Does transubstantiation mean matter is an illusion?

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Let’s find out:

I don’t think it helps.

Conversion has so many nuanced and related meanings. It can mean (and its root is) turning something to a new direction (The pagan converted himself to Christianity). But usually it means exchanging one thing for another (The pagan converted his dollars to euros), which I do not think is necessarily the truth in transubstantiation*? But I cannot think of a common example where it means an absolute change (The magician’s silk handkerchief was converted(?) into a rabbit?).

(* The substance of the bread and wine is changed into the substance of the body and blood, soul and divinity of Our Lord, but it is not exchanged – The substance of the resurrected and ascended (and presumably still extant) body of Our Lord is not changed into the substance of bread and wine.

I am pretty sure the teaching of the Church is that the substance of the elements to be consecrated are annihilated. I could be mistaken.)

tee
I’m not sure about that formulation. The doctrine is that the substance of the bread and wine is changed into the substance of Christ. I don’t think change means annihilation. The bread and wine are gone, but they are changed into the body and blood of Christ. The accidents of bread and wine remain. We can’t think of substance in chemical or atomic terms when speaking of transubstantiation.
 
I’m a Protestant with a question about transubstantiation. I understand the basics of the doctrine and the philosophical terms behind it, so you needn’t rehash those. The issue I see is that, if the bread and wine “really and truly” transform into flesh and blood, why is there no accompanying chemical change? There is no change in how the elements appear, nor in how they taste, or how our bodies digest them. If you put them under a microscope and didn’t know they had been blessed, you would think they were ordinary bread and wine.

Under normal circumstances, when God transforms something, you can tell. Jesus changed the water into wine; presumably the color changed, and we know that the taste changed. When God said, “Let there be light,” there was light – an observable change.

But the transformation of bread into flesh and wine into blood is completely unobservable, even in theory. I know the argument is that the accidents are unchanged but the substance changed, but under ordinary circumstances, what makes blood blood is its chemical makeup.

It seems like the doctrine of transubstantiation makes matter an illusion in much the same way Gnosticism did. You can’t trust your senses. The physical isn’t what matters. It’s the “spiritual” that matters. Am I misunderstanding anything? Is there a standard Catholic response to this type of charge? I can’t be the first one to have said it.

I hope I haven’t offended. Please understand that I’m earnestly looking for an answer, not trolling.
Without having read the prior responses (sorry), I think the answer to your question is simply that the change is a miracle worked by Christ - and the whole Aristotelian thing is an attempt to explain something that is fundamentally beyond the physical world - it is the very intersection of God, creation/the temporal and the eternal. It is simply a way to try to explain a reality that is inexplicable in this world.
 
I’m not sure about that formulation. The doctrine is that the substance of the bread and wine is changed into the substance of Christ. I don’t think change means annihilation. The bread and wine are gone, but they are changed into the body and blood of Christ.
Perhaps so, *annihilation may be too strong a term. But to restate the primary point: In transubstantiation the substances of the bread and wine are changed, but are not exchanged, they are not traded off somewhere (somewhat?) else.

(* Which is the usual sense of conversion, which was the primary word under consideration)
We can’t think of substance in chemical or atomic terms when speaking of transubstantiation.
I never thought we could.

tee
 
I’m a Protestant with a question about transubstantiation. I understand the basics of the doctrine and the philosophical terms behind it, so you needn’t rehash those. The issue I see is that, if the bread and wine “really and truly” transform into flesh and blood, why is there no accompanying chemical change? There is no change in how the elements appear, nor in how they taste, or how our bodies digest them. If you put them under a microscope and didn’t know they had been blessed, you would think they were ordinary bread and wine.

Under normal circumstances, when God transforms something, you can tell. Jesus changed the water into wine; presumably the color changed, and we know that the taste changed. When God said, “Let there be light,” there was light – an observable change.

But the transformation of bread into flesh and wine into blood is completely unobservable, even in theory. I know the argument is that the accidents are unchanged but the substance changed, but under ordinary circumstances, what makes blood blood is its chemical makeup.

It seems like the doctrine of transubstantiation makes matter an illusion in much the same way Gnosticism did. You can’t trust your senses. The physical isn’t what matters. It’s the “spiritual” that matters. Am I misunderstanding anything? Is there a standard Catholic response to this type of charge? I can’t be the first one to have said it.

I hope I haven’t offended. Please understand that I’m earnestly looking for an answer, not trolling.
This is the only truly repeatable miracle that occurs every time there is the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. It is a miracle because it cannot be explained by science. It is transcendent because Jesus Himself promised that He is present. This is why He said that the Second Temple is greater than Solomon’s Temple because He fulfilled scripture when He Himself, God in the flesh, preached in the Temple before He was crucified. And this is why He said He will be with His Church until the end of time because He is always present in the Blessed Sacrament.

