I'll try that word first next time Marydoll 
Reform UK’s Richard Tice allegedly failed to pay £100,000 in corporation tax
I went back to church yesterday for first time since before first lockdown. I am still being very careful with mask wearing, distancing etc as my husband is unwell and very vulnerable. This was the Anglican Church ( Church of Ireland) which I normally attend. I was very surprised that they have gone back to a shared cup. I think until now communicants were just receiving bread. The rector did make it clear that anyone not comfortable sharing the cup could just take the chalice and hand it back without sipping. This is what I did but think I was the only member of congregation who did. What do others think? Is it not too soon? Should the Anglican Church adopt the same practice as non conformist churches with individual cups? There is something very symbolic about a shared cup but covid is still with us.
I'll try that word first next time Marydoll 
Smileless2012
That's interesting Onward, I've only ever seen that in the Methodist service of Communion.
I went to a Methodist service with a friend when I was a teenager. Not realising they didn't kneel to pray, I got down on my knees, thinking that the space was very cramped only to feel my friend nudging me and hissing "Get up!"
When I have been to Catholic services in France (a very long time ago) I thought only the wafer (host) was offered to the congregation? Or has it changed? I couldn't take communion, of course, not being RC.
The word “host,” which is given to the Communion wafer or other forms of bread, is derived from the Latin hostia, which means “sacrificial victim.” Catholics believe that when the priest prays over the bread and the wine, the bread and wine then becomes the body and blood of Christmas.
I have been Googling again!
A good word for our Latin Wordle. Am I being disrespectful? PS, don't tell the others. We don't want them to beat our score.
I rarely go to Communion now but the time before last, well before Covid, it was at an Anglican wedding just before Christmas one year and I caught a rotten cold over Christmas.
It may ot have been from the chalice but I have my suspicions.
The next time pre-Covid the wafer was dipped.
Host or Communion wafer
Catholics believe in transubstantiation but Anglicans don't - is that why it's called The Host?
I like to believe, it is now a more welcoming Church than the one of my childhood.
When I think back to some of the things were were taught, I get angry. Thankfully that is not how children are taught nowadays. They are taught to respect and understand other faiths, as well as their own.
I wouldn't be offended if someone asked me. My non Catholic DIL is always asking me about my faith or to explain things she doesn't understand.
I suspect she is thinking, about becoming a Catholic, but risks offending her parents. I would never try to influence her, it must be her own choice.
I have so many Catholic friends who are really nice and so lovely. I want to understand better, but am too afraid of offending them so don't ask. When I saw this thread it seemed like the perfect place to mention the things I'm puzzled about. Catholicism and Anglicism or Protestentism all seem so different in many ways, but there must also be many things in common.
Aggie, you just walk past the Extr-ordinary minister, holding the chalice. That too is not compulsory.
On holiday in Rome, a priest insisted I receive the Eucharistic in my mouth, when I held out my hands to receive. It depends, who the priest is.
It is rare to see people receiving in their mouth in our parish.
OnwardandUpward, I hope you have learned something you didn't already know tonight.
To confuse matters even more, some priests decide to have Communion under both kinds at all masses, some at only certain Sunday masses and some not at all. There are a number of reasons for this.
We never use the term, Communion wafer, we say host. Could it be an Anglican term?
I don't really know much about the Anglican faith. In fact my friends and I once attended a Sunday service in Newcastle, thinking we were in a Catholic church. It wasn't until near the end we realised our error. It was a very uplifting service and the congregation were so welcoming. It was difficult to tell the difference.
"The host" is a new term to me, as I'm not Catholic and am still learning about it, out of curiosity. I'm not sure how it relates to scripture to only take the bread?
I have to be honest and say it doesn't compute for me, (at this time in my understanding) I find it hard to understand how communion without the wine, is biblical as I cannot find biblical evidence for this. Surely I am not the only one confused by this.
I've never been to a Catholic church and I am interested, but as yet unconvinced.
As a Catholic in Northern Ireland I have never had wine as part of Communion , I was totally confused to be expected to sip from the Chalice at Mass in Edinburgh , and declined , much to the dismay of the person offering it
I would not expect it these days of Covid
During the consecration (the bit of the ritual where the bread and wine are made holy), fragments of the bread are mixed with the wine. This makes a kind of union between the bread and wine, so any part of the stuff, bread or wine, represents the whole thing. That’s why receiving only bread is theologically the same as receiving bread and wine.
