Is an act, a repeated act that is not without understanding, of taking communion in the Episcopal or the Anglican Church a âturning awayâ from Catholic Eucharist?
I am looking at CCC 1398-1401, particularly 1400. âEucharistic intercommunion with these communities * is not possible.â Not possible means what in this context? It is possible to take communion, it is just that the act is not permitted by the Catholic Church? CCC1400 gives a reason: because the mystery has not been preserved: i.e., the reality is not complete.
Consider CCC 1356 and 1357. This has duration of historical practice that includes apostolic succession and a declaration of the real presence of Christ based on the authority of the words/command of Christ at the Last Supper to his disciples who were granted the powers of Christâs priests and further by the power of the Holy Spirit to effect by a mystery, upon consecration, the real presence of Christ in the bread and wine.
Yet, the species of bread and wine remain molecular wheat and water and not molecularly human cells. Transubstantiation (across) means a complete change of substance. So, for the Anglican Church, where the belief is in consubstantiation (with), which means the real presence of Christ along with the species is present, the reality is not complete, I assume because it would be more toward perfect to have only substance, more simple, than two substances present simultaneously. The effect of this is that the host no longer has the real presence after the faithful have finished partaking. Whereas, the Catholic remainder host continues to be the real presence of Christ when returned to the Tabernacle.
The second loss of reality in the Anglican Church is the consecration, which is not valid, due to the break in Apostolic succession of bishops from Peter, a point that Anglicans dispute, and a point by contrast that does continue to ensure validity of consecration in the Eastern Church.
I would like to understand â Why the distinction between âtransâ (across) and âconâ (with) is fatal to the warrant; what evidence supports each side of the argument on Apostolic succession or lack of it; and in the broader context not only of ecumenism but also of personal faith in God, why God would invalidate a sincerely held partaking of Eucharist qua communion with Christ by a member of either Anglican or Catholic Churches and why such an act is grounds for excommunication by the Catholic Church, when it may not be by God? There is something in here that I donât yet âgetâ.*