Peter wrote:We don't normally make an issue of giving Communion to the Eucharistic Ministers to take out to the sick or housebound, though I have known in done, notably in my father's parish when I was caring for him in his final illness. When he was not well enough to attend Mass I would take him Communion and went up at the end of Mass to collect a pyx along with others doing a similar service. We were not "blessed" as such but formally given the Sacrament to take to the sick. While not strictly "needed", I felt it was a dignified gesture, making it clear that the sick were still a part of the parish community, sharing the same Sacrament the rest had received in the Mass.
In the diocese of Brentwood, the sending-forth of the ministers of the
Communion to the sick and housebound at the end of Sunday Mass was mandated by the bishop, and I believe takes place in most if not all parishes of that diocese. In my own diocese, a majority of parishes would be doing this every Sunday, and some even on weekdays when it is not possible to take
Communion to some of the sick and housebound on a Sunday. I have heard that is also common elsewhere.
This joining to the celebrating community of those who cannot be physically present seems to be a powerful inclusive symbol, and perhaps one day it will even make its appearance in the Roman Rite. (The reason why it did not appear in the 3rd edition of the Roman Missal is because (a) the underlying agenda there is to elevate the status of the priest, not acknowledge the role of service of other ministers, and (b) because those in Rome have no concept of what it is like at the grass roots: they have never seen lay ministers of
Communion, for a start; they are not needed in Rome, because the city is crawling with priests!)