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FrKimel
Guest
The question of validity is irrelevant to the question "Do Orthodox and Catholics agree on the real presence? or “Do Orthodox and Lutherans agree on the eucharistic transformation?” (and other questions like this). Nor does validity in Catholic theology function as you seem to think. If it did, there would be no ecumenical discussions between the Catholic Church and other churches on the Eucharist: see, e.g., the Lutheran/Catholic agreement on the Holy Eucharist and the Anglican/Catholic agreement on the Eucharist. These agreements may not enjoy authoritative status in the Catholic Church (and indeed have been criticized on various points by the CDF), but they do tell us something about how Catholic theology interprets and applies the dogmatic teaching of the Catholic Church.I find a conflict of interest between Orthodox and Lutheran theology of sacraments. How these two can qualify as both being in agreement as to the same when Lutherans sacraments are invalid and Orthodox are valid sacraments
Actually, I didn’t invent the term. Sir Anthony Kenny did.You are the first poster to invent the term “scholastic theory”? Please confirm what a scholastic theory is as compared to the Eucharist?
Kenny makes a critical point germane to the present discussion. If he is right, the scholastic theologians who began to employ the substance/accident distinction to speak of the eucharistic change did not understand “substance” as the underlying, invisible reality of a thing; substance, rather, simply is that individual thing. Hence to say that the substance of the bread and wine has been changed into the substance of the Body and Blood of Christ is synonymous to saying that the bread and wine have become the Body and Blood.
This is of course true. Who is saying otherwise? But the Catholic Church is well aware that its dogmas and doctrines need to be interpreted; hence the high respect it accords its theologians.Theology, by anyone university or theological opinions do not dictate nor can it discount what is believed by the faithful these past 2000 years in the true presence of the Eucharist in the Catholic Church.
I presented the citations from the Orthodox/Lutheran dialogue to provide an example of how Orthodox theologians presently approach the question of the eucharistic change. The OP wanted to know if Orthodox and Catholics agree on the real presence.Your commentary has only replaced Transubstantiation with a vast number of terms and definitions that do not contradict with what has transubstantiated from bread and wine into the body, blood, soul and divinity of Jesus Christ.
When Catholics read the Lutheran/Orthodox “agreement” (which only represents the views of the respective participants), do they see significant disagreement between the Orthodox and Catholic Church? I suspect that very traditional Catholics might have some real problems with the Orthodox statement but that most contemporary Catholic theologians would not.
The Orthodox Church has her own ways of speaking about the Eucharist. She is not obligated to employ Latin terminology or conceptuality.What is the purpose to compete with theology and terms to define what is already believed “A Change of substance has taken place” either by Transubstantiation, or by the many vast terms, theology and definitions that try and get your interpretation to arrive at what Transubstantiation simply arrives at " A change has occurred".
I know enough about Catholic eucharistic theology to know that Catholic theologians are happy to use all sorts of terms, in addition to “transubstantiation,” to speak of the eucharistic change. Moreover, they are not content to remain within the scholastic categories of St Thomas Aquinas to interpret transubstantiation. A good example of such reflection may be found in the pre-papal days of Joseph Ratzinger:Transmutation is never a Catholic teaching in the Eucharist. The definition is Transubstantiation.
This is a different way of thinking about transubstantiation than is found in Aquinas, for example. Ratzinger appeals to the notion of incorporation into the glorified body of Christ to explain the eucharistic transformation. Orthodox theologians, who might otherwise by unsympathetic to Transubstantiation, might well find themselves nodding in agreement.What has always mattered to the Church is that a real transformation takes place here. Something genuinely happens in the Eucharist. There is something new there that was not before. Knowing about a transformation is part of the most basic eucharistic faith. Therefore it cannot be the case that the Body of Christ comes to add itself to the bread, as if bread and Body were two similar things that could exist as two “substances,” in the same way, side by side. Whenever the Body of Christ, that is, the risen and bodily Christ, comes, he is greater than the bread, other, not of the same order. The transformation happens, which affects the gifts we bring by taking them up into a higher order and changes them, even if we cannot measure what happens. When material things are taken into our body as nourishment, or for that matter whenever any material becomes part of a living organism, it remains the same, and yet as part of a new whole it is itself changed. Something similar happens here. The Lord takes possession of the bread and the wine; he lifts them up, as it were, out of the setting of their normal existence into a new order; even if, from a purely physical point of view, they remain the same, they have become profoundly different. (God is Near Us [2001], pp. 85-86