 Dear readers, Catholic Online was de-platformed by Shopify for our pro-life beliefs. They shut down our Catholic Online, Catholic Online School, Prayer Candles, and Catholic Online Learning Resources essential faith tools serving over 1.4 million students and millions of families worldwide. Our founders, now in their 70's, just gave their entire life savings to protect this mission. But fewer than 2% of readers donate. If everyone gave just $5, the cost of a coffee, we could rebuild stronger and keep Catholic education free for all. Stand with us in faith. Thank you. Help Now >
            Dear readers, Catholic Online was de-platformed by Shopify for our pro-life beliefs. They shut down our Catholic Online, Catholic Online School, Prayer Candles, and Catholic Online Learning Resources essential faith tools serving over 1.4 million students and millions of families worldwide. Our founders, now in their 70's, just gave their entire life savings to protect this mission. But fewer than 2% of readers donate. If everyone gave just $5, the cost of a coffee, we could rebuild stronger and keep Catholic education free for all. Stand with us in faith. Thank you. Help Now >
    Quam singulari
FREE Catholic Classes
A decree of the Sacred Congregation of the Sacraments, 8 August, 1910, on the age at which children are to be admitted to first Communion, officially promulgated 15 August, 1910 (Acta Apost. Sedis, 15 August, 1910). The historical facts narrated in the "Quam singulari" prove that:
- it is not a decree inaugurating a new discipline, but one restoring the ancient and universal law of the Church, wherever it has not been observed ( Pius X to Card. Abp. of Cologne, 31 December, 1910);
- the custom of giving Holy Communion to infants immediately after baptism, and frequently before the beginning of their rational life, has been modified but never condemned; it is even approved today among the Greeks and Orientals;
- the decree of the Fourth Lateran Council (1215, can. xxi) has never been revoked or modified, and in virtue of it all are obliged, as soon as they arrive at the years of discretion, to receive both the Sacraments of Penance and Holy Communion at Easter time ;
- the "testimony of the greatest authority, St. Thomas Aquinas ", interpreting the Council, states that the Lateran decree obliges "children when they begin to have some use of reason " (also Ledesma, Vasquez, St. Antoninus );
- the Council of Trent confirmed the Lateran decree pronouncing anathema against all who deny "that the faithful of both sexes who have attained the use of reason are obliged to receive Holy Communion every year, at least at Easter time " (Sess. XIII, de Euch., c. viii, can. ix).
 Errors condemned by the "Quam singulari" 
-  A greater discretion is required for first Communion than for  first Confession. 
-  To receive  Holy Communion  a  more, complete  knowledge  of the articles of Faith  is  required. This  erroneous  opinion,  demanding with  Jansenism  (1)  extraordinary preparation, thereby deferring Communion "for the  riper age" of twelve, fourteen, or even older ("absolutely  forbidden"), makes (2) "the  Holy Eucharist  a reward and not a remedy  for human frailty", which is contrary to the teaching of the Council of Trent  that  Holy Communion  is "an antidote by which we  are freed from our daily faults and preserved from mortal  sins  ". The  error  assumes (3) what may be  false  -- that riper years and more complete  instruction give better dispositions than the innocence and candour  of more tender years. As first Communion is not essentially  different from any other Communion the extraordinary preparation  heretofore demanded is (4) contrary to the "Sacra Tridentina",  which for daily communicants, including children, requires only the  state of grace and a   good  intention. 
 Abuses following from errors 
-  Depriving the child from the beginning of its rational  life of the  right  of living in Christ through  Holy Communion, a  right  given by  baptism  ; 
-  Causing the loss of  angelic  first innocence in many by those years of deprivation of Christ and  of  graces, years for many the  seed-time for snares and vices, all of which might have been  avoided; 
-  causing, by the  custom  of some places, children to live in  the state of  sin  by not allowing  them to go to confession until the age determined for first  Communion, or of denying them  absolution  when they confessed ("absolutely  condemned" and "to be done away with by  ordinaries  as the  law  permits"); 
-  denying the  Viaticum  to dying  children who had not received their first Communion, and burying  these as infants, thereby depriving them of the suffrages of the Church, to which they were entitled  ("utterly detestable", "ordinaries to proceed severely against  these"). 
 Conditions for first Confession and first Communion 
-  The age of discretion, which applies equally to both  sacraments. This may be judged (1) by the  first indication of the child using its reasoning powers; (2) by  the child knowing what is right from wrong. No determined age is  placed as a  condition  ;  the age of seven is mentioned because the  majority  of children arrive at the years of  discretion, that is, begin to  reason, about this period, some sooner,  some later. 
-  A  knowledge  such as a child  just beginning to  reason  can have about one  God, Who rewards  the   good and punishes the wicked, and about the  mysteries of the Trinity and the  Incarnation. It is not  necessary  that the child should commit to memory  accurate  theological  definitions, which may convey  no  idea  to the little mind  just beginning to  unfold. 
-  A child must be able to distinguish the Eucharistic from the  common bread; that is, to  know  that  what looks like bread is not bread, but contains the real, living  Body and Blood of Christ. 
-  Children should be taught to receive  Holy Communion  devoutly. 
-  Children should be instructed on the  necessity  of being in the state of grace  and of having a   good  intention, also 
-  of  fasting  from midnight before  Communion. 
 Obligation of admitting children to first Communion 
- Depriving the child from the beginning of its rational life of the right of living in Christ through Holy Communion, a right given by baptism ;
- Causing the loss of angelic first innocence in many by those years of deprivation of Christ and of graces, years for many the seed-time for snares and vices, all of which might have been avoided;
- causing, by the custom of some places, children to live in the state of sin by not allowing them to go to confession until the age determined for first Communion, or of denying them absolution when they confessed ("absolutely condemned" and "to be done away with by ordinaries as the law permits");
- denying the Viaticum to dying children who had not received their first Communion, and burying these as infants, thereby depriving them of the suffrages of the Church, to which they were entitled ("utterly detestable", "ordinaries to proceed severely against these").
 Conditions for first Confession and first Communion 
-  The age of discretion, which applies equally to both  sacraments. This may be judged (1) by the  first indication of the child using its reasoning powers; (2) by  the child knowing what is right from wrong. No determined age is  placed as a  condition  ;  the age of seven is mentioned because the  majority  of children arrive at the years of  discretion, that is, begin to  reason, about this period, some sooner,  some later. 
-  A  knowledge  such as a child  just beginning to  reason  can have about one  God, Who rewards  the   good and punishes the wicked, and about the  mysteries of the Trinity and the  Incarnation. It is not  necessary  that the child should commit to memory  accurate  theological  definitions, which may convey  no  idea  to the little mind  just beginning to  unfold. 
-  A child must be able to distinguish the Eucharistic from the  common bread; that is, to  know  that  what looks like bread is not bread, but contains the real, living  Body and Blood of Christ. 
-  Children should be taught to receive  Holy Communion  devoutly. 
-  Children should be instructed on the  necessity  of being in the state of grace  and of having a   good  intention, also 
-  of  fasting  from midnight before  Communion. 
 Obligation of admitting children to first Communion 
When children begin to reason, the obligation of receiving Holy Communion is Divine as well as ecclesiastical. The subject-matter of the decree :
- is therefore a grave one obliging under serious sin, (1) children themselves if they know of and maliciously neglect their obligation ; (2) those responsible for the children: father, mother, instructors, rectors of colleges, principals of schools, superiors of communities and children's asylums, all who have parental responsibility, confessors, and pastors.
- A grave obligation devolving on all above mentioned is to encourage children after first Communion to approach the altar frequently, even daily, if possible.
- Those responsible for children should regard as "their most important duty " that the incomplete instruction given before first Communion be continued afterwards by sending the children to the public catechetical instructions, or by supplying their religious instruction in some other way. The formal admission of the child to first Communion rests with the father, or the one taking his place, and with the confessor. The decree supposes these to act together, and when they agree on the admission no one may interfere. Where the parents are negligent or indifferent or opposed to their children's first Communion, the confessor can assume the entire responsibility. Should the confessors oppose the admission of children whose parents know they have begun to reason, the prudent course in practice is to present the children to another confessor, for every confessor has a right to admit a child to private first Communion.
General Communion
A public ceremony devolving not on the confessor but on the parish priest, who is required to have yearly one or several of these general Communions, which may be simple or solemn. The simple:
- will admit the (1) little children making their first Communion, also (2) those who have previously approached the Holy Table. The decree requires some days of instruction and preparation for both classes of children when they receive in a body. This can be given as conditions and circumstances permit, attention being paid to the spirit and substance of this provision.
- Every pastor can arrange a solemn ceremony in which those would participate who had completed a course in Christian Doctrine. Every year during the time the faithful can satisfy their Easter duty, the "Quam singulari" must be read to the people in the vernacular. Every five years in their ad limina , ordinaries will be obliged to report the observance of the decree to the Holy See.
Join the Movement
When you sign up below, you don't just join an email list - you're joining an entire movement for Free world class Catholic education.
	
- Easter / Lent
- Ascension Day
- 7 Morning Prayers
- Mysteries of the Rosary
- Litany of the Bl. Virgin Mary
- Popular Saints
- Popular Prayers
- Female Saints
- Saint Feast Days by Month
- Stations of the Cross
- St. Francis of Assisi
- St. Michael the Archangel
- The Apostles' Creed
- Unfailing Prayer to St. Anthony
- Pray the Rosary

Copyright 2025 Catholic Online. All materials contained on this site, whether written, audible or visual are the exclusive property of Catholic Online and are protected under U.S. and International copyright laws, © Copyright 2025 Catholic Online. Any unauthorized use, without prior written consent of Catholic Online is strictly forbidden and prohibited.
Catholic Online is a Project of Your Catholic Voice Foundation, a Not-for-Profit Corporation. Your Catholic Voice Foundation has been granted a recognition of tax exemption under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. Federal Tax Identification Number: 81-0596847. Your gift is tax-deductible as allowed by law.
 
 
			 
			 
			


 


