Podcasts: ACU’s Speaking of Liturgy

By Editor, November 25, 2025

Pray Tell is pleased to present the latest episode from the Australian Catholic University Centre for Liturgy’s podcast series, Speaking of Liturgy.

Fr. Brian Nichols discusses the significance of receiving Holy Communion from the same altar of sacrifice. One of the great teachings of the Second Vatican Council, this expresses the unity of the Body of Christ when we celebrate the Mass. It is an invitation to consider our pastoral practice.

Rev. Brian Nichols is a priest of the Archdiocese of Hobart, Tasmania, Australia, and is currently Vice-Rector of Corpus Christi Seminary in Melbourne. He also teaches Liturgical and Sacramental Theology at Catholic Theological College (University of Divinity), Melbourne. He holds a Licentiate in Sacred Liturgy from the Pontifical Liturgical Institute (Sant’ Anselmo), Rome.

The link to the podcast can be accessed here.

Editor

Katharine E. Harmon, Ph.D., edits the blog, Pray Tell: Worship, Wit & Wisdom.

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One response to “Podcasts: ACU’s Speaking of Liturgy”

  1. Anthony Hawkins

    Session the Twenty-Second

    Being the sixth wider the Sovereign Pontiff Pius IV., celebrated on the seventeenth day of September, 1562.
    doctrine touching the sacrifice of the mass

    The sacred and holy, œcumenical and general Synod of Trent, lawfully assembled in the Holy Ghost,—the same legates of the Apostolic See presiding therein,—to the end that the ancient, complete, and in every part perfect faith and doctrine touching the great mystery of the Eucharist may be retained in the holy Catholic Church; and may, all errors and heresies being repelled, be preserved in its own purity; [the synod], instructed by the illumination of the Holy Ghost, teaches, declares, and decrees what follows, to be preached to the faithful, touching the Eucharist, in as far as it is a true and singular sacrifice.

    Chapter VI

    On the Mass wherein the Priest alone communicates

    The sacred and holy synod would wish indeed that, at each mass, the faithful who are present should communicate, not only in spiritual desire, but also by the sacramental participation of the Eucharist, that thereby a more abundant fruit of this most holy sacrifice might be derived unto them: but nevertheless, if this be not always done, it doth not therefore condemn, as private and unlawful, but approves of, and therefore commends, those masses in which the priest alone communicates sacramentally; since those masses ought also to be considered as truly common; partly because in them the people communicate spiritually; partly also because they are celebrated by a public minister of the Church, not for himself only, but for all the faithful, who appertain to the body of Christ.

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