J
Jonatron5
Guest
Firstly I want to say that this may sound flippant. But I do honestly not intend it that way. I mean it as a legitimate question.
I was never raised in a Catholic family have never been to a Catholic church so all I have to go on is what I have picked up, so please be patient if my question is based on misconception.
All that being said. I have recently learned that many Catholics believe in the litteral pressence of Jesus Christ in the Eucharist. As in the bread is physically transformed into Jesus’s flesh.
Being raised Protestant I always assumed most people interpreted his speech at the last supper as being metaphorical and not literal.
I could not square this mentally and one question kept popping up in my head.
“if the bread is transformed into Jesus’s flesh, why does it taste like bread?”
Again I do not mean this to offend anyone or to challenge their beliefs, it’s just where I got stuck in my own head, and would welcome some (name removed by moderator)ut from people who know more than I
I was never raised in a Catholic family have never been to a Catholic church so all I have to go on is what I have picked up, so please be patient if my question is based on misconception.
All that being said. I have recently learned that many Catholics believe in the litteral pressence of Jesus Christ in the Eucharist. As in the bread is physically transformed into Jesus’s flesh.
Being raised Protestant I always assumed most people interpreted his speech at the last supper as being metaphorical and not literal.
I could not square this mentally and one question kept popping up in my head.
“if the bread is transformed into Jesus’s flesh, why does it taste like bread?”
Again I do not mean this to offend anyone or to challenge their beliefs, it’s just where I got stuck in my own head, and would welcome some (name removed by moderator)ut from people who know more than I
Last edited: