
Church or England, or Anglicans, introduce full Holy Communion circa 2009.
Until 2009, the Anglican Communion, aka The Church of England, were renowned for their tradition for not taking the sacrament. As part of Anglican Church Services, clergy simply offered prayers and Holy Communion on behalf of the congregation. Anglican clergy married, and the Anglican Church was a leading religion. Anglicans often simply referred to as The Church of England, had their own distinct identity, and were a religion in their own rite, seperate from the Catholic Church.
At the requests of Anglican clergy, in 1982, Pope John Paul II approved a "pastoral provision" that allowed some groups of Anglicans to enter the Catholic Church en masse while preserving their structure as churches and maintaining elements of an Anglican identity.
Anglicans tried to create an alternative structure worldwide, but as tensions grew, Anglicans petitioned the Catholic Church in October 2007 for "full, corporate, and sacramental union." That petition became the basis for Pope Benedict's action on October 20, 2009.
In October 2009, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith announced that Pope Benedict XVI had set up a procedure to allow "groups of Anglican clergy and faithful in different parts of the world" to return en masse to the Catholic Church. While the announcement was greeted with joy by most Catholics and many doctrinally orthodox Anglicans, others remained confused.
On 4 November 2009, Pope Benedict XVI issued an apostolic constitution, Anglicanorum Coetibus, to allow groups of former Anglicans to enter into full communion with the Roman Catholic Church as members of personal ordinariates.
Since 2009, in line with Catholic Church reforms known as personal ordinariates, Anglicans introduced full Catholic Holy Communion, also known as Holy Eucharist.
In most parishes the Church of England, or Anglicans, celebrate Holy Communion or the Eucharist every Sunday, having replaced Morning Prayer as the principal service. No requirement has been made for clerical celibacy.
