The H1N1 Virus (Swine Flu) And Parish Life
Fr. Andrew Morbey over at St. Mary's Cathedral has posted some helpful pastoral thoughts on this matter on the Cathedral web site. The Cathedral bulletin also reprinted an article from a physician at the Sign of the Theotokos parish in Montreal from some years ago. There may be further information and guidance from the OCA Chancery this season, but in the mean time, these seemed like helpful texts to share:
[05 - 10 -2009] THE THERE ARE NO STUPID QUESTIONS COLUMN
Question: In light of discussion concerning the 'flu, do you think it
possible to get ill from receiving Communion?
Answer: This is a timely question and one that touches the anxieties of
a number of people. There is a simple, faith-based answer: no one ever
got ill from participating in the Body and Blood of Christ, 'the
medicine of immortality' (as holy communion is called in our prayers) -
unless of course they receive communion unworthily - cf. 1 Corinthians
11:27 - 30. We receive communion for our health and salvation.
In almost 2000 years of far worse things - real plagues and epidemics -
let alone the annual regular cycles of colds and flus - it does not seem
that communion has had any discernible impact on the transmission of
disease via communion. After all, if communion were a vehicle of disease
you would think the clergy would have been getting sick all the time and
dropping like flies, since they have to consume the chalice etc....
However - I think it a blessing that this simple, faith-based answer can
be augmented by some information from a medical perspective. I have
attached to this column a reflection written several years ago by a
friend who is a doctor in one of our parishes. (This article is on page
three of the Messenger.)
I myself still think that the best - the most appropriate, the most
loving - preventative practice is for you and your children to stay away
from gathering at the church and parish center if you are sick with a
contagious disease or feel that you are coming down with something. This
is better for you - rest is best! - and better for the people you would
have had contact with if you went out while sick - and better for the
anxieties and scruples of your brothers and sisters in Christ. The
clergy will be happy to minister to you as a shut-in at home, if
necessary.
- Fr. Andrew
CAN YOU GET ILL FROM TAKING THE COMMUNION CUP? A Physician's opinion
...to the Healing of soul and body...
By Emanuel Kolyvas, M.D.,
The Sign [of the Theotokos], Montreal
Contrary to popular opinion, wine, and other beverages of antiquity
produced through fermentation, were probably more important in providing
disease-free drinking fluids than in their tendency to intoxicate.
Ancient Greeks drank their water mixed with wine, and also used wine to
cleanse wounds and soak dressings. More recently, military physicians of
the last century observed that during epidemics of cholera, wine
drinkers were relatively spared by the disease, and troops were advised
to mix wine into the water.
Wine has been shown to be an effective antiseptic even when the alcohol
is removed. In fact, 10% alcohol is a poor antiseptic, and alcohol only
becomes optimally effective at concentrations of 70%. The antiseptic
substances in wine are inactive in fresh grapes because these molecules
are bound to complex sugars. During fermentation these antiseptic
substances are split off from the sugars and in this way become active.
These molecules are polyphenols, a class of substances used in hospitals
to disinfect surfaces and instruments. The polyphenol of wine has been
shown to be some thirty-three times more powerful than the phenol used
by Lister when he pioneered antiseptic surgery.
Same year wines can be diluted up to ten times before beginning to show
a decrease in their antiseptic effect. The better wines gradually
improve with age over the first ten years and can be diluted twenty
times without a decrease of the antiseptic effect. This effect then
remains more or less constant over the next twenty years and becomes
equivalent to a new wine after another twenty-five years. (Modern
antiseptics and antibiotics for disinfecting wounds have surpassed wine
effectiveness because the active ingredients in wine are rapidly bound
and inactivated by proteins in body tissues.)
In preparing communion, the hot water that is added to the wine will
increase greatly the antiseptic effect of the polyphenols. Disinfection
occurs more rapidly and more effectively at 45 degrees centigrade than
at room temperature (22-25 degrees). Another contribution to the
antiseptic effect comes from the silver, copper, zinc that make up the
chalice itself, ensuring that microbes are unable to survive on its
surface.
Throughout the centuries, no disease has ever been transmitted by the
taking of Holy Communion. Diseases, such as Hepatitis B, known to be
transmitted by shared eating utensils, have never been acquired from the
communion spoon. HIV is known not to be transmitted through shared
eating utensils, and considering the antiseptic qualities of the Holy
Communion received by the faithful, there is no likelihood of acquiring
HIV infection through the Common Cup.