Just as God was hidden by the burning bush when He spoke to Moses, just as He was hidden by the column of fire by night and the column of smoke by day when He Himself led the Children of Israel out of Egypt , so too is He hidden behind the matter of the Holy Eucharist but our senses only perceive it to remain as bread whereas it is no longer bread but it truly is God Himself is in the flesh and blood, body and soul and divinity. The faithful and the world participates in the Last Supper with Jesus Himself present in your midst in the Mass.

In the Holy Eucharist, you enjoy a treasure far greater than the Temple of Jerusalem, greater than the Ark of the Covenant itself. Whereas the Jews never saw the face of God and was hidden behind the veil of the Holy of Holies, in the Catholic Church is God Himself. If the Holy Eucharist is not God in the flesh, then we would be committing idolatry.
 
This is the only truly repeatable miracle that occurs every time there is the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. It is a miracle because it cannot be explained by science. It is transcendent because Jesus Himself promised that He is present. This is why He said that the Second Temple is greater than Solomon’s Temple because He fulfilled scripture when He Himself, God in the flesh, preached in the Temple before He was crucified. And this is why He said He will be with His Church until the end of time because He is always present in the Blessed Sacrament.

Just as God was hidden by the burning bush when He spoke to Moses, just as He was hidden by the column of fire by night and the column of smoke by day when He Himself led the Children of Israel out of Egypt , so too is He hidden behind the matter of the Holy Eucharist but our senses only perceive it to remain as bread whereas it is no longer bread but it truly is God Himself is in the flesh and blood, body and soul and divinity. The faithful and the world participates in the Last Supper with Jesus Himself present in your midst in the Mass.

In the Holy Eucharist, you enjoy a treasure far greater than the Temple of Jerusalem, greater than the Ark of the Covenant itself. Whereas the Jews never saw the face of God and was hidden behind the veil of the Holy of Holies, in the Catholic Church is God Himself. If the Holy Eucharist is not God in the flesh, then we would be committing idolatry.
While I agree with pretty much everything you say, I would not call the Eucharist a “miracle,” because with a miracle, we observe a scientifically inexplicable change in the accidents or appearances of something. With the Eucharist, the accidents do not change. It is better than a miracle, but only the substance changes, and that is not something that we can perceive.
 
But how is the new substance (that of flesh and blood) in any sense a “composite of matter and form”? Materially, the flesh and blood is like bread and wine. In form, they are like bread and wine. Perhaps this is my lack of philosophical background showing, but using the senses of the words I’m familiar with, that definition of essence doesn’t clear things up.
You have to remember that Christ’s body is a glorified body. Glorified bodies, as we will be after our own resurrection, are not subject to the limitations of matter, as we are subject to in our earthly life. Remember how Christ was able to pass through solid walls and doors after his resurrection? Well it is the same glorified body that is present in the Eucharist. It can be visible or not visible. In other words, his body is now a " spiritualized " body. It can be any size, it can be visible or invisible. But it is still matter, so it is still composed of matter and form.

The " bread " and " wine " however are accidents without any underlying substance. Their substance has been changed into the body and blood of Christ. But they cannot exist in the substance of Christ’s body and blood because his body and blood is not the proper substance for bread and wine.

Deep, but that is the way Thomas Aquinas explains it. And this comports to the teaching of the Church which teaches that the accidents of the bread and wine exist without a substance.

Hope this helps.

Linus2nd.
 
It is important to understand that the Whole Christ is truely present physically in the sacrament but in an invisible way.
No; Christ is present sacramentally, not physically. What’s physically present is what can be sensed – that is, the accidents of bread and wine.
 
\under ordinary circumstances, what makes blood blood is its chemical makeup.
Well, no… not in a philosophical sense. What makes ‘blood’ blood is that it has the substance of blood; what makes ‘blood’ perceptible to us is its chemical makeup.
 
Modern Catholic Dictionary, Inherence:Dependence on another being for its existence. Accidents naturally inhere in the substances they modify. By divine power, in the Holy Eucharist the accidents of bread and wine exist without inhering in their substance, which has been changed through transubstantiation into the substance of Christ’s body and blood.
 
But how is the new substance (that of flesh and blood) in any sense a “composite of matter and form”? Materially, the flesh and blood is like bread and wine. In form, they are like bread and wine. Perhaps this is my lack of philosophical background showing, but using the senses of the words I’m familiar with, that definition of essence doesn’t clear things up.
I heard it explained like this at a retreat: The speaker held up a pen and began to describe it on a scientific level. With the end result being that what you saw was actually different than what was scientifically there. The pen appeared to be solid. But on its basic level it was made up of molecules. We have all seen representations of molecules. In his explaination it was the movement of the molecules that made it appear solid when actually they are mostly nothing( or blank space). So things are not always what they appear to be.

