R
rev_kevin
Guest
I see no evidence that it is actually transformed into his body and blood. At the last super when he said this is my body he raised up bread as a symbol of his body and the same with the wine as a symbol of his blood.Because He said that it was.
So do we.
This is a question that Christians have been asking right from the very beginnings of the Church.
The current theory is called âTransubstantiationâ which proposes that there are two aspects to any material thing - its âsubstanceâ (the real essence of the thing) and itâs âaccidentsâ (its outward appearance). So, to give a simple example, we have the substance âball.â Individual balls have specific characteristics - roundness (but not all balls are round - footballs are not round); colour; markings, what they are made of (rubber, plastic, animal skins) and so on. These characteristics are called âaccidents.â Not every ball has the same âaccidentsâ but they all share the same âsubstanceâ - they are all balls.
When Christ comes to us at Mass, He displaces the substances of the bread and wine (without in any way altering their accidents) with His own substance, without (in most cases, other than in the case of Eucharistic miracles, which tend to be quite rare) any of His accidents.
The early Christians recognized Christ in the Eucharist, but they were unable to explain how it was that He was present with or under the appearances of the bread and wine - but even though they couldnât explain it, they still condemned those who saw it as "only a symbol (such as Arius) and they still required that those who called themselves Christians were to understand that when they received the Eucharist, they were partaking of Christâs body and blood, soul and divinity. It was only later that the explanation of Transubstantiation became available - but they believed it before they understood it, or could explain it.