The presence He left us is the HG, who is available anywhere anytime The consecrated Host is not anytime anyplace, but limited to a specific mass and for a short time within that, with limited presence (no voice ,hands).
Yes, He left us His Holy Spirit, who is the One who brings His presence into the Bread and Wine. You are right, the consecrated Host is not “anytime and anyplace” but is specific to the Anamnesis He commanded at the Last Supper.
Yes, it is limited to the Eucharistic Celebration, from which we depart as His voice, His hands, His presence in the World.
The reason they are called “Holy Mysteries” is that they do actually defy reason. How does it make sense? It cannot.
He never mentions coming back to Earth physically and materially after He ascends until His second coming.
Well, we read it differently, do we not?
John was clear throughout His Gospel about the Real Presence of Jesus in the Bread. He alone includes the story of the disciples on the Road to Emmaus, to emphasize that Jesus is present in the breaking of the Bread. His mystical presence in the Eucharist is there to bring us physically present to the foot of the cross, just as the Passover brought the Jews, through anamnesis, ritually and enacted into the Exodus.
He never mentions that He would be physically present all over the world in as many locales as possible in the form of bread and wine stored in a Tabernacle made with human hands.
Malachi 1:11
11 For from the rising of the sun to its setting my name is great among the nations, and in every place incense is offered to my name, and a pure offering; for my name is great among the nations, says the Lord of hosts."
Jesus is the Pure Offering that is present in the Holy Eucharist from the rising of the sun to its setting. His name is great among the nations, as He is offered everywhere in the sacrifice of the Divine Liturgy. The anamnesis during which we become mystically present at His sacrifice on the cross.
The Bread and Wine are not His “tabernacle made with human hands” but the Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity of Him who died for our sins on the cross.
How do you prove that “…confess not the Eucharist to be the flesh…” means that Ignatius believed that the flesh was literal and not figurative? I
The Bread and Wine are not His “tabernacle made with human hands” but the Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity of Him who died for our sins on the cross.
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I did not mean what you said here. I was refering to Jesus being put away in the Tabernacle that is located by the altar. It is a box made by human hands.