1                  May 1983 
Your Excellency,
We are writing                  to you on a matter of the utmost gravity. Indeed, it could hardly                  be more grave as it involves the worst of all forms of sacrilege,                  irreverence to the Holy Eucharist. We are referring to the widespread                  practice within the U.S.A. of what is known as "Eucharistic                  hospitality" to Protestants, i.e. allowing Protestants to                  receive Holy Communion from a Catholic priest. We shall show you                  how the legislation of the Holy See regulating this concession                  is defied in a number of American dioceses, and ask you to use                  your authority to curtail this grave abuse. But this will be the                  subject of a subsequent letter.
In this letter                  we wish to put before Your Grace our firm conviction that such                  a concession should never have been made by the Holy See, and                  our belief that allowing a Protestant to receive Catholic Holy                  Communion contradicts the very nature of the Sacrament. Such a                  concession repudiates our entire Catholic tradition concerning                  the Eucharist, a tradition manifested not simply in the teaching                  of the Fathers, the Popes, and the great theologians, but in the                  unbroken practice of the Church which has always denied Holy Communion                  to heretics.
The Holy Eucharist                  is designated the Sacrament of Unity, and rightly so; because                  the Eucharist is the Sacrament of Unity, giving it to those outside                  the visible unity of the Church violates this fundamental principle.                  In his encyclical Mirae Caritatis (28 May 1902), Pope Leo                  XIII commented:
On this subject                    St. Cyprian writes: "Finally, this sacrifice of the Lord                    in itself affirms the universal union of Christians among themselves                    by form and indissoluble charity. For when the Lord called His                    Body the bread made up of many grains, He indicates the                    union of Our people; and when He calls His Blood the                    wine made out of thousands of grapes and forming one single                    liquid, He also designates Our flock formed out of a multitude                    of different men together."
This passage                  is an admirable explanation of the ultimate end for which the                  Eucharist was instituted, not simply the union of the individual                  members of the Mystical Body with Christ, the Head of the Body,                  but the unity of the members of the Body among themselves as well                  as their Head. It conforms perfectly to the teaching of St. Thomas                  Aquinas that the Sacrament of the Eucharist signifies the unity                  of the Church, which is the Mystical Body of Christ, to which                  everyone who would be saved must belong. (Summa Theologica,                  III, Q. LXIII, art. 3.).
In a message                  to the 9th National Eucharistic Congress of the United States                  in 1941, Pope Pius XII developed this aspect of the Eucharist                  on an even more profound level by quoting St. John Chrysostom:
For what                    is the Bread? The Body of Christ. And what do they become who                    receive It? The Body of Christ; not many bodies but one Body.
St. John Chrysostom,                  then, teaches that those who receive the Eucharist become what                  they receive, the Body of Christ which is the Church. But a Protestant                  who insists upon remaining outside the unity of the Mystical Body,                  no matter how sincere he may be, cannot become what he receives.                  St. Cyprian taught that the Eucharistic sacrifice affirms the                  universal union of Christians among themselves, but by remaining                  outside the unity of the Church a Protestant denies this universal                  union. St. Thomas Aquinas points out, quoting St. Augustine, that                  the Mass may only be offered (licitly) by members of the Mystical                  Body for members of that Body, and that in the Canon of the Mass                  we do not pray for those who are outside the Church (S.T. III,                  Q. LXXIX, art. 7). The Christian sacrifice is, wrote St. Augustine,                  "continually celebrated in the Sacrament of the altar well                  known to the faithful, in which it is made clear to her that in                  her offering she herself is offered to God" (City of God, X, vi). The Mass is, then, Christ offering Himself together                  with His Church, the sacrifice of the Mystical Body, Head and                  members. Evidently, as those outside the Mystical Body and excluded                  from offering the Sacrifice they are excluded from receiving the                  Sacrament.