I probably didn’t explain that as well as he did but I hope you get the basic idea. It is similar to some earlier post that explained that Jesus “looked” like a man but was actually God.
👍
 
God also transformed Himself into a human person, yet you couldn’t “tell” that He was Divine just by looking at Him. Jesus Christ was fully God, yet there was no way to detect His Divine nature, touching him, looking at him, even if a person could have examined his flesh under a microscope He would have shown to be only a human being.
But Jesus is truly a human being! Hence the analogy fails.

I myself cannot see what is so problematic about “consubstantiation,” which would fit more appropriately with the Christological analogy you invoke. (Yes, I know the argument that adoring Christ in the Eucharist would be idolatrous if the substance of bread and wine remained, but I don’t buy it.) However, by the same token I have no problems with transubstantiation as taught by Aquinas (some of the ways Catholics talk about it do bother me quite a bit). I can’t get excited about it either way.

In response to the OP: I don’t think the Catholic position implies that matter is an illusion. The matter is really there. The accidents are also real. But it does imply a more “spiritual” or “realist” (in the medieval sense) view of reality than modern people are comfortable with.
Much of what we believe has been passed down directly from the Apostles. If you like, I can research the early church fathers and find where in the early church going back to the Apostles, and the 100-200 years after writings where it was clear that they believed and taught what the Eucharist was.
Oh please no. Please. Anyone who has been around these discussions for a while has seen the same canned list of patristic citations a thousand times. Please spare us.

Even the fourth-century Fathers, who are the first to affirm something that sounds very much like transubstantiation (as opposed to more general language about the bread and wine truly being the Body and Blood, which you do indeed find from very early times, and of course in the NT itself) use language like “the bread and wine are no longer common bread and wine.” The idea that they aren’t bread and wine at all is later, and is i think a rather questionable one. But as I said I just can’t see that it’s a big deal either way.

Edwin
 
No; Christ is present sacramentally, not physically. What’s physically present is what can be sensed – that is, the accidents of bread and wine.
Thank you for bringing this up.

Christ is really present. It is called the real presence because Christ is really there.

What it is not called is physical presence. No theologian will ever refer to the physical presence of Christ. Christ is present in the physical world but Christ is not physically present. If Christ were physically present then there would be a 180 lb Jewish guy lying on the altar.

It is the real presence, not the physical presence. The entire substance of his body and blood are present sacramentally but not physically. It is a subtle distinction.

I choose not to linger on this topic for too long. Thinking about it is like staring at the sun. It doesn’t do any good and can do much harm. The important thing to remember is that it is Jesus. It is The Lord.

-Tim-
 
No; Christ is present sacramentally, not physically. What’s physically present is what can be sensed – that is, the accidents of bread and wine.
But this is because what we mean by physical presence invariably refers to the accidents of a thing, not the substance of a thing.

You think I am physically present if you can perceive me with your senses. But what you perceive is only sense perceptions, not my actual presence.

So, IF we define “physical” presence by the accidents we can perceive, then we can say Christ is not “physically” present—because we do not perceive his accidents. Yet, he is really all there: his entire body, his blood, his humanity, his divinity. Nothing is missing. He is not just a spiritual presence. It’s just that we perceive only the accidents of bread and wine, and not the accidents of Jesus.
 
But this is because what we mean by physical presence invariably refers to the accidents of a thing, not the substance of a thing.
This is precisely the point. And, the accidents present in the Eucharist are the accidents of bread and wine. Therefore, there is no physical presence of Christ in the Eucharist. A Real Presence; a sacramental presence; but not a physical presence.
So, IF we define “physical” presence by the accidents we can perceive
How in the world else would we define physical presence, as opposed to substance? :confused:
Yet, he is really all there: his entire body, his blood, his humanity, his divinity.
Yes; He is sacramentally and substantially present. No argument there.
He is not just a spiritual presence.
That’s not what I’m claiming.
It’s just that we perceive only the accidents of bread and wine, and not the accidents of Jesus.
Are you claiming that the accidents of Christ are present in the Eucharist? On what basis?
 
This is precisely the point. And, the accidents present in the Eucharist are the accidents of bread and wine. Therefore, there is no physical presence of Christ in the Eucharist. A Real Presence; a sacramental presence; but not a physical presence.

How in the world else would we define physical presence, as opposed to substance? :confused:

Yes; He is sacramentally and substantially present. No argument there.

That’s not what I’m claiming.

