Under another post there is a question in a comment:
QUAERITUR:
Does a communicant have the right to receive communion from a cleric?
Yes, and no.
The 1997 Instruction On Certain Questions Regarding the Collaboration of the Non-Ordained Faithful in the Sacred Ministry of Priest (Ecclesiae de mysterio) – Art. 8 – and the 2004 Instruction Redemptionis Sacramentum provide the basis for saying “yes, communicants have the right” to receive from a bishop, priest or deacon. Bishops and priests are the only “ministers of the Eucharist” and, with deacons, are the only “ordinary ministers of Communion”. Hence, if they are present in sufficient numbers so that communion may be distributed in a reasonable length of time, they and only they should distribute without the assistance of extraordinary (lay) ministers (EMHC).
If a person is properly disposed and there is no danger of profanation, that person should be admitted to communion. So, a person has a right to receive but not an absolute right.
We can also say that, yes, a person has the right to receive from a cleric (bishop, priest, deacon) but that right is not absolute. Off the top of my head I can think of a situation where an elderly and infirm priest (the only cleric present) is just able to celebrate Mass, but is not mobile or strong enough to distribute communion. In that case, one wouldn’t have an absolute right to receive from him alone. Redemptionis Sacramentum backs this up:
[158.] Indeed, the extraordinary minister of Holy Communion may administer Communion only when the Priest and Deacon are lacking, when the Priest is prevented by weakness or advanced age or some other genuine reason, or when the number of faithful coming to Communion is so great that the very celebration of Mass would be unduly prolonged. This, however, is to be understood in such a way that a brief prolongation, considering the circumstances and culture of the place, is not at all a sufficient reason.
All this being the case, it is entirely unreasonable to oblige a person to receive from a layperson if there are clerics there also to distribute.
Of course, if a person feels strongly about not receiving communion from a lay person, but only from a cleric, he could choose not to receive at all and, instead, make a spiritual communion. People are obliged to receive only once a year as per can. 920 §1: “After being initiated into the Most Holy Eucharist, each of the faithful is obliged to receive holy communion at least once a year.”





In 589 Deacon Aigulf trekked home to Tours with relics he had collected in Rome. St. Gregory of Tours relates in his Historia Francorum that Aigulf saw with his own eyes the disasters that struck Rome that year. The Tiber rose to such a flood that buildings were washed away, ancient temples destroyed, and the Church’s food storehouses were lost. There was an invasion of snakes, some the size of logs, which were washed to the sea. In November a plague they called “inguinaria” (of the groin) struck. It killed Pope Pelagius I and a great many others.
