We are aware                  that, today, there are those claiming to be Catholics who repudiate                  the teaching of the Magisterium on membership of the Church. They                  adhere to the theory condemned by Pope Pius XI in Mortalium                  Animos, that the Church is composed of the various Christian                  communities linked by some sort of invisible bond. We are confident                  that Your Excellency is no less loyal to the Pontifical Magisterium                  than we are, and that you fully accept the traditional teaching                  that the Catholic Church is the Mystical Body of Christ.                  We are certain that you will agree that the teaching of the Letter                  Jam vos omnes, convoking the First Vatican Council, is                  as valid and binding today as when Pope Pius IX wrote it in 1868:
Now, anyone                    who wishes to examine with care and to meditate on the condition                    of the different religious societies divided among themselves                    and separated from the Catholic Church, who, since the time                    of Our Lord Jesus Christ and His Apostles, has always exercised                    by her legitimate pastors, and still exercises today, the divine                    power which was given to her by the same Lord, will easily be                    convinced that not one of these societies, nor all of them together,                    in any way constitute or are that one Catholic Church which                    Our Lord founded and established and which He willed to create.                    Nor is it possible, either, to say that these societies are                    either a member or a part of this same Church, since they are                    visibly separated from Catholic unity.
Your Grace                  will certainly be aware that some Catholics, blinded by a false                  concept of ecumenism, are claiming that, as every baptised person                  is baptised into the Catholic Church, Protestants therefore belong                  to the Church. It is true that every baptism is a baptism into                  the Church, but the baptised person no longer remains within the                  Church after he gives his voluntary adherence to membership of                  a Protestant sect. Thus an infant who is baptized remains a Catholic                  until, after reaching the age of reason, he makes a conscious                  decision to adhere to the sect to which his parents belong. Obviously,                  such persons are almost invariably in good faith, they are the                  victims of invincible ignorance, material, not formal heretics,                  and do not incur sin by their heresy. They are, as Pope Pius XII                  taught in his encyclical The Mystical Body of Christ, often                  "related to the Mystical Body of the redeemer by a certain                  unconscious yearning or desire." These people are, he teaches,                  by no means excluded from eternal salvation, but, on the other                  hand, they are in a condition "in which they cannot be sure                  of their salvation" since "they still remain deprived                  of those many heavenly gifts and helps which can only be enjoyed                  in the Catholic Church." The dogma that outside the Church                  there is no salvation is, as was explained in the Letter of the                  Holy Office to the Archbishop of Boston (8 August 1949), to be                  understood as referring only to those who are aware of the divine                  foundation of the Catholic Church and deliberately remain outside                  her visible boundaries:
Therefore,                    no one will be saved who, knowing the Church to have been divinely                    established by Christ, nevertheless refuses to submit to the                    Church or withholds obedience from the Roman Pontiff, the Vicar                    of Christ.
In his encyclical                  on the Mystical Body Pope Pius XII specifically condemned the                  opinion that every baptised person is a member of the Body simply                  in virtue of His baptism:
In the Church                    they alone are to be counted as members who have received the                    baptism of regeneration and profess the true faith, who, moreover,                    have not had the misfortune to separate themselves from the                    assembly of the Body, or been excommunicated by legitimate authority                    by reason of very great faults ... they who are divided by reasons                    of faith or of government cannot live in this one Body, and                    in its one Divine Spirit.
In this encyclical                  the Pope teaches, of course, that the terms Catholic Church and                  Mystical Body of Jesus Christ are synonymous. The Mystical Body                  is not some sort of amorphous entity which transcends the boundaries                  of the one visible Church subject to the Roman Pontiff.
We hope that                  what we have written so far will be adequate to indicate to Your                  Grace the dilemma posed by the admission of a Protestant to Catholic                  Holy Communion under any circumstances. The Eucharist signifies                  and builds up the unity of the Mystical Body, and, therefore,                  to admit anyone to It who remains deliberately outside that visible                  unity contradicts the very nature of the Eucharist. The entire                  Tradition of the Church testifies to the truth of this observation.
