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pjcsisabel
Guest
I somewhat understand that the way the communion hosts are made today in the Catholic Church—thin, white circular wafers—is mostly because of economic and practical reasons. Firstly, due to the large number of communicants in every mass, particularly for areas with a high number of Catholics, using a larger piece of bread using a greater amount of flour and water would be much more expensive compared to the very economical small wafers we use. Secondly, with the way the wafers are made—small, uniform, pre-cut, hard pieces of wafers—it lesses the chance of crumbs falling into the ground while it’s being given to the faithful, and also importantly, lessens the chances of the bread spoiling early since we do store the hosts for use in adoration or communion to the sick.
However, would it be possible that the bread was made in a slightly different way before? Probably even as early as the Middle Ages or around the Counter-Reformation? The only requirement by canon law is to use pure wheat and water and, based on that, you can actually produce a bread that actually looks like a bread, not a thin, white disc. I ask this as a sort of historical question since I saw a movie set in 16th century England which featured a priest giving communion and the bread he was using was very much like the wafers we are using now, which I thought was a kind of anachronism. I would imagine that the breads the Church used for communion hundreds of years ago may have looked a little different from the mass produced wafers we are accustomed to today, perhaps a little more brown and having a little more texture.
I also ask this as a sort of legal question. Based on what I’ve said, would it be actually licit to use bread that’s not made exactly like the white wafers we universally (I think) use today? I mean just as long as it’s made recently and from pure wheat and water it’s fine, right?
However, would it be possible that the bread was made in a slightly different way before? Probably even as early as the Middle Ages or around the Counter-Reformation? The only requirement by canon law is to use pure wheat and water and, based on that, you can actually produce a bread that actually looks like a bread, not a thin, white disc. I ask this as a sort of historical question since I saw a movie set in 16th century England which featured a priest giving communion and the bread he was using was very much like the wafers we are using now, which I thought was a kind of anachronism. I would imagine that the breads the Church used for communion hundreds of years ago may have looked a little different from the mass produced wafers we are accustomed to today, perhaps a little more brown and having a little more texture.
I also ask this as a sort of legal question. Based on what I’ve said, would it be actually licit to use bread that’s not made exactly like the white wafers we universally (I think) use today? I mean just as long as it’s made recently and from pure wheat and water it’s fine, right?