Are you claiming that the accidents of Christ are present in the Eucharist? On what basis?
No. I agree that the accidents of Christ are not present in the Eucharist. I would also note that even though the accidents of bread and wine are present, they do not inhere in any substance. They do not inhere in Christ. But Christ is corporeally present. That is part of the doctrine. One might ask whether his head and arms and legs are present, and the answer is yes, they are. He is wholly present body and soul. But his accidents are not present to us.
 
But Christ is corporeally present. That is part of the doctrine.
Agreed; corporeally – but not physically.
One might ask whether his head and arms and legs are present, and the answer is yes, they are.
No – this doesn’t seem right. Saying it that way seems to make the case for Christ’s presence in the Eucharist being composite (arms and legs and head and feet). However, what’s present is His substance – and that would seem to be simple, not composite.
 
Well, God is a simple substance, but human beings are not, being composed of body and soul. And Jesus is present in the Eucharist fully, including bodily. Corporeally means bodily. So Jesus is bodily present by definition. But his mode of presence is not the same as a body in a place, because place and location are accidents.

Here is what Fr.John Hardon says:

“We are to believe that the Eucharist is Jesus Christ - simply, without qualification. It is God become man in the fullness of His divine nature, in the fullness of His human nature, in the fullness of His body and soul, in the fullness of everything that makes Jesus Jesus. He is in the Eucharist with His human mind and will united with the Divinity, with His hands and feet, His face and features, with His eyes and lips and ears and nostrils, with His affections and emotions and, with emphasis, with His living, pulsating, physical Sacred Heart. That is what our Catholic Faith demands of us that we believe. If we believe this, we are Catholic. If we do not, we are not, no matter what people may think we are.” --Father John A. Hardon S.J.

This is from the encyclical Mysterium Fidei:

“For what now lies beneath the aforementioned species is not what was there before, but something completely different; and not just in the estimation of Church belief but in reality, since once the substance or nature of the bread and wine has been changed into the body and blood of Christ, nothing remains of the bread and the wine except for the species—beneath which Christ is present whole and entire in His physical “reality,” corporeally present, although not in the manner in which bodies are in a place.”

w2.vatican.va/content/paul-vi/en/encyclicals/documents/hf_p-vi_enc_03091965_mysterium.html
 
In a period of questioning, I asked my Byzantine priest a similar question. His response was along the lines of, “consecration does not change the bread and wine into something they are not, but reveals them to be what they truly are.”

Sometimes, the mystical is just mystical. We know that it is truly Christ’s Body and Blood, but in our attempts to explain the how’s and why’s and wherefore’s, we forget that our experience of the Holy Mysteries is ineffable, and defies even our best attempts at conceptualization. If I remember correctly, my conversation with my dear priest included something along the lines of ‘our experience of the divine eludes definition by definition’.

I’m comfortable leaving the specifics within the realm of the mystical, mostly because I have experienced the beauty of Christ’s presence in the Holy Mysteries, in my own feeble ways. My God grant us all an increasing awareness of His Presence…Glory to God for All Things!
 
No; Christ is present sacramentally, not physically. What’s physically present is what can be sensed – that is, the accidents of bread and wine.
Sorry, you are wrong. A physical body may exist in this world or it may be glorified. Christ’s presence in the Eucharist is a glorified physical body. And it is indeed present after the manner of the sacrament. Christ rose from the dead in his glorified body. Was it a ghost? No, it was a physical body. Thomas put his finger in his side, he ate and drank with his disciples, he talked with them. Yet it was a glorified body, not limited by the restrictions of finite matter or time. Christ cannot be sensed because that would make the Sacrament impossible. He chose to be invisible for that reason among others. Why not read the Summa Theologiae, Part 3, on Christ’s presence.

Linus2nd.
 
Sorry, you are wrong. A physical body may exist in this world or it may be glorified. Christ’s presence in the Eucharist is a glorified physical body. And it is indeed present after the manner of the sacrament. Christ rose from the dead in his glorified body. Was it a ghost? No, it was a physical body. Thomas put his finger in his side, he ate and drank with his disciples, he talked with them. Yet it was a glorified body, not limited by the restrictions of finite matter or time. Christ cannot be sensed because that would make the Sacrament impossible. He chose to be invisible for that reason among others. Why not read the Summa Theologiae, Part 3, on Christ’s presence.
With due respect to the Angelic Doctor, :twocents: the reason I prefer to describe Our Lord’s presence in the Blessed Sacrament as *Real *rather than *physical *is because the latter description is incomplete and leaves one open to error. In the same way, I would prefer not to describe Our Lord’s presence as merely *spiritual *(nor merely sanguinal, nor merely divine). I cannot deny any of those modes – Our Lord is present body, blood, soul, and divinity – But to express any one of them at the exclusion of the others is incomplete and leaves one open to error.

The Church describes Our Lord’s presence as Real, and I shall stand with her.

:twocents:
tee
 
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