L
langlob
Guest
I have a number of concerns about the Real Presence in the Eucharist that my sense of logic just finds difficult to accept. I’ll start with the first one. During my search to find out which (if any) was the true faith, I came aross a Protestant (ex-Catholic) website called something like the Roman Catholic Observer. In those days I had a farily strong antagonism towards the Catholic Church, and I used to frequent this website in search of reasons to justify my decision to leave the Church I had been baptized and raised in. I have since found God leading me back to the Catholic Church, and I have thankfully abandoned a lot of the prejudices and mistruths I formerly held against her.
However, this website raised at least one interesting point which I still consider to this day, concerning the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist. Basically, in an attempt to disprove transubstantiation, the author recommended taking the Eucharist at Communion and instead of immediately consuming it, putting it in a plastic bag for observation. Over the next few days, he claimed one could observe the specimen turning mouldy and going bad just like normal bread, thus “proving” that it is not really Christ, since anything divine is incorruptible. He further claimed that priests always consume the leftover Eucharistic Adoration hosts before the required time elapses for them to go mouldy for the sole purpose of ‘eliminating the evidence’.
I realize that desecrating the host in this way would be the utmost in blashpemy, and thus I would never attempt it, but is there any soundness to this guys argument? Would a Eucharistic host, if not consumed in time, go mouldy? Since the Church teaches that the Real Presence does not leave the host until it changes form, are we to believe that a host left unconsumed would remain incorrupted forever? Or is it justifiable to believe that it would, indeed, go bad just like normal bread?
However, this website raised at least one interesting point which I still consider to this day, concerning the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist. Basically, in an attempt to disprove transubstantiation, the author recommended taking the Eucharist at Communion and instead of immediately consuming it, putting it in a plastic bag for observation. Over the next few days, he claimed one could observe the specimen turning mouldy and going bad just like normal bread, thus “proving” that it is not really Christ, since anything divine is incorruptible. He further claimed that priests always consume the leftover Eucharistic Adoration hosts before the required time elapses for them to go mouldy for the sole purpose of ‘eliminating the evidence’.
I realize that desecrating the host in this way would be the utmost in blashpemy, and thus I would never attempt it, but is there any soundness to this guys argument? Would a Eucharistic host, if not consumed in time, go mouldy? Since the Church teaches that the Real Presence does not leave the host until it changes form, are we to believe that a host left unconsumed would remain incorrupted forever? Or is it justifiable to believe that it would, indeed, go bad just like normal bread?