It is not compulsory to receive Communion under both species in the Roman Catholic Church.
In fact, when I was a child, we only ever received the host, That is my experience.
I Googled too.
In the 20th century, Catholic liturgical reformers began to press for a return to Communion under both kinds, citing the practice of the church before the thirteenth century. There were spirited debates over the issue at the Second Vatican Council, resulting in a compromise. The following text was finally issued by the bishops; "communion under both kinds may be granted when the bishops think fit, not only to clerics and religious, but also to the laity, in cases to be determined by the Apostolic See, as for instance, to the newly ordained in the Mass of their sacred ordination, to the newly professed in the Mass of their religious profession, and to the newly baptized in the Mass which follows their baptism".[5] Regular use of Communion under both kinds requires the permission of the bishop, but bishops in many countries have given blanket authorisation to administer Holy Communion in this way. In the United States, the Notre Dame Study of Catholic Parish Life showed that by 1989, slightly less than half of the parishes in its survey offered the chalice to their congregations.
According to Google....
What is the true meaning of communion?
Definition of communion
1 : an act or instance of sharing. 2a capitalized : a Christian sacrament in which consecrated bread and wine are consumed as memorials of Christ's death or as symbols for the realization of a spiritual union between Christ and communicant or as the body and blood of Christ.
I didn't see anything when I googled that explained how only taking the bread is correct. I am assuming that the biblically correct choice is to abstain completely or to fully partake of the bread and wine- whether that's a shared cup, separate cups or dipping?
I don't know of another way to take communion in a biblical way unless it's the bread and the wine, that is my meaning.
The blind faith comment was meant to be tongue in cheek.
OnwardandUpward
I am still confused.
In fact I am more confused now than at the beginning.
What is it, you are confused about? A genuine question, btw.
Thank you Grannmarie.
Same in our Diocese, all sanitising hands and most parishioners wearing masks, as does the PP.
We have to do our best to keep others and ourselves safe.
Of course we all should be singing from the same hymn sheet, as the Scottish Dioceses are doing.
(That is not meant to sound smug!)
If faith isn't "blind faith", then what even is it?
I am still confused.
In fact I am more confused now than at the beginning.
Et cum spiritu tuo, Marydoll. ?
Our parish is following all the Diocesan guidelines as outlined above. Our priest and visiting Archbishop still wear masks, and most parishioners still wear masks although the legal obligation ended today in Scotland. We still have socially distanced areas within the church so that people can have plenty of space.
Quite possibly Marydoll
.
I am catholic. Our churches are only giving the host, the chalice has not been used since before the first lock down.
Smileless2012
Faith doesn't protect you from catching Covid or any other illness.
I totally agree Smileless. Is that what is called blind faith? 
Faith doesn't protect you from catching Covid or any other illness.
As a practising Roman Catholic in Scotland, I would like to clarify some of the misconceptions posted here.
The Catholic Church in Scotland have been and still are, committed to protecting the faithful by rigorously following Government legislation, regarding Covid. I would imagine the same protocols are in place for the rest of the UK.
Health protocol for distribution of Holy Communion – Bishop’s Conference Scotland.
Clergy distributing Holy Communion should:
sanitise their hands immediately prior to distributing Holy Communion
wear a face covering while distributing Holy Communion
direct congregants to receive Holy Communion in their hand by stretching out their arms with one hand on top of the other, then taking steps to the side to place the host on the tongue.
(The Eucharist is and has been only distributed under one kind since the beginning of the pandemic. No chalices are used.)
2.Catholics are only under obligation to receive the Sacrament of Reconciliation, ( Confession) once a year and about Easter time. You can still receive the Eucharist, even if you haven’t been to confession for weeks. However, some Catholics feel they must go to Confession, before receiving Communion. That is totally impractical, in my opinion.
3.Most Catholics (myself included) do not believe that God will prevent us from contracting Covid, if we receive from the chalice. That is why at present, we do not receive the precious blood of Jesus and it is still not allowed.
Dipping the host (wafer) is called Intiction and is not allowed in Scotland, nor in many countries.
4.We do not all follow religiously (pardon the pun) like sheep and as a fairly intelligent person, there are parts of the Catholic faith which I question. Many modern Catholics also question certain aspects of their faith, that is in my opinion a healthy approach.
Despite what some seem to think, we are not all indoctrinated.
Here ended the lesson for tonight, folks.
I hope that clears up a few things and half truths.
Pax Vobiscum. ?.
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