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Msgr. Joseph M. Champlins as Liturgist;
His latest book: "The Breaking of the Bread..."
By JAMES LIKOUDIS
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As Buffalo’s Western New York Catholic diocesan paper (November 1998) reported:
"The name Champlin may not be a
household word, but chances are your life as a Catholic has been influenced by
Msgr. Joseph M. Champlin in more ways than you realize."
Indeed, there are few priests who have left
their pastoral and liturgical mark on the Church as Msgr. Joseph M. Champlin, a
priest of New York’s Syracuse diocese. In dozens of books, articles, and
syndicated columns he furthered the agenda of AmChurch to "americanize" the
Liturgy and to restructure in Liberal fashion relationships between priests,
religious, and laity in the parishes of the country. From positions as Diocesan
Liturgy Chairman, Associate Director of the U.S. Bishops’ Committee on the
Liturgy, Vicar for Parish Life and Worship for the diocese of Syracuse, Rector
of its Cathedral until his recent retirement, and as a leading "litnik" in the
Federation of Diocesan Liturgical Commissions, he has travelled more than two
million miles to lecture on pastoral subjects at religious education Conferences,
clergy retreats, and meetings with laity eager to hear his version of "people
ministering to people". Speaking to audiences on marriage and family life, on
catechetics, and on liturgy, he frequently remarked that:
"perhaps the Lord may be giving us fewer priests so the laity will
minister to one another as originally intended."
"The Breaking of the Bread: An Updated
Handbook for Extraordinary Ministers of Holy Communion" (Paulist Press, NJ, 2005)
is one of his most recent books and is a revision of an earlier work published in
the late 1970’s "An Important Office of Immense Love: A Handbook for Eucharistic Ministers" wherein he rejoiced at the Vatican’s permitting in 1977 for
the U.S. this new "sacred ministry". In "The Breaking of the Bread...", he notes happily that:
"there has been a veritable explosion in the number of Catholics exercising
this function" and that "almost everyone [at Mass] moves forward to receive the Eucharist".
Obliged by recent Vatican documents to acknowledge the proper name of
"Extraordinary Minister of Holy Communion" for those temporarily deputed to exercise that
ministry, he expresses his delight at the "countless extraordinary ministers of
Holy Communion" functioning in American parishes and especially with the "five
hundred persons serving in liturgical ministries [at] the new and remarkable
Our Lady of the Angels Cathedral in Los Angeles". There "at Sunday Masses there
are over 40 Communion Stations" (pages 2-3). Though Msgr. Champlin quotes on
page 103 the prescription from the Vatican instruction Redemptionis Sacramentum, (n. 151) that:
"Only out of true necessity is there to be recourse
to the assistance of extraordinary ministers in the celebration of the liturgy. Such recourse is not intended for the sake of a fuller participation of the laity...",
it is this latter concept of liturgy that has certainly
represented Msgr. Champlin’s long-held understanding of Liturgy. His loose and
rather flexible understanding of Liturgy and Music in the Liturgy (which is not
that of the official Vatican
documents attempting to correct the disfigurement of the Liturgy), has its
interesting counterpart in his view of the Church’s sexual morality. His
marriage preparation booklet "Together for Life" which has sold more
than 8 million copies with its flexible,
non-judgmental attitude towards the grave sin of contraception, and with its
subtle underminding of Humanae Vitae, served to promote
moral relativism on a key moral issue. Unfortunately, the booklet continues to
be used in many American parishes (See "Countering the Eclipse of Sin in Marriage Preparation", The Wanderer, 5/25/06).
It is Msgr. Champlin’s role as a
liturgist that has long been a matter of concern to Catholics and needs to be
further highlighted. As I took occasion to note in a Review of his book
"With Hearts Light as Feathers: the First Reconciliation of Children":
"With regard to liturgical and sacramental matters,
Msgr. Champlin was a fervent advocate of the ill-fated RENEW program... Always
open to liturgical innovation, he sanctioned Holy Communion being given to
Protestants in inter-faith Marriage Encounter groups, and enthusiastically
defended liturgical dancing at Mass. When Communion-in-the-hand was still
forbidden, Fr. Champlin endorsed its illicit practice. Like other liturgists
who happily impose their own glosses on Vatican documents, Msgr. Champlin helped to transform ‘Extraordinary Ministers of the Eucharist’ into those ‘Special Ministers’
who are a permanent feature at every Mass."
(Homiletic and Pastoral Review, December 1995)
Msgr. Champlin has always looked upon the Church’s approval
of lay ministers of Holy Communion as vindicating his own vision of
"creative liturgies" being at the heart of
the Church’s renewal and to be fostered by laity exercising parish leadership
positions. "Parish Leadership people" whom he trained to appreciate music in
the Liturgy in diocesan workshops relished the Sunday Masses in his parish
featuring high-school girls dancing in the sanctuary to songs from "Jesus Christ
Superstar". Champlin’s notion of "active participation" by the laity
(especially women and girls) has included his delight with applause at Mass,
"the half-dozen women who bake our altar breads or the ceramic students who
fashioned our altar breads" (which "are not thin and pure white"), home
liturgies, "small group liturgies" marked by spontaneity, and the establishment
of committees galore including the parish liturgy committee made up of
enthusiasts for tacky innovations as
well as the more serious liturgical abuses which have alienated parishioners
nation-wide from regular Mass attendance. The version of "active participation of
the laity" relentlessly pursued by Msgr. Champlin and his fellow re-shapers of liturgical
celebration has had results. It is undeniable that there has occurred not only
a sharp decline in Mass attendance but also a blurring of the distinction
between the ordained and lay ministries in parish life. In the words of one of
the Extraordinary ministers of Holy Communion whom Msgr. Champlin quotes
favorably:
"There [now] seems to be a closer relationship to the Lord and the
people of the parish as a representative of the Lord during the Mass". (p. 38)
There are some surprising errors in "The Breaking of the Bread..":
- Msgr. James Moroney, secretary of the U.S. Bishops’ Committee on the Liturgy,
appears twice as Msgr. James Maroney (pp. vii and 76).
- The heretic Theodore of Mopseustia, the father of Nestorianism who was
condemned in the Fifth Ecumenical Council, appears as "St. Theodore of
Mopsuestia" (p. 8).
- On page 45 Eucharistic Prayer IV is quoted: "by your Holy
Spirit, gather all who share this bread and wine into the one body of Christ."
The approved text actually reads: "and by your Holy Spirit, gather all who share
this one bread and one cup into the one body of Christ."
- For one who declares that "faith in this real Eucharistic
presence is the most critical quality for a minister of Communion", he writes,
"We touch, consume, and handle more reverently the consecrated species when we fully appreciate that it is truly Christ’s Body and Blood beneath the bread and wine."
(p. 24)
This last expression presumes the continued existence of bread and wine
and fails to do justice to the Catholic doctrine of transubstantiation.
There is no question that
Communion-in-the-hand was practiced in the early centuries of the Church, both
West and East, and in itself can be as reverent in practice as
Communion-on-the-tongue. The Holy See and the Church in the U.S. and other
countries have permitted Communion-in the-hand, so there is no question of the
legitimacy of the practice. However, there can be no question that the abuses
surrounding the practice have led the Supreme Pontiffs to protest strongly at
the spread of irreverence accompanying the practice in all too many places.
For example, in his Holy Thursday 1980 Letter to Bishops,
Pope John Paul II addressed the issue:
"In some countries the practice of receiving
Communion in the hand has been introduced. This practice has been requested by
individual episcopal conferences and has received approval from the Apostolic
See. However, cases of a deplorable lack of respect toward the Eucharistic
species have been reported, cases which are imputable not only to the
individuals guilty of such behavior but also to the pastors of the Church who
have not been vigilant enough regarding the attitude of the faithful towards
the Eucharist. It also happens, on occasion, that the free choice of those who
prefer to continue the practice of receiving the Eucharist is not taken into
account in those places where the distribution of Communion in the hand has
been authorized. It is therefore difficult in the context of this present
letter not to mention the sad phenomenon previously referred to. This is in no way
meant to refer to those who, receiving the Lord Jesus in the hand, do so with
profound reverence and devotion, in those countries where this practice has
been authorized."
(See Origins, NC Documentary Service, 3-27-1980)
The history of the introduction of
Communion-in-the-hand in U.S. dioceses remains to be written. But it is known
that it was preceded by years of disobedience and deceit by priests in Western
Europe (especially Holland) and then in the U.S. and Canada who were agitating
for radical changes in liturgical practice. As Australian Bishop Bernard D.
Stewart of Sandhurst (one of the heroic and vigilant bishops of the
post-conciliar period) noted in his 1976 "Pastoral Statement
on the Manner of Distributing and Receiving the Sacrament of Holy Communion:
"The new method
was introduced illegally; an indult was given in places where it had become an
accomplished fact and could not easily be removed."
What was particularly disconcerting to concerned priest and lay writers
(e.g., "On Consulting the Faithful" by A.J. Matt, Jr., Editor of The Wanderer, 4/27/72, and various articles by Wanderer Columnist Frank
Morriss, 9/22/77 and /23/78) were the blatant propaganda efforts engaged in by
national and diocesan liturgical committees which distorted the history of
Communion in the hand in the early Church and even tampered with patristic
testimonies such as the famous testimony of St. Cyril of Jerusalem. Thus,
readers of such material as "Take and Eat" emanating from the Federation of
Diocesan Liturgical Commissions were never informed that in the early Church
the faithful did not take communion with both hands (with one hand extended to
receive and placing the host in the mouth with the other). Rather, one received
on the palm of the right hand which acted as a paten from which one then took
the host directly with the mouth, without any clutching by the left (and
especially since the left hand was popularly regarded as a symbol of evil).
Moreover, no mention was made of the early Church’s sense of profound awe in
the presence of the Eucharistic elements or the testimonies noting that women
often had a white cloth cover the hand to reverently receive the host. In
quoting St. Cyril of Jerusalem on communion under two species, excised from his
testimony were certain questionable practices that might well have excited
wonder among readers being persuaded to adopt the new practice:
"Sanctify thine eyes by the touch of the Holy Body... and after
proceeding to drink the Precious Blood from the cup, while the moisture is
still upon thy lips, touching it with thine hands, sanctify both thine eyes
and brow and the other senses."
(See his Mystagogical Catecheses, #21)
Ignored were
the testimonies from the 5th century calling for abolition of
communion in the hand as abuses multiplied concerning careless and irreverent
reception of Holy Communion and many having come to regard the Body of the Lord
as ordinary bread. Interestingly, in his recent work Msgr. Champlin registers
no interest in the appointment of installed acolytes where there is a real need
for extraordinary ministers of Holy Communion and discourages the practice of
Intinction allowed by the Church for priests to administer the Eucharist. Both
the use of acolytes and Intinction would eliminate the excessive use of
Extraordinary ministers of the Holy Eucharist he favors to flourish in
parishes.
Msgr. Joseph M. Champlin was assuredly an
active participant in the fraudulent catechesis for communion in the hand that
characterized the "progressive" liturgists who clearly had the ear of most
bishops. And as his recent book "Breaking of the Bread..." also
witnesses, though he acknowledges that Communion in the hand is an "option" (allowed
by special indult of the Holy See), he clearly holds that it should be the norm
for the faithful. This same attitude
certainly appears to be shared by many involved in the preparation of children
for their first Holy Communion and who subtly impose their own preference for
communion in the hand. As noted, our author is pleased with the proliferation
of Extraordinary ministers of Holy Communion where Communion under two species
has now become common even at daily Mass. He is entranced with the testimonies
of the "uplifting experiences" of the lay ministers whom he helped train at Syracuse’s Cathedral to be "casual and relaxed and reverent". Examples:
"I try hard to look in each person’s eyes
and touch his or her hand as I place the wafer in his or her palm... and pray that
my contact has helped to make the experience more meaningful for the receiver."
(Janice, p. 6)
"About twenty-five years ago as an altar boy, I had a very
different view of Jesus Christ in the Holy Eucharist... Over the past several
years, great changes in the sacrament have made Jesus a closer friend. A more
relaxed and personal relationship has been formed between us. Jesus used
earthen dishes when he consecrated the bread and wine of the Last Supper into
his Body and Blood, not golden cups and platters. He was dealing with common
men and he too was a common man. How he is again reachable and has been brought
back to humanness by a Church that feels for its people. With the advent of
bread baked by lay people, Communion in the hand, and a relaxation of the
fasting rules, I believe that Jesus Christ has been put back into our lives on
a more personal level than ever before." (Bill, p. 20)
Msgr. Champlin admits there have
occurred incidents where extraordinary ministers of Holy Communion have caused
scandal as moral faults were revealed
or disobedience to liturgical norms resulted. But in his vision for a renewed
Church with lay people, they become "leadership people", it is the habitual use of
Extraordinary ministers of the Eucharist that is envisaged as the key element
for fulfilling the Church’s call for "greater participation in the liturgy".
This vision, however, is not compatible with the Church’s directives as
contained in the "Instruction on Certain Questions Regarding the Collaboration of the Non-Ordained Faithful in the Sacred Ministry of Priests"
(August 15, 1997). Unlike Msgr. Champlin, the Instruction deliberately avoids the term
"lay minister" as too liable to be misconstrued as meaning the lay person is
substituting for an ordained minister rather than collaborating with him. It is
also made clear that the use of Extraordinary ministers of Holy Communion must
not result in blurring the essential difference between the ministerial
priesthood and the common priesthood of the faithful.
There is no "right" to be
an Extraordinary minister of Holy Communion; the latter is intended to be
"supplementary", a temporary deputation by hierarchical authority and
determined by real necessity. As another more recent Instruction has insisted
(but which also remains generally ignored):
"If there is usually a sufficient
number of sacred ministers for the distribution of Holy Communion,
extraordinary ministers may not be appointed."
(Redemptionis Sacramentum, n. 157)
Russell Shaw, a former staff member of what is now called the USCCB,
has observed rightly with respect to the explosion of lay ministries in the
Church and all parish activities becoming subsumed under "lay ministry":
"Much theoretical and practical confusion has accompanied the rise of lay
ministry... The trouble is that where everything is ministry, sooner or later
nothing will be."
(Lay Witness, May-June 2006)
A serious result of the absorption of lay energies into
liturgical activities has been to the detriment of the Second Vatican Council’s
call for them to renew the temporal order. Russell Shaw has also pointed out
how the diversion of the laity from their proper role to evangelize society and
culture has had another consequence: "Organized lay apostolate
has largely disappeared from the American Catholic scene".
Lastly, a reader of "The Breaking of the Bread"
will be uneasy with the resultant devaluation of the priesthood that is the
consequence of the widespread abuse of the use of Extraordinary ministers of
Holy Communion which receives the
author’s enthusiastic sanction, and this, moreover, in a context which accepts
the shortage of priests as a permanent fact. For Msgr. Champlin, there is now a
paradigm shift in parish leadership with lay leaders now determining the shape
of liturgical celebration:
"In a parish or worshiping community, the leadership
people may judge that it needs these ministers, and will carefully select
suitable candidates and then publicly commission these persons." (p. 18)
The reduction of priests from their own leadership/liturgical role to be
"sacramental ministers" in lay-run parishes abounding in Extraordinary
ministers is already increasingly evident in the more liberal dioceses of the
United States, such as Rochester, NY. There can be no question that where "lay
ministry" is seen to dominate liturgical celebration, the role of the priest is
thereby diminished and devalued to the injury of the priesthood and the entire
Church.
James Likoudis co-authored
(with Kenneth Whitehead) in 1981 the book "The Pope, the Council and the Mass"
which was hailed by "L’Osservatore Romano" as an outstanding defense of the
genuine liturgical reforms desired by Vatican II. It has been re-published in
a new Updated and Revised edition, and is now available for $16.95 from Emmaus
Road Publishing (1-800-398-5470) or www.emmausroad.org. His most recent
work "Eastern Orthodoxy and the See of Peter" completes a trilogy of works
dealing with the separated Eastern Churches, and details an account of his
own spiritual and intellectual journey to the Catholic Church. It is available
from the author, P.O.Box 852, Montour Falls, NY 14865 ($24.95).
The above article appeared in the December 28, 2006, issue of The Wanderer.
Subscriptions ($50/yr.) to this Catholic newspaper with its venerable history of
fidelity to the Magisterium of the Catholic Church may be had by writing at:
The Wanderer 201 Ohio St., St. Paul, MN 55107 Ph.# (651)-224-5733
Mr. James
Likoudis' Homepage
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