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2014taylorj
Guest
Since, it is a catholic dogma, that every particle in the eucharist is fully christ, does that mean that particles on the molecular and sub atomic level fully christ?
Sorry but you’re wrong. The accidents remain in the form of bread all the way down. It is the substance that has changed.No. The transformation is supernatural not sub-atomic.
But what if you don’t divide?Once you divide either down to molecular level, they are no longer the form of bread or wine and the real presence no longer extends.
Well, I can see this discussion quickly spiraling down (wink, wink), but I’ll make one last comment. Let’s say the eucharist is a house. So, in this example, the substance of the house is Jesus. But what are the accidents of a house? Wood, nails, wires, pipes. So the house is actually Jesus, but the wood, nails, wires, pipes that make up the house (that make it in the form of a house) are not Jesus? In my view, the substance of the nails in the house are indeed Jesus, while that same nail, removed from the house, is no longer the substance of Jesus.The smallest particle of bread, it has to still be bread is Jesus body, blood, soul and divinity. A single molecule is not bread.
No, that is not what the terms “substance” and “accidents” mean in Aristotelian philosophy. A wire has the substance of a wire but its own accidents, and so on.So, in this example, the substance of the house is Jesus. But what are the accidents of a house? Wood, nails, wires, pipes.
That which has been consecrated and which we perceive to be bread is the body and blood (soul and divinity) of Christ.Is this discussion revolved around molecular that have broken away from the host, or molecular particles that are part of the host. What I really want to know is, are sub atomic particles which are part of the host still considered the body and blood of christ? Or has this point not been defined by the church?