Why Fast Before
Communion?
Straight Answers from Fr.
William Saunders
HERALD Columnist
Recently, someone told me that a
person is supposed to fast one hour before receiving Holy
Communion. I honestly have never heard that before. Can
you clear up this matter for me?
A reader
from Dale City
Canon 919 of the Code of Canon Law states,
"One who is to receive the most holy Eucharist is to
abstain from any food or drink, with the exception of
water and medicine, for at least the period of one hour
before holy Communion." Actually, this regulation
merely reflects an ancient tradition in our Church, which
is even rooted in Judaism. In Acts of the Apostles
(13:2), we find evidence of fasting connected with the
liturgy. A more normative practice of fasting before
receiving holy Communion appears throughout the Church
after the legalization of Christianity in 313. St.
Augustine attested to this practice in his own writings.
Granted, the specific requirements of
the fast have changed over time. Prior to 1964, the
eucharistic fast began at midnight. Pope Paul VI, on Nov.
21, 1964, reduced the fast to a period of one hour.
This rule has two exceptions: First, if
a priest celebrates more than one Mass on the same day,
as oftentimes happens on Sunday, he is only bound to the
one hour fast before the first Mass. The priest may eat
and drink something to keep up his strength in between
Masses even though a full hour fast will not occur before
the next reception of holy Communion.
Second, those who are elderly (at least
60 years of age) or sick, as well as their caretakers,
can receive Communion even if a full hour fast has not
been fulfilled. For example, people in the hospital are
not in control of their own schedule and may be eating or
have just finished eating when visited by the priest or
eucharistic minister. Therefore, the period of fast
before receiving holy Communion is reduced to
"approximately one quarter of an hour" for
those who are sick at home or at a medical facility,
those elderly confined to home or a nursing home, and
those who care for these people and who are unable
conveniently to observe the fast ("Immensae
Caritatis,"1973).
The most important point regarding this
question concerns why we ought to fast. St. Paul reminds
us, "Continually we carry about in our bodies the
dying of Jesus, so that in our bodies the life of Jesus
may also be revealed" (II Cor 4:10). We, too, are
charged to convert our whole lives body and soul
to the Lord. This conversion process involves
doing penance including bodily mortification like
fasting for our sins and weaknesses, which in turn
strengthens and heals us. Pope Paul VI exhorted the
faithful in his apostolic constitution
"Paenitemini" (1966),
"Mortification aims at the liberation of
man, who often finds himself, because of concupiscence,
almost chained by his own senses. Through corporal
fasting man regains strength, and the wound
inflicted on the dignity of our nature by intemperance is
cured by the medicine of a salutary abstinence."
Moreover, the fast before receiving
holy Communion creates a physical hunger and thirst for
the Lord, which in turn augments the spiritual hunger and
thirst we ought to have. In the Old Testament, fasting
prepared individuals to receive the action of God and to
be placed in His presence. For instance, Moses (Ex 34:28)
fasted 40 days atop Mount Sinai as he received the Ten
Commandments, and Elijah (I Kings 19:8) fasted 40 days as
he walked to Mount Horeb to encounter God. Similarly,
Jesus Himself fasted 40 days as He prepared to begin His
public ministry (Mt 4:1ff) and encouraged fasting (Mt
6:16-18). Likewise, this corporal work enhances the
spiritual disposition we need to receive Christ in the
Blessed Sacrament. In a sense, we fast so as not "to
spoil our appetite" but to increase it for the
sharing of the paschal banquet. Jesus said in the
beatitudes, "Blest are they who hunger and thirst
for holiness; they shall have their fill" (Mt 5:6).
In all, fasting is an exercise of humility, hope and love
essential virtues in preparing ourselves to
receive the holy Eucharist.
This regulation, however, does not mean
we have to be scrupulous and count-off seconds. I
remember concelebrating Mass with a priest who had eaten
one-half hour before Mass and was worried that he would
not have a one-hour fast before receiving holy Communion.
He literally set his watch for one-hour, dragged-out the
prayers, and stood at the altar while I finished giving
everyone else holy Communion until the hour had ticked
away. While we do not want to be lax, we do not want to
be scrupulous. The goodness of receiving holy Communion
supersedes the precise "hour of fast" if there
is a doubt.
However, note that one should also not
be lax. Pope John Paul II lamented in "Dominicae
Cenae" (1980) the problem of some people not
being properly disposed to receive holy Communion, even
to the point of being in a state of serious mortal sin.
He said, "In fact, what one finds most often is not
so much a feeling of unworthiness as a certain lack of
interior willingness, if one may use this expression, a
lack of eucharistic hunger and
thirst, which is also a sign of lack of
adequate sensitivity towards the great sacrament of love
and a lack of understanding of its nature." We must
make a good faith effort to prepare ourselves properly to
receive the Lord.
Therefore, the eucharistic fast assists
us in preparing to receive holy Communion wholly
body and soul. This physical mortification strengthens
our spiritual focus on the Lord, so that we may humbly
encounter the divine Savior who offers Himself to us.
Fr. Saunders is dean of the Notre
Dame Graduate School of Christendom College and pastor of
Queen of Apostles Parish, both in Alexandria.
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Arlington Catholic Herald, Inc. All rights reserved.
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