Ok. That’s one use of the term. However, the appropriate use in this context is (b).
:to induct (a person) into a permanent office with a religious rite;
especially:to ordain to the office of bishop
a*:to make or declare sacred;especially*:to devote irrevocably to the worship of God by a solemn ceremony
b*:to effect the liturgical transubstantiation of (eucharistic bread and wine)
c*:to devote to a purpose with or as if with deep solemnity or dedication
I’m saying they died physically and did not have His Eucharist or the Gospel which must be accepted before receiving.
Jesus’ body IS the switch! His body and blood is the Spirit incarnate. I’m not sure you get this, even though you say you believe it. Because then you reduce His flesh to nothing and only worship His Spirit. This is dangerously departing Christianity altogether! He and the Spirit are one. The Spirit, like the dew fall, sends down the Body and Blood of Jesus at the words of the priest. They are actually His words from the Last Supper. We no longer regard Him in the flesh, but as Spiritual food. Yet He really has a body and it passes through doors, appears and vanishes and levitate out of sight. All these happen after His resurrection. He is showing us that His body is one and the same with the Spirit.
Well I’m not sure why you keep trying to make a point that doesn’t mean much. There is no way for us to know who has eternal life, but before Christ, they had to await His coming to those who held to the promise through the old covenant.