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Inaestimabile Donum
Instruction Concerning Worship of the Eucharistic Mystery
Sacred Congregation for the Sacraments and Divine Worship Approved and
Confirmed by His Holiness Pope John Paul II April 17, 1980
a) The Mass
1. "The two parts which in a sense go to make up the Mass, namely the
Liturgy of the Word and the Eucharist Liturgy, are so closely connected
that they form but one single act of worship."(10) A person should not
approach the table of the Bread of the Lord without having first been
at the table of His Word.(11) Sacred Scripture is therefore of the
highest importance in the celebration of Mass. Consequently there can
be no disregarding what the Church has laid down in order to insure
that "in sacred celebrations there should be a more ample, more varied
and more suitable reading from Sacred Scriptures."(12) The norms laid
down in the Lectionary concerning the number of readings, and the
directives given for special occasions are to be observed. It would be
a serious abuse to replace the Word of God with the word of a man, no
matter who the author may be.(13)
2. The reading of the Gospel passage is reserved to the ordained
minister, namely the deacon or the priest. When possible, the other
readings should be entrusted to a reader who has been instituted as
such, or to other spiritually and technically trained lay people. The
first reading is followed by a responsorial psalm, which is an integral
part of the Liturgical of the Word.(14)
3. The purpose of the homily is to explain to the faithful the Word of
God proclaimed in the readings, and to apply its message to the
present. Accordingly the homily is to be given by the priest or the
deacon.(15)
4. It is reserved to the priest, by virtue of his ordination, to
proclaim the Eucharist Prayer, which of its nature is the high point of
the whole celebration. It is therefore an abuse to have some parts of
the Eucharist Prayer said by the deacon, by a lower minister, or by the
faithful.(16) On the other hand the assembly does not remain passive
and inert; it unites itself to the priest in faith and silence and
shows its concurrence by the various interventions provided for in the
course of the Eucharist Prayer: the responses to the Preface dialogue,
the Sanctus, the acclamation after the Consecration, and the final Amen
after the Per Ipsum. The Per Ipsum itself is reserved to the priest.
This Amen especially should be emphasized by being sung, since it is
the most important in the whole Mass.
5. Only the Eucharist Prayers included in the Roman Missal or those
that the Apostolic See has by law admitted, in the manner and within
the limits laid down by the Holy See, are to be used. To modify the
Eucharist Prayers approved by the Church or to adopt others privately
composed is a most serious abuse.
6. It should be remembered that the Eucharistic Prayer must not be
overlaid with other prayers or songs.(17) When proclaiming the
Eucharistic Prayer, the priest is to pronounce the text clearly, so as
to make it easy for the faithful to understand it, and so as to foster
the formation of a true assembly entirely intent upon the celebration
of the memorial of the Lord.
7. Concelebration, which has been restored in the Western Liturgy,
manifests in an exceptional manner the unity of the priesthood.
Concelebrants must, therefore, pay careful attention to the signs that
indicate that unity. For example, they are to be present from the
beginning of the celebration, they are to wear the prescribed
vestments, they are to occupy the place appropriate to their ministry
as concelebrants, and they are to observe faithfully the other norms
for the seemly performance of the rite.(18)
8. Matter of the Eucharist. Faithful to Christ's example, the Church
has constantly used bread and wine mixed with water to celebrate the
Lord's Supper. The bread for the celebration of the Eucharist, in
accordance with the tradition of the whole Church, must be made solely
of wheat, and, in accordance with the tradition proper to the Latin
Church, it must be unleavened. By reason of the sign, the matter of the
Eucharistic celebration "should appear as actual food." This is to be
understood as linked to the consistency of the bread, and not to its
form, which remains the traditional one. No other ingredients are to be
added to the wheaten flour and water. The preparation of the bread
requires attentive care to ensure that the product does not detract
from the dignity due to the Eucharistic bread, can be broken in a
dignified way, does not give rise to excessive fragments, and does not
offend the sensibilities of the faithful when they eat it. The wine for
the Eucharistic celebration must be of "the fruit of the vine" (Lk.
22:18) and be natural and genuine, that is to say not mixed with other
substances.(19)
9. Eucharistic Communion. Communion is a gift of the Lord, given to the
faithful through the minister appointed for this purpose. It is not
permitted that the faithful should themselves pick up the consecrated
bread and the sacred chalice, still less that they should hand them
from one to another.
10. The faithful, whether religious or lay, who are authorized as
extraordinary ministers of the Eucharist can distribute Communion only
when there is no priest, deacon or acolyte, when the priest is impeded
by illness or advanced age, or when the number of the faithful going to
Communion is so large as to make the celebration of Mass excessively
long.(20) Accordingly, a reprehensible attitude is shown by those
priests who, though present at the celebration, refrain from
distributing Communion and leave the task to the laity.
11. The Church has always required from the faithful respect and
reverence for the Eucharist at the moment of receiving it.
With regard to the manner of going to Communion, the faithful can
receive it either kneeling or standing, in accordance with the norms
laid down by the episcopal conference: "When the faithful communicate
kneeling, no other sign of reverence towards the Blessed Sacrament is
required, since kneeling is itself a sign of adoration. When they
receive Communion standing, it is strongly recommended that, coming up
in a procession, they should make a sign of reverence before receiving
the sacrament. This should be done at the right time and place, so that
the order of people going to and from Communion is not disrupted."(21)
The Amen said by the faithful when receiving Communion is an act of
personal faith in the presence of Christ.
12. With regard to Communion under both kinds, the norms laid down by
the Church must be observed, both by reason of the reverence due to the
Sacrament and for the good of those receiving the Eucharist, in
accordance with variations in circumstances, times and places.(22)
Episcopal conferences and ordinaries also are not to go beyond what is
laid down in the present discipline: the granting of permission for
Communion under both kinds is not to be indiscriminate, and the
celebrations in question are to be specified precisely; the groups that
use this faculty are to be clearly defined, well disciplined, and
homogeneous.(23) 13. Even after Communion the Lord remains present
under the species. Accordingly, when the Communion has been
distributed, the sacred particles remaining are to be consumed or taken
by the competent minister to the place where the Eucharist is reserved.
14. On the other hand, the consecrated wine is to be consumed
immediately after Communion and may not be kept. Care must be taken to
consecrate only the amount of wine needed for Communion.
15. The rules laid down for the purification of the chalice and the
other sacred vessels that have contained the Eucharistic species must
be observed.(24)
16. Particular respect and care are due to the sacred vessels, both the
chalice and paten for the celebration of the Eucharist, and the ciboria
for the Communion of the faithful. The form of the vessels must be
appropriate for the liturgical use for which they are meant. The
material must be noble, durable, and in every case adapted to sacred
use. In this sphere, judgment belongs to the episcopal conference of
the individual regions.
Use is not to be made of simple baskets or other recipients meant for
ordinary use outside the sacred celebrations, nor are the sacred
vessels to be of poor quality or lacking any artistic style.
Before being used, chalices and patens must be blessed by the bishop or
by a priest.(25)
17. The faithful are to be recommended not to omit to make proper
thanksgiving after Communion. They may do this during the celebration
with a period of silence, with a hymn, psalm or other song of
praise,(26) or also after the celebration, if possible by staying
behind to pray for a suitable time.
18. There are, of course, various roles that women can perform in the
liturgical assembly: these include reading the Word of God and
proclaiming the intentions of the Prayer of the Faithful. Women are
not, however, permitted to act as altar servers.(27)
19. Particular vigilance and special care are recommended with regard
to Masses transmitted by the audiovisual media. Given their very wide
diffusion, their celebration must be of exemplary quality.(28)
In the case of celebrations that are held in private houses, the norms
of the Instruction Actio pastoralis of may 15, 1969, are to be
observed.(29)
b) Eucharistic Worship Outside Mass
20. Public and private devotion to the Holy Eucharist outside Mass also
is highly recommended: for the presence of Christ, who is adored by the
faithful in the Sacrament, derives from the sacrifice and is directed
towards sacramental and spiritual Communion.
21. When Eucharistic devotions are arranged, account should be taken of
the liturgical season, so that they harmonize with the Liturgy, draw
inspiration from it in some way, and lead the Christian people toward
it.(30)
22. With regard to exposition of the Holy Eucharist, either prolonged
or brief, and with regard to processions of the Blessed Sacrament,
Eucharistic Congresses, and the whole ordering of Eucharistic piety,
the pastoral indications and directives given in the Roman Ritual are
to be observed.(31)
23. It must not be forgotten that "before the blessing with the
Sacrament, an appropriate time should be devoted to the reading of the
Word of God, to songs and prayers, and to some silent prayer."(32) At
the end of the adoration, a hymn is sung, and a prayer chosen from
among the many contained in the Roman Ritual is recited or sung.(33)
24. The tabernacle in which the Eucharist is kept can be located on an
altar, or away from it, in a spot in the church which is very
prominent, truly noble, and duly decorated, or in a chapel suitable for
private prayer and for adoration by the faithful.(34)
25. The tabernacle should be solid, unbreakable, and not
transparent.(35) The presence of the Eucharist is to be indicated by a
tabernacle veil or by some other suitable means laid down by the
competent authority, and a lamp must perpetually burn before it, as a
sign of honor paid to the Lord.(36)
26. The venerable practice of genuflecting before the Blessed
Sacrament, whether enclosed in the tabernacle or publicly exposed, as a
sign of adoration, is to be maintained.(37) This act requires that it
be performed in a recollected way. In order that the heart may bow
before God in profound reverence, the genuflection must be neither
hurried nor careless.
27. If anything has been introduced that is at variance with these
indications, it is to be corrected.
Most of the difficulties encountered in putting into practice the
reform of the Liturgy and especially the reform of the Mass stem from
the fact that neither priests nor faithful have perhaps been
sufficiently aware of the theological and spiritual reasons for which
the changes have been made, in accordance with the principles laid down
by the Council.
Priests must acquire an ever deeper understanding of the authentic way
of looking at the Church,(38) of which the celebration of the Liturgy
and especially of the Mass is the living expression. Without an
adequate biblical training, priests will not be able to present to the
faithful the meaning of the Liturgy as an enactment, in signs, of the
history of salvation. Knowledge of the history of the Liturgy will
likewise contribute to an understanding of the changes which have been
introduced, and introduced not for the sake of novelty but as a revival
and adaptation of authentic and genuine tradition.
The Liturgy also requires great balance, for, as the Constitution
Sacrosanctum concilium says, it "is thus the outstanding means by which
the faithful can express in their lives, and manifest to others, the
mystery of Christ and the real nature of the true Church. It is of the
essence of the Church that she be both human and divine, visible and
yet invisibly endowed, eager to act and yet devoted to contemplation,
present in this world and yet not at home in it. She is all these
things in such a way that in her the human is directed and subordinated
to the divine, the visible likewise to the invisible, action to
contemplation, and this present world to that city yet to come, which
we seek."(39) Without this balance, the true face of Christian Liturgy
becomes obscured.
In order to reach these ideals more easily it will be necessary to
foster liturgical formation in seminaries and faculties(40) and to
facilitate the participation of priests in courses, meetings,
assemblies or liturgical weeks, in which study and reflection should be
properly complemented by model celebrations. In this way priests will
be able to devote themselves to more effective pastoral action, to
liturgical catechesis of the faithful, to organizing groups of lectors,
to giving altar servers spiritual and practical training, to training
animators of the assembly, to enriching progressively the repertoire of
songs, in a word to all the initiatives favoring an ever deeper
understanding of the Liturgy.
In the implementation of the liturgical reform, great responsibility
falls upon national and diocesan liturgical commissions and liturgical
institutes and centers, especially in the work of translating the
liturgical books and training the clergy and faithful in the spirit of
the reform desired by the Council.
The work of these bodies must be at the service of the ecclesiastical
authority, which should be able to count upon their faithful
collaboration. Such collaboration must be faithful to the Church's
norms and directives, and free of arbitrary initiatives and particular
ways of acting that could compromise the fruits of the liturgical
renewal.
This document will come into the hands of God's ministers in the first
decade of the life of the Missale Romanum promulgated by Pope Paul VI
following the prescriptions of the Second Vatican Council.
It seems fitting to recall a remark made by that Pope concerning
fidelity to the norms governing celebration: "It is a very serious
thing when division is introduced precisely where congregavit nos in
unum Christi amor, in the Liturgy and the Eucharistic Sacrifice, by the
refusing of obedience to the norms laid down in the liturgical sphere.
It is in the name of tradition that we ask all our sons and daughters,
all the Catholic communities, to celebrate with dignity and fervor the
renewed Liturgy."(41)
The bishops, "whose function it is to control, foster, and safeguard
the entire liturgical life of the Church entrusted to them,"(42) will
not fail to discover the most suitable means for ensuring a careful and
firm application of these norms, for the glory of God and the good of
the Church.
Rome, April 3, 1980, Holy Thursday.
This instruction, prepared by the Sacred Congregation for the
Sacraments and Divine Worship, was approved on April 17, 1980, by the
Holy Father, John Paul II, who confirmed it with his own authority and
ordered it to be published and to be observed by all concerned.
+James R. Cardinal Knox
Prefect
+Virgilio Noe
Assistant Secretary
Footnotes
1. Ed. Typica Altera, Rome, 1975.
2. Ed Typica, Rome, 1973.
3. Sacred Congregation of Rites, May 25, 1967: AAS 59 [1967], pp.
539-573.
4. Sacred Congregation for Divine Worship, May 29, 1969: AAS 61 [1969],
pp. 541-545.
5. Sacred Congregation for the Discipline of the Sacraments, January
29, 1973: AAS 65 [1973], pp. 264-271.
6. Sacred Congregation for Divine Worship, September 5, 1970: AAS 62
[1970], pp. 692-704.
7. St. Thomas, Summa Theolgiae, 2-2, Q. 93, A. 1.
8. Second Vatican Council, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy,
Sacrosanctum concilum, nos. 22, 3.
9. Paul VI, address of August 22, 1973: L'Osservatore Romano, August
23, 1973.
10. Second Vatican Council, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy,
Sacrosanctum concilium, no. 35.
11. Cf. ibid., 56; cf. also Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic
Constitution on Divine Revelation, Dei Verbum, no. 21.
12. Second Vatican Council, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy,
Sacrosanctum concilium, no. 35.
13. Cf. Sacred Congregation for Divine Worship, Instruction Liturgicae
Instaurationes, no. 2, a.
14. Cf. Institutio Generalis Missalis Romani, no. 36.
15. Cf. Sacred Congregation for Divine Worship, Instruction Liturgicae
Instaurationes, no. 2, a.
16. Cf. Sacred Congregation for Divine Worship, circular letter
Eucharistiae participationem, April 27, 1973: AAS 65 [1973], pp.
340-347, 8; Instruction Liturgicae Instaurationes, no. 4.
17. Institutio Generalis Missalis Romani, no. 12.
18. Cf. ibid., nos. 156, 161-163.
19. Cf. ibid., nos. 281-284; Sacred Congregation for Divine Worship,
Instruction Liturgicae Instaurationes, no. 5; Notitiae 6 [1970], no. 37.
20. Cf. Sacred Congregation for the Discipline of the Sacraments,
Instruction Immensae caritatis, no. 1.
21. Sacred Congregation of Rites, Instruction Eucharisticum Mysterium,
no. 34. Cf. Institutio Generalis Missalis Romani, nos. 224 c, 246 b,
247 b.
22. Cf. Institutio Generalis Missalis Romani, nos. 241-242.
23. Cf. ibid., end of no. 242.
24. Cf. ibid., no. 238.
25. Cf. Institutio Generalis Missalis Romani, nos. 288, 289, 292, 295;
Sacred Congregation for Divine Worship, Instruction Liturgicae
Instaurationes, no. 8; Pontificale Romanum, ordo dedicationis ecclesiae
et altaris, p. 125, no. 3.
26. Cf. Institutio Generalis Missalis Romani, no. 56 j.
27. Cf. Sacred Congregation for Divine Worship, Instruction Liturgicae
Instaurationes, no. 7.
28. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy,
Sacrosanctum concilium, no. 20; Pontifical Commission for Social
Communications, Instruction Communio et progressio, May 23, 1971: AAS
63 [1971], pp. 593-656, no. 151.
29. AAS 61 [1969], pp. 806-811.
30. Cf. Rituale Romanum, De Sacra Communione et de Cultu Mysterii
Eucharistica Extra Missam, nos. 79-80.
31. Cf. ibid., nos. 82-112.
32. Ibid., no. 89.
33. Cf. ibid., no. 97.
34. Cf. Institutio Generalis Missalis Romani, no. 276.
35. Cf. Rituale Romanum, De Sacra Communione et de Cultu Mysterii
Eucharistica Extra Missam, no. 10.
36. Cf. Sacred Congregation of Rites, Instruction Eucharisticum
Mysterium, no. 57.
37. Cf. Rituale Romanum, De Sacra Communione et de Cultu Mysterii
Eucharistica Extra Missam, no. 84.
38. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church,
Lumen gentium.
39. Second Vatican Council, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy,
Sacrosanctum concilium, no. 2.
40. Cf. Sacred Congregation for Catholic Education, Instruction on
liturgical formation in seminaries In Ecclesiasticam Futuroram
Sacerdotum Formationem, June 3, 1979.
41. Consistorial address of May 24, 1976: AAS 68 [1976], p. 374.
42. Second Vatican Council, Decree Christus Dominus, no. 15.