It might help                  Your Grace if we reminded you of the manner in which this startling                  breach with Tradition came about. It is quite possible that you                  have never examined the documents yourself. Since the Council                  a veritable deluge of documents regulating the liturgy and related                  matters has poured out from the Vatican, well over two hundred                  by now. In view of the time-consuming nature of your work in the                  diplomatic service of the Holy See you have probably had the opportunity                  of reading only a fraction of this staggering total. We hope that                  you will find the following resumé useful.
In 1967 the                  Secretariat for the Promotion of the Unity of Christians published                  an Ecumenical Directory. In this Directory it was stated that                  for "adequate reasons" the separated brethren could                  be allowed access to the sacraments. The reasons and conditions                  were explained as follows:
This may                    be permitted in danger of death or in urgent need (during persecution,                    in prisons) if the separated brethren has no access to a minister                    of his own communion, and spontaneously asks a Catholic priest                    for the sacraments—so long as he declares a faith in these sacraments                    in harmony with that of the Church, and is rightly disposed.                    In other cases the judge of this urgent necessity must be the                    diocesan bishop or episcopal conference.
It is evident                  that a protestant could never have a faith in the Eucharist in                  conformity to that of the Church. This is generally interpreted                  as meaning that he should believe in the Real Presence, but for                  a faith in harmony with that of the Church he would have to accept                  that the Eucharist signifies the unity of the Mystical Body, and                  if he believed this he would wish to be admitted to the Church.                  It is also evident that this concession is totally open ended.                  It purports to impose restrictions—urgent need, prison, danger                  of death—but then allows bishops to extend the concession to "other                  cases." What could possibly be more vague, and, we feel bound                  to ask, scandalously irresponsible? But our complaints concerning                  the Unity Secretariat do not end here. We consider that it has                  justified this breach with immemorial tradition by an act of misrepresentation                  amounting to outright falsehood. This is a very serious charge;                  but the evidence is open to no other interpretation. The Directory                  cites as its authority for admitting Protestants to the Sacraments                  of the Catholic Church, the Decree on Ecumenism of the Second                  Vatican Council. It even cites the section of the Decree which                  is supposed to make this concession, i.e. No. 8. Your Grace, there                  is not one word in this section or anywhere else in the Decree                  even hinting that Protestants should be allowed to receive Holy                  Communion from a Catholic priest. There is not one word alluding                  even remotely to the sacraments in this passage which refers to                  prayer in common, stating that although the expression                  of unity very generally forbids it there are certain circumstances                  when Catholics can join in prayer with their separated brethren.
During the                  course of this letter we shall be referring to subsequent legislation                  on the question of "Eucharistic hospitality." This legislation                  cites the Ecumenical Directory as its authority, but, as we have                  just shown you, the authorization given in this Directory is based                  on a totally false premise, i.e., that Eucharistic hospitality                  for Protestants was authorized by the decree on Ecumenism of Vatican                  II. We are thus faced with a situation where the Secretariat of                  Christian Unity has taken it upon itself to repudiate a tradition                  of 2000 years standing, and to contradict the nature of the Eucharist                  by allowing Protestants to receive It. Not surprisingly, the publication                  of the Directory was followed in some places by the virtually                  indiscriminate admission of Protestants to Holy Communion by ecumenically-minded priests, and the scandal was so great that in 1972 the                  Secretariat was obliged to publish an Instruction entitled In                  quibus verum circumstantiis, in an attempt to curtail the                  abuses. The Instruction stated, referring to offering Eucharistic                  hospitality to Protestants,
The question                    is not a new one. The Second Vatican Council (in the Decree                    on Ecumenism) and the Ecumenical Directory deal with it.
This, of course,                  is a repetition of the falsehood contained in the Directory.
It is evident                  that in this Instruction the Secretariat was uneasy about the                  doctrinal basis of the concession. Several statements accepting                  the Eucharist as the Sacrament of Unity were included, among them                  the following:
The strict                    relationship between the mystery of the Church and the mystery                    of the Eucharist can never be altered, whatever pastoral measures                    we may be led to take in given cases. Of its very nature, celebration                    of the Eucharist signifies the fullness of profession of faith                    and the fullness of ecclesial communion. This principle must                    not be obscured, and must remain our guide in this field.
