What I don't understand is why there is a difference in interpretation.
Simply put, the rationalising process of the Western Mind.
Catholic dogmatics insist that it is an essential Catholic belief that the bread and the wine REALLY become the Blood and Body of Jesus.
I don't get this: Just imagine it REALLY became human blood, would you drink it? And the bread, if it REALLY became raw human meat, would you eat it?
Ah ... there's a whole philosophical debate here on the nature of 'real'.
The Eucharist has been at the core of traditional Christian belief for two millennia now – so add together all the bread eaten and all the wine drunk and the volume is considerably greater than the volume of a human being.
The Catechism (para 1374) says:
"The mode of Christ's presence under the Eucharistic species is unique. It raises the Eucharist above all the sacraments as "the perfection of the spiritual life and the end to which all the sacraments tend." In the most blessed sacrament of the Eucharist "the body and blood, together with the soul and divinity, of our Lord Jesus Christ and, therefore, the whole Christ is truly, really, and substantially contained." "This presence is called 'real' - by which is not intended to exclude the other types of presence as if they could not be 'real' too, but because it is presence in the fullest sense: that is to say, it is a substantial presence by which Christ, God and man, makes himself wholly and entirely present."
Now, the Reformed say, it's a symbol. I don't think that anyone in the Roman Catholic Church would say that it REALLY transforms in the way I said above. But if not, what is the difference to those who say, it's a symbol?
By saying it's a symbol, they're to some degree refuting the idea of 'presence'. Is Christ present in the Eucharist? Symbolically, yes, actually, no ... that kind of argument.
Whereas the Catholic argument is that Christ is ACTUALLY present.
(The Catholic belief is that Christ is present
under the Eucharistic species, that the bread and wine appear as bread and wine (rather than physical flesh and blood) ... This the Orthodox reject, as they see 'under' as a dualism – the body and blood/bread and wine – whereas they assert a non-dual belief that the bread and wine is the body and blood.)
The Reformers were divided about the matter, for Luther, Christ is not as present in the Eucharist as He is for a Catholic, but He's more present than He is for Calvin ... so we see an argument by degree, a matter of rationalising, and trying to explain what is, essentially, a mystery.
At his point I side with the Orthodox Church – the Latin West has always felt the pressure to 'explain' the mysteries, whereas the Orthodox say it is a mystery, ergo it cannot be explained; if it could be explained, it would not be a mystery ... and so the dialogue, sometimes heated, between Roman Catholic and Orthodox.
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For centuries, the Church did not find it necessary to formally define the Holy Eucharist. Despite all the theological disputes that wracked the Church, significant conflict over the understanding that Christ is present in the Eucharist never arose.
The Church was united in the real identification of the consecrated bread and wine with the body and blood of Christ. Through the supernatural power of consecration, the eucharistic bread and wine not only represent and symbolise, convey and communicate the body and blood, they actually are the body and blood.
It is so because it is in Christ's power to transform (or transubstantiate) any material thing according to His will.
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