J
JimG
Guest
Jesus instituted the Eucharist as a way to continue the presence and effects of his sacrifice within His Church. The method of doing that is in the double consecration, as given in the institution narratives of the Gospels and continued in the sacrifice of the Mass.
Thus, in every Mass, there must be a double consecration of the bread and the wine, and the priest must consume both consecrated species. (Remember, the Apostles were also priests–their successors continue what they did. The words of institution were addressed to his priests, not the laity.)
The method of consecration and reception by the priest is a separate matter from the question of whether Jesus is fully present under each species. It is also a separate matter from whether the laity must receive under both species.
At the consecration of the elements, the living Jesus becomes present, not a dead Jesus. Even though the bread is changed into his body and the wine into his blood, the underlying reality is that where is body is, so is his blood; and where his blood is, so is his body, because he is one living being. Theologians call this a “presence by concomitance.”
The double consecration symbolizes his death on the cross–the separation of his body and blood. But the continuing sacrifice is of the living Jesus, one body, united. Consequently, it is impossible to receive only a “partial” Jesus by receiving only under one species.
The priest satisfies the requirements of the Last Supper by consecrating and consuming under both species.
As to germs, as far as I know, nobody ever got sick from receiving the Eucharist, but that does not make it impossible. The appearances of bread and the wine retain all of what we would call their “physical” properties after consecration. Transubstantiation does not change any of the ‘physical’ properties of the appearances of bread and wine. (Otherwise they would not appear to us as bread and wine.)
Some parishes have as many as 10,000 or more people receiving communion in a weekend. Simple logistics often are the reason for receiving only under one species.
It is also worth mentioning that, from its very earliest days, the Church customarily carried the Eucharist to the sick under the species of bread only. It would not have done that if reception of only one species were considered inadequate.
Thus, in every Mass, there must be a double consecration of the bread and the wine, and the priest must consume both consecrated species. (Remember, the Apostles were also priests–their successors continue what they did. The words of institution were addressed to his priests, not the laity.)
The method of consecration and reception by the priest is a separate matter from the question of whether Jesus is fully present under each species. It is also a separate matter from whether the laity must receive under both species.
At the consecration of the elements, the living Jesus becomes present, not a dead Jesus. Even though the bread is changed into his body and the wine into his blood, the underlying reality is that where is body is, so is his blood; and where his blood is, so is his body, because he is one living being. Theologians call this a “presence by concomitance.”
The double consecration symbolizes his death on the cross–the separation of his body and blood. But the continuing sacrifice is of the living Jesus, one body, united. Consequently, it is impossible to receive only a “partial” Jesus by receiving only under one species.
The priest satisfies the requirements of the Last Supper by consecrating and consuming under both species.
As to germs, as far as I know, nobody ever got sick from receiving the Eucharist, but that does not make it impossible. The appearances of bread and the wine retain all of what we would call their “physical” properties after consecration. Transubstantiation does not change any of the ‘physical’ properties of the appearances of bread and wine. (Otherwise they would not appear to us as bread and wine.)
Some parishes have as many as 10,000 or more people receiving communion in a weekend. Simple logistics often are the reason for receiving only under one species.
It is also worth mentioning that, from its very earliest days, the Church customarily carried the Eucharist to the sick under the species of bread only. It would not have done that if reception of only one species were considered inadequate.