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HolySpirit
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There are plenty of CA articles about this. It is a frequent topic. If you want the official Catholic answer to this question, do a quick search.
The RC teaching is one of Real Presence, i.e. after consecration Christ is really present in the bread and wine. That’s not quite the same as saying that the the bread has literally become His flesh or the wine literally His blood. What is changed by consecration is the “substance” of the bread and wine, but not their “species”, i.e. not their physical characteristics.How can we know the flesh and blood is literal compared to perhaps other symbolic verses?
Literal here means the bread and the wine have become the Body and Blood of Jesus. That’s what it means by literal. They are not symbolic of his Body and Blood but his true Body and true Blood.I’m not arguing against Jesus. I just don’t think that “partaking of the flesh and blood” can be taken as literal. Nobody ever ate bread and threw up muscle tissue; no coroner ever pulled out human tissue from a stomach so far as I’ve ever heard.
To me, that’s obviously because bread is bread, and it is not muscle tissue. If you want to say, “We’re talking about a spiritual nourishment,” or “Jesus meant that ALL nourishment is a gift of the Lord, and that all things in the world of of Him and His grace,” then okay.