R
Reuben_J
Guest
Of course Aquinas was right. For it is to be a miracle, all it needs is the changing of the host to flesh. That is a miracle by itself as it is impossible for the bread to change into flesh.I don’t know if you saw the quoted bit in Post #84 (which I found after my first post), but apparently Aquinas had philosophical reasons for thinking that the accidentals of human flesh observed in a Eucharistic miracle were not the actual flesh of Jesus. See Article 8 for the context for the quoted bit. Granted, this is just one opinion, but I doubt many would challenge Aquinas on the subject of transubstantiation.
We seem to argue much about nothing about what a miracle should be. Those are only our presumption and rationale. God obviously has his own way. We try to guess the purpose of the particular miracle. We will not make any headway in that too.
Miracle is for the faithful concerned. It is not the most important thing. Jesus had done the most important part. Sometimes miracle does increase the faith of the believers; sometimes it open the mind of the unbelievers for them to notice and maybe open their own faith. Other than that it may be just a passing thing that does not affect anybody. Because of that, it can be said that miracle is for those who believe because these are the people who can really appreciate it. No motive should be attributed to a miracle unnecessarily.