s, it was not
unusual for people at small Masses to experiment with various types
of breads in order to return to a more authentic reenactment. Women
and laymen also created “Breaking and Blessing of Bread” services
(“para liturgies”) to sidestep prohibitions against women saying Mass
and the requirement that a priest preside. Guidelines for services
“without the presence of a priest” were developed to regulate them.
In the mainstream, boomer and older Catholics have already
personally experienced vast changes in Communion practices during
their lifetime. Congregants used to kneel in a row at the front of
the church and a wafer was placed on their tongues. For the last 30
years, people have instead formed a single file line, standing in
front of the priest or Eucharistic minister.
There was quite a hoopla when people first wanted to have the Host
-- the bread or wafer consecrated -- placed in their hands. Now it is
commonplace, and rubrics have been developed to specify exactly how
this is to be done.
The tradition changed. The real question is how each generation of
practitioners internalizes and drinks in the religious tradition,
which is then interpreted and expressed anew in each culture and
time.
I surmise that Haley’s mother is standing up for values of
inclusion, accommodation of people who have disabilities or special
needs, concern about addictive epidemics such as alcoholism and a
need for flexibility and mercy. The jurists at the Vatican could
easily craft regulations that would maintain wheat wafers as the
norm, but would also grant limited exceptions.
These disagreements are called “liturgy wars” by John L. Allen
Jr., the Rome correspondent for the National Catholic Reporter. They
are power struggles between the local church (some bishops, the
national bishops’ conferences, professional liturgists/specialists,
and parish liturgy committees) and those who prefer centralized
Vatican control (via the Congregation for Divine Worship and the
Discipline of the Sacraments).
Who will lead and make decisions? How much latitude or diversity
can exist within a church? Should local bishops be trusted to
exercise their pastoral discretion?
While Communion is important to Christians, there is a bigger
picture. There was an era when the divine presence was experienced by
many Catholics primarily during the Mass and in receiving Communion,
believed to be the Body and Blood of Christ (the Real Presence).
There has been a mega shift both in the church and in our culture
toward appreciating and experiencing the presence of the divine in
all persons, places and things. The focus widens and religious
experience is not limited to attending Mass and receiving Communion,
but to discovering this meaning in the midst of life.
The Zen practitioner tries to awaken to the treasure of life,
which is each moment as it is. We do not emphasize liturgy or
chanting or any special services. Regular meditation is the way in
which Zen practitioners experience the ultimate meaning and value of
our life. The Communion wafer is the finger pointing at the moon.
REV. DR. DEBORAH BARRETT
Zen Center of Orange County
Costa Mesa
Health-wholeness-holiness in body and mind and spirit is a goal of
all faith communities, isn’t it? “How can a person find God when they
are not as well as possible physically?” is almost as good a question
as the traditional, “How can a person come into faith when they are
starving of hunger?”
In this Episcopal Parish Church, there are a number of
communicants for whom wine with alcohol is poison; they partake of
Holy Eucharist with wheat bread only. We have one occasional
parishioner who has a serious wheat allergy; when she receives the
Holy Communion here, she takes only the wine. Because the grace of
the Blessed Sacrament is fully contained in but one molecule of
either the bread or the wine, these beloveds receive the grace of
Communion as completely as another who takes a whole wafer or a full
sip of wine.
If someone for whom both wheat bread and wine with alcohol were
unhealthy desired to receive the sacrament here, I would consult with
our Parish’s worship commission, Anglican sacramental theologians and
the Bishop of our Episcopal Diocese. I am confident that we would
easily and graciously find other ways for that person to receive Holy
Communion openly and honestly so as to enhance their
holiness-wholeness-health.
(THE VERY REV’D CANON)
PETER D. HAYNES
Saint Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Parish Church
Corona del Mar
Jesus was asked the same question when he was criticized for
healing a man on the Sabbath. The religious people were appalled at
his lack of respect for tradition. Jesus replied that the Sabbath was
made for man and not the other way around.
Protestants broke from the Roman Church precisely because of this
kind of issue. Tradition became valued over truth; practice became
more important than people.
The Lord’s table is a remembrance of Jesus’ sacrifice for us and
an invitation by Christ himself to do so. To legalistically require
specific types of ingredients, especially when the life and health of
a child is at stake, misses the point at best and is abusive at
worst.
