When There's a Medical
Emergency
ROME, JAN. 15, 2008 (Zenit.org).-
Answered by Legionary of
Christ Father Edward
McNamara, professor of
liturgy at the Regina
Apostolorum university.
Q: During a weekday
Mass a parishioner collapsed
during the Prayers of the
Faithful. Someone with a
cell phone called for
assistance from a local
hospital. The emergency team
arrived, brought in a
gurney, questioned the
stricken man, took his blood
pressure, managed to get him
onto the gurney, and wheeled
him out to the waiting
ambulance. Meanwhile, the
presider kept on with the
Mass, right through the
consecration and Communion,
while all of this was going
on just a few feet away from
the altar. While visiting
another church some years
ago, I witnessed a different
reaction to an apparent
medical emergency. During
Sunday Mass the presider
noticed that a woman was
visibly becoming faint; he
left the altar and caught
her before she fell, then
took her to the back of the
church and left her in the
hands of the ushers, who
presumably hadn't been in a
position to notice the
emergency as it was
developing. Then he resumed
the Mass. This seemed a lot
more caring and communal
than simply ignoring an
obvious medical emergency.
Is there some statement
somewhere to the effect that
nothing but nothing should
interrupt the Mass? -- C.A.,
Urbana, Illinois
A: There is no overall
rule, other than common
sense and pastoral tact, to
respond to such emergencies.
While the Mass should
not generally be
interrupted, circumstances
such as those described
could lead to a temporary
interruption with no
disrespect shown.
It would also depend
on the particular moment
during which the medical
emergency occurred. For
example, it is easier for a
priest to notice a fainting
parishioner during the
readings then during the
Eucharistic Prayer when many
priests avoid looking toward
the assembly.
My own reaction in
this case would probably
have been to interrupt the
Mass at least while the
emergency team was doing its
work. This is, in part,
because such situations
polarize everybody's
attention and nobody would
follow the Mass anyway.
Also, if the parishioner was
in danger of death and no
other priest was available,
then it would be necessary
to leave the altar and
administer the sacraments.
That said, I do not
wish to censure the priest
in the first case as I am
unaware of all the
circumstances that led him
to decide that the most
appropriate course was to
continue the Mass. The
priest in the second example
reacted with commendable
attentiveness and
sensitivity to a particular
situation, but different
circumstances might lead to
different reactions.
A particular case is
when the subject of the
medical emergency is the
priest himself. If a priest
is unable to continue
celebrating a Mass due to a
sudden illness, then another
priest may continue the Mass
from the interruption point.
This includes the case in
which a priest only managed
to consecrate the species of
bread; the replacement
priest continues the Mass
from the consecration of the
chalice.