S
SpeakKindly
Guest
I’ve been trying to wrap my head around understanding what really goes on with the Eucharist.
Would it be correct to think about it like this:
While a lot of people say that the bread and wine become the body, blood, soul and divinity of Jesus (which I believe, but I’m not sure how to understand it), it can also be said in this way:
That Jesus is seated at the right hand of the Father in Heaven, with His resurrected human body, and during the Eucharist He takes on a different form than the human body we know Him by physically.
Therefore the bread and wine are not possessed by Jesus, as if He is contained or trapped in the materials, but that they are His physical form in which He appears in our time.
Just as Jesus appeared to one of the (I forget which one) Marys in a form that must have looked different from what she knew before His death, because the Scriptures say He was mistaken for the gardener.
So if Jesus can take on a different form, like a gardener, or have His body glow at the transfiguration, then surely He takes on the form of bread and wine, which may be for our own psychological benefits to eat and drink without being grossed out.
Or am I meant to view it as if my senses are lying and the appearance of bread and wine are an illusion or something?
Would it be correct to think about it like this:
While a lot of people say that the bread and wine become the body, blood, soul and divinity of Jesus (which I believe, but I’m not sure how to understand it), it can also be said in this way:
That Jesus is seated at the right hand of the Father in Heaven, with His resurrected human body, and during the Eucharist He takes on a different form than the human body we know Him by physically.
Therefore the bread and wine are not possessed by Jesus, as if He is contained or trapped in the materials, but that they are His physical form in which He appears in our time.
Just as Jesus appeared to one of the (I forget which one) Marys in a form that must have looked different from what she knew before His death, because the Scriptures say He was mistaken for the gardener.
So if Jesus can take on a different form, like a gardener, or have His body glow at the transfiguration, then surely He takes on the form of bread and wine, which may be for our own psychological benefits to eat and drink without being grossed out.
Or am I meant to view it as if my senses are lying and the appearance of bread and wine are an illusion or something?