W
wllmjoseph
Guest
Thank you! That is precisely my point. I had the impression that there were some Anglicans that believed in the real presence on Jesus’ body and blood in the Eucharist and that for Anglicans it was just a symbol. Nothing more. Please correct me if I am wrong, but it is my understanding that the official doctrine on the Anglican Church is the Eucharist is a symbol and that they do not believe in the Transubstantiation.As I’ve posted oft, during my long and storied career here, if you want to know what Anglicans believe on a given subject, it is best to ask one. The answer likely will vary. You certainly will find Anglicans who affirm the Real presence in the Eucharist, and those who further accept transubstantiation as the explication of how this comes about. And you will find those who don’t. Asking is useful.
There are certainly Anglicans whose Eucharistic theology would permit reception under Canon 844, in theory. That this is likely to become something normalized, I seriously doubt. Times and things being what they are.
I for one would not be comfortable with Anglicans being able to receive Roman Catholic Communion when within the Anglican community there are different beliefs on the Eucharist and especially when the official Anglican doctrine is that the Eucharist is a symbol and does not contain the real presence.