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Thursday, July 09, 2009
Questions Raised Over Canadian Prime Minister At Funeral Mass
Canada's Prime Minister Stephen Harper has created at least a protocol stir. Last Friday he attended the New Brunswick funeral of former Canadian governor general Romeo Leblanc, a Catholic. St. John's (NB) Telegraphic Journal and CTV Toronto both reported yesterday that a television clip of Harper, a Protestant, receiving communion at the Catholic funeral mass, raises a question of what he did with the communion wafer he received. (YouTube report.) A television camera shows Harper accepting the wafer with his right hand, but does not show him consuming it, even though a spokesman for the Prime Minister says that he did. Monsignor Brian Henneberry, vicar general and chancellor of the Diocese of Saint John, says that if Harper accepted the host but did not consume it: "it's worse than a faux pas, it's a scandal from the Catholic point of view." The press has speculated that Harper was confused about the protocol, or expected the priest to invite everyone to consume the wafer, as is done in some Protestant traditions. Separate questions have been raised as to whether Harper should have accepted the communion wafer at all at the Mass. [Thanks to Scott Mange for the lead.]