Not even for a split second I have not kept in mind that everything I have learned and know may be wrong. Not even for a second I have not kept in mind that perhaps it is all an illusion, that perhaps there is no good and bad, no soul, no God, nothing. Only then I can truly say with no fear: “all I know is that I know nothing.”
It is with no pride at all, but in full humbleness, that I tell you with the words of the Apostle Paul, that I simply hold to the traditions as the apostles passed them unto me, and that it is this tradition what I am also passing on to you.
The tradition, acknowledged by Early Church Fathers, by centuries of theologians, and even by some protestant communities, is that the Bread and Wine become true Body and true Blood.
You may smile at the idea of
Eucharistic miracles, perhaps because you do not know about them. There have been truly countless of occasions in which, for instance, a priest has doubted of the Real Presence of Christ and the consecrated host has started to bleed. On one occasion, a priest put a consecrated host inside his breviary to take it to a sick patient, and when he opened the breviary, it was soaked in blood. In other occasions, the host transformed before the priest and the faithful into flesh - in modern times, scientists determined that it was myocardial tissue from a heart. All of these have happened not just once or twice, but consistently throughout the centuries, and we still have relics of some of these. You are totally free to not believe in them. But the witnesses saw them take place, and the relics are there, and they draw people to God, and make them grow in humbleness and virtue.
Yes, miracles may not be the norm, but they do take place. Even Eucharistic miracles. Why don’t you check this video?
(real scene) [(zoomed-in scene)](
ilpanevivo.org/video/scena ingrandita.mpg) This was witnessed not only by hundreds, but was also recorded by many, since the Mass was being transmitted on the national French television network. Just check it out.
I do not try to convince you, to convert you, or to make you believe in anything. All I can do is pass onto you what has been passed onto me since the days of the Lord:
It is amazing that the best quote I can think of is that of Martin Luther: how can you possibly believe, based on who knows what teaching, that the Eucharist is not real body and real blood, if in 1500 years none of the Apostles or the Fathers of the Church or any theologian ever said, It is only bread and wine; or, the body and blood of Christ is not there present. It is not credible, nor possible that they should never (if they thought so) not so much as once, say these words: It is bread only; or the body of Christ is not there, especially it being of great importance, that men should not be deceived.
I can therefore tell you that there are many others that bears witness of this truth; and I know that the witness which they witness of is true. Now I ask you: to what Tradition are you appealing yourself? Who has been your Teacher? Or is this your own interpretation? For surely there is a need to understand where does something proceed from if we want to discern its truthfulness.