Your Excellency,                  this is precisely the point which we have been attempting to convey                  to you in this letter. It would appear then, that there is no                  dispute concerning the principle which is at stake. But the Secretariat                  then continues with a statement so outrageous that it almost defies                  credibility:
The principle                    will not be obscured if admission to Catholic eucharistic communion                    is confined to particular cases of those Christians who have                    a faith in the sacrament in conformity                    to that of the Church, who experience a very serious spiritual                    need for eucharistic sustenance, who for a prolonged period                    are unable to have recourse to a minister of their own community,                    and who ask for the sacrament of their own accord; all this                    provided they have proper dispositions and lead lives worth                    of a Christian.
We hardly need                  to point out that this is a purely gratuitous affirmation. The                  Secretariat first accepts the principle that reception of the                  Eucharist to Protestants in particular cases does not obscure                  that principle. It makes no attempt to explain why, and this is                  not surprising as it could not possibly do so. If a Protestant                  could ever be given Holy Communion legitimately by a Catholic                  priest then the principle would be a false one. Either the Eucharist                  signifies the unity of the Mystical Body, in which case those                  outside its unity must be excluded, or it does not. We might add                  that if the conditions laid down in (2) above are applicable,                  then we should always permit Protestants to receive Holy Communion                  in our churches because they can never receive true eucharistic                  sustenance from their own ministers, as these ministers do not                  have valid priestly ordination and hence cannot consecrate. We                  would also add that no Protestant is ever excluded from receiving                  Holy Communion in a Catholic church, or would we wish him to be.                  All he needs to do is to take the step taken by countless other                  Protestants, from St. Edmund Campion to Cardinal Newman, and join                  the one true Church where, as a member of the Mystical Body, he                  can, each time he receives Communion, become ever more truly what                  he receives—the Body of Christ.
We would, therefore,                  beg your Excellency to convey this letter to the Holy Father,                  and with it our urgent request that he will immediately bring                  an end to the abuse of Eucharistic hospitality for Protestants                  anywhere, at any time, under any circumstances, and for any reason.                  In other reasons, we beg him to return to Tradition.
In our next                  letter to you we shall deal with the manner in which the current                  legislation of the Holy Communion is defied in the U.S.A.
Your Excellency                  may have noted that we have made no reference to members of the                  Orthodox Church in this letter. This has been for two reasons,                  firstly it would involve a discussion of the status of the Orthodox                  churches, which would be very lengthy, and, secondly, the question                  does not arise because the Orthodox Bishops in the United Statement                  rejected in very forceful terms the Catholic offer of reciprocal                  Eucharistic hospitality. In the case of the Protestant sects the                  offer was not reciprocal, and Catholics are not permitted to receive                  Holy Communion from Protestant ministers. In May 1973, the Standing                  Conference of Canonical Orthodox Bishops in the United States                  stated their position with admirable clarity, and it is the very                  position which the Holy See had always maintained until 1967.                  They believe that the Orthodox Church is the true Church, that                  Catholics are in schism, and that to receive Communion from our                  priests, or to allow us to receive Communion from theirs, contradicts                  the nature of the sacrament. The Orthodox Bishops insisted that:                  "unity in faith and the active life of the community is a                  necessary precondition to sharing the Sacraments of the Orthodox                  Church." They teach that the Eucharistic Mystery is the end                  of unity, not a means to that end, and that: "the decisions                  regarding Holy Communion reached by bodies outside the Orthodox                  will have no significance or validity for the Orthodox Church                  or her members. Holy Communion will not be sought by Orthodox                  Christians outside the Church, nor will it be offered to those                  who do not yet confess the Orthodox as their mother."
Your Excellency,                  if we substitute the title "Catholic Church" for "Orthodox                  Church" this is exactly the statement we hope Pope John Paul                  II will make, and thus conform the practice of the Catholic Church                  to immemorial Tradition.
We remain,                  Your Grace, your obedient servants.
The Editors
The Most Reverend Pio Laghi                  
 The Apostolic Delegation 
 3339 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W. 
 Washington, D.C. 20008