A
AliciaCL
Guest
Maybe this isn’t entirely kosher by the catechism, but I find an easy way to explain the body of Christ in the Eucharist this way.
God, Jesus and the Holy Spirit are one. When Christ said “this is my body” at the Last Supper, he remained physically present with the apostles. Think of the Holy Spirit, one with Jesus, infusing himself into the bread. Jesus is then holding the bread, with the Holy Spirit in it, the same as if he himself became the bread. The bread is indeed changed but in a way that is sooo spiritual that it is equivalent to a “physical” change as we would understand it. The quibbling about the physical change in the bread is simply one of those human things we get tripped up on. Suffice to say, it isn’t thoroughly understandable by humans, hence the Church’s reference to it and other things as mysteries.
That God/Jesus/Holy Spirit were giving mankind a ritual through which they could continually make a sacrifice to God, honor God, and engage in worship, receive spiritual renewal shouldn’t be that hard to grasp from scriptures.
Also wish to comment on tradition. The Catholic church is the one that complied the Bible in the 3rd and 4th centuries. The apostles spread the Word and catholic Christian practices for hundreds of years before the Bible was ever complied. Protesants as far as I know made no effort to re-evaluate the church’s selections and compile their own Bible. The Reformers accepted the catholic Bible but rejected the “church” that complied it. Today Protestant churches simply don’t address this, they just say the church had corrupt practices and went awry (which it did but not on doctrine). It really only makes common sense to give credence to the tradition, practices, beliefs, rituals, etc. set in motion by the apostles and those they taught before the Bible was even compiled. It isn’t against the Bible as some Protestants seem to think.
Hope these comments can help some people view these things differently.
God, Jesus and the Holy Spirit are one. When Christ said “this is my body” at the Last Supper, he remained physically present with the apostles. Think of the Holy Spirit, one with Jesus, infusing himself into the bread. Jesus is then holding the bread, with the Holy Spirit in it, the same as if he himself became the bread. The bread is indeed changed but in a way that is sooo spiritual that it is equivalent to a “physical” change as we would understand it. The quibbling about the physical change in the bread is simply one of those human things we get tripped up on. Suffice to say, it isn’t thoroughly understandable by humans, hence the Church’s reference to it and other things as mysteries.
That God/Jesus/Holy Spirit were giving mankind a ritual through which they could continually make a sacrifice to God, honor God, and engage in worship, receive spiritual renewal shouldn’t be that hard to grasp from scriptures.
Also wish to comment on tradition. The Catholic church is the one that complied the Bible in the 3rd and 4th centuries. The apostles spread the Word and catholic Christian practices for hundreds of years before the Bible was ever complied. Protesants as far as I know made no effort to re-evaluate the church’s selections and compile their own Bible. The Reformers accepted the catholic Bible but rejected the “church” that complied it. Today Protestant churches simply don’t address this, they just say the church had corrupt practices and went awry (which it did but not on doctrine). It really only makes common sense to give credence to the tradition, practices, beliefs, rituals, etc. set in motion by the apostles and those they taught before the Bible was even compiled. It isn’t against the Bible as some Protestants seem to think.
Hope these comments can help some people view these things differently.