Traditions are icons of reality. They point us to the reality and
are not meant to take the place of the real thing. When the tradition
is practiced for the sake of the tradition, the reality is forgotten
and is eventually lost.
The Jewish practice of Passover is a great example of keeping a
tradition relevant. There are many Haggadahs (service orders) for
practicing the Passover in ways that keep the message alive and
relevant. We use several different Haggadahs as we celebrate the
deliverance of God’s people, the nation of Israel. It is just as
vital a message for us today as Christians as it has been for Jews of
any age.
More importantly, it was this celebration that Christ was
celebrating when he instituted the Lord’s Supper. He took the cup of
salvation and the bread of the Afikoman and said, “Do this in
remembrance of me.” He did not say, “Do this exactly like me.”
There are many ways to remember our traditions without being
legalistic and abusive to our followers.
People naturally fall in love with that which is meaningful in
their lives. As leaders, we must guard traditions from becoming idols
and remember that without the people, any religion is useless.
Religion is for the benefit of people, not people for benefit of
religion.
SENIOR ASSOCIATE
PASTOR RIC OLSEN
Harbor Trinity
Costa Mesa
It is tempting to reflexively object to a decision so apparently
insensitive and arbitrary, what seems to be an example of man’s law
obscuring God’s truth. After all, the Gospel of Matthew teaches: “It
is not what enters a man’s mouth that defiles, but what proceeds from
it that defiles.”
Abstaining from eating meat on Fridays used to be synonymous with
Catholicism, but if that dietary restriction was abolished, why can’t
this one be slightly modified for such a seemingly valid reason?
Is a wheat-based Eucharist truly the only recipe for Communion?
Does gluten-free bread render the Sacrament invalid? Does a different
flavor or chemical composition vitiate theological validity? Is it
only wheat that can be transubstantiated into Christ’s body?
Leviticus teaches that we are to live by God’s commandments and
not die by them. Jesus himself said, “Suffer the little children to
come unto me,” not “make the children suffer!”
Judaism is often characterized by the church as excessively
legalistic, focused obsessively on the minutiae of ritual. The New
Testament rails against preoccupation with “rite” at the expense of
“right.” Jesus is portrayed as criticizing those who exalt rules and
regulations, mere externals, above the moral purpose of the rituals.
This “hypocrisy,” according to Gospel debates, endangers the
fulfillment of religion’s true purpose -- to create intimacy between
God and the faithful. Yet, in this matter of the ingredient of the
Host, we seem to have a punctiliousness bordering on the absurd!
It is only when we explore this tradition’s origin that our
initial negative response may be tempered. It is the church’s belief
that Jesus used wheat bread at the Last Supper and ordered to “do
this in memory of me.” Catholicism holds that the use of bread made
of wheat is of divine origin and that the church has no authority to
alter what Christ ordained. The Host is explicitly unleavened wheat
bread, because it was with wheat that Jesus instituted the Eucharist
at the Last Supper.
How do we know that Jesus consumed wheat with his disciples? The
Last Supper was the Passover Seder and hence matzah was eaten. Matzah
is prepared from wheat to fulfill the obligation to eat bread that is
unleavened but that is capable of leavening. The flat bread
symbolizes the bondage of Egypt; that it can rise through leavening
represents the new life of freedom.
Jewish tradition disqualifies rice as fulfilling the purpose of
wheat because rice does not ferment and become leavened. The
Communion Host is made of wheat because wheat can ferment and rise.
As the Gospel of John points out, when a grain of wheat is sown
into the earth, it first dies and then grows in resurrection. It
rises through its death, thus linking the seed of wheat to the Divine
Mystery. The grain of wheat dying in the earth in order to grow and
bear a harvest is Jesus’ death and burial in the tomb and his
Resurrection
The Seder of Judaism and the Communion of Catholicism share in the
belief that the bread must be made of a grain that participates in
the process of leavening, of rising, of liberation from death, of
going forth to new life. That grain is wheat.
The temptation to denigrate this ancient tradition should be
resisted. We should look beneath the surface and separate the wheat
from the chaff.
RABBI MARK S. MILLER
Temple Bat Yahm
Newport Beach
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