D
Duane1966
Guest
Duane1966;14346357:
I understand all this, but is Jesus physically present in the Euchrarist in a manner that we do not understand? If yes, then what I said is true,We bow to the altar, which is veneration, because what happens there, We genuflect to the tabernacle, because Christ is physically present there. We do not worship the altar.
QUOTE]
Sorry, Duane, be careful not to confuse people with inexact language.
The Real Presence is not physical. If the Blessed Sacrament species of bread decays, as all physical things do, would you say that Jesus had decayed? The ‘accidents’ - taste, appearance, texture, volume in space - are physical, but Jesus is the substance, not the accidents.
In the Catechism, the Real Presence is described thus (para 1374): ‘The mode of Christ’s presence under the Eucharistic species is unique…it is presence in the fullest sense, that is to say, it is a substantial presence by which Christ, God and man, makes himself wholly and entirely present’.
And see para 1381. ''That in this sacrament at the true Body of Christ and his true Blood is something that ‘cannot be comprehended by the senses,’ says St. Thomas, ‘but only by faith, which relies on divine authority’.
The physical is what is perceived by the senses - sight, touch and taste - remember. But we are told that the Real Presence cannot be comprehended by the senses. It is unique, of a different order to what we knew before - in short, Jesus is present really, truly and sacramentally.
From Pope Paul VI:
although not in the same way that bodies are present in a given place.The Physical Reality of Christ’s Body and Blood in the EucharistTo avoid misunderstanding this sacramental presence which surpasses the laws of nature and constitutes the greatest miracle of its kind we must listen with docility to the voice of the teaching and praying Church. This voice, which constantly echoes the voice of Christ, assures us that the way Christ is made present in this Sacrament is none other than by the change of the whole substance of the bread into His Body, and of the whole substance of the wine into His Blood, and that this unique and truly wonderful change the Catholic Church rightly calls transubstantiation. As a result of transubstantiation, the species of bread and wine undoubtedly take on a new meaning and a new finality, for they no longer remain ordinary bread and ordinary wine, but become the sign of something sacred, the sign of a spiritual food. However, the reason they take on this new significance and this new finality is simply because they contain a new “reality” which we may justly term ontological. Not that there lies under those species what was already there before, but something quite different; and that not only because of the faith of the Church, but in objective reality, since after the change of the substance or nature of the bread and wine into the Body and Blood of Christ, nothing remains of the bread and wine but the appearances, under which Christ, whole and entire, in His physical “reality” is bodily present,
– Pope Paul VI in Mysterium Fidei [emphasis added]
[Mysterium Fidei can be accessed on the Adoremus web site]