Get in touch

555-555-5555

mymail@mailservice.com

the logo for interchurch families shows a woman and a man holding a child.

Guidance Issued and Subsequently Withdrawn

The topic of Eucharistic Sharing is widely covered and includes valuable contributions from numerous Dioceses internationally, reflecting a rich diversity of perspectives and experiences. While some of the teachings and writings were once readily accessible to the public, some are now less easily available. Below is a curated selection of the Dioceses whose contributions at some time were instrumental in shaping the discourse on this important topic.


  • Saskatoon


The Guidelines for Sacramental Sharing, produced for the Diocese of Saskatoon by Bishop Albert LeGatt, and approved by the Vatican, have now been withdrawn by a subsequent bishop.

The same has happened with Pastoral Notes which accompanied those Guidelines.

They may still be available directly from the Diocese through the Catholic Pastoral Centre.


  • Maitland


        Diocese resource no longer available


  • Adelaide


        In 1997, the Archdiocese of Adelaide, South Australia, published Guidelines for Eucharistic Sharing in the Catholic Church.  These                                Guidelines are not at this point available on the internet.

      Meanwhile, they may possibly be available directly from the Archdiocesan offices at 

 

39 Wakefield Street, Adelaide SA 5000
GPO Box 1364, Adelaide SA 5001


  • Helena & Great Falls, Billings, Montana


The Eucharistic Sharing Guidelines for the Dioceses of Helena and Great Falls-Billings, Montana, U.S.A., was issued in April 1982, and were originally posted on the diocese's website. It was missed in the modifications of their website. A request has been made to the diocese to once again post those Guidelines. Meanwhile, a subsection of them, referred to in a paper entitled "The Ecumenical Household As Domestic Church? Ecclesial Threat or Pastoral Challenge and Even Resource?" by Dr Bernard Prusak of Villanova University, is posted below. Hopfully the entire document may soon once again be posted.


“In our time there are significant events in the lives of individual Christians and their families when spontaneous requests to receive the Eucharist are possible. If we consider the high frequency of marriage between Roman Catholics and other baptized Christians, the fact that many of our people are well informed about other Churches, the extensive sacramental preparation programs which require the participation of parents, and the increasingly favorable ecumenical climate in our dioceses, it is very likely that such requests for sharing the Eucharist will be forthcoming on a variety of occasions, for example, when a baptized Christian of another denomination is: a. a parent of a child baptized within the context of a Mass; b. the parent of a child receiving First Communion within the context of Mass; c. the parent of a child receiving First Communion or Confirmation and has taken part of the child's preparation for the sacraments; d. the spouse in a mixed marriage celebrated with a Nuptial Mass; e. attending a funeral of a relative in the Catholic Church; f. confined in a health care facility; g. subject to some form of institutional confinement; h. living in an ecumenical marriage and wants to celebrate in faith a significant event in the marriage. The aforementioned occasions are not mentioned by way of category for which a general regulation is issued. Each particular request must be evaluated on an individual basis”


Share by: