Hi,
Transubstantiation is nothing more than what Christ said.
What He said to the crowd was, “unless you eat my flesh and drink my blood…”
What He said to his apostles was, "Take and eat all of you for this is my flesh…
That is transubstantiation, THE change.
St. Paul says when we receive, it is a “participation” in the Body and Blood.
I haven’t seen any church in our diocese that dosen’t offer both the Body and Blood at
Mass.
Before Vatican II, no church offered the Precious Blood.
Isn’t Christ really fully present in the Body? Or is He only half present? If He isn’t all
present, how could it really be Christ? Are we saying we must receