docmattc wrote:........ this seems to imply a hierarchy that one must be commissioned (and prior to that trained) to distribute Christ in the form of communion, but anyone can distribute the Word with no training or commissioning at all....
Now docmattc is standing up for a just cause i.m.o. But the first question that needs resolving, I think, is a deeper one - that of instituted ministers - Lectors and Acolytes (who are ex officio Extraordinary Ministers of the Eucharist) - and those who usually exercise these ministries: i.e. non-instituted readers and ministers of the Eucharist.
Before one can become an instituted Lector and Acolyte, one receives a lot of formation - but as these LAY (and life-long) ministries are given still in seminaries as if they were minor orders (which they are not) - to receive them the recipient must be male. (We've had a thread about this before somewhere)
I myself should like to see this mess sorted out and all who exercise ministries at Mass for which ordination is not necessary be properly formed/trained and commissioned (including "Ushers") - but for how long? In my diocese, a minister of Holy Communion is commissioned for three years - and then re-commissioned and recommissioned ..... &c But this is not supposed to be a life-long ministry ....... how often does your community change its Extraordinary Ministers of the Eucharist?
How many readers would want to make a life-long commitment to the study (even in a simple way) of the Word of God? An instituted Lector is asked to do just that. Yet surely at least SOME preparation in finding out at least a little of what the passage one is reading is essential - so that the reader reads with UNDERSTANDING ...... and then (God forgive me for the vulgarity but I am quoting what was heard ) we won't get dreadful gaffs about Elisha taking the "*beep*" and St Paul writing to the Philippines. Formation for readers - liturgical, pastoral, practical and spiritual - is essential. And 40 years on from Vat II, Catholics on the whole, sadly, still tend to know almost nothing about the Bible.
Enough of any amateurish approach to liturgical ministry! And a pox on any twit who thinks that because we're all supposed to be participating that means anyone has a right to do any ministry (and do it badly) - sorry, side swipe at Primary School teachers of a certain inclination there - don't start me - go read St Paul on the variety of gifts and if you aint got that gift - then for God's sake and the sake of his people, don't do the ministry.
And as for the formation of Ministers of Music - by all means commission them - give them diplomas and certificates and degrees if you must - but not without sound liturgical, pastoral, practical and personal spiritual formation, formation, formation (yes, I know I've expanded the BCEWLC syllabus - I think it needs it). Liturgical musicians are facilitators of a community's PRAYER together so they must be people of prayer themselves.
I would be overjoyed if every parish had two musicians who had studied the BCEW Preliminary Level Syllabus and a certificate presented to them by their parish priest at Mass, making it very plain to the assembly that what they have studied is for the benefit of all gathered, not the individuals themselves. And I'd like to see that syllabus extended to primary, secondary, tertiary levels (if one could call them that) - and ultimately, I'd like to see formation programmes for musicians that are of the equivalent in some way to those for the permanent diaconate. A pipe dream? Why should it be?
Whatever you do - don't commission "naff" musicians to perpetuate "naff" music in the celebration of "naff" liturgy. E-naff for now and for evermore. Amen.
Time for bed said Meldrew......
PS - the new automated spell check in here is unhappy with "programmes" - can't it understand English like wot she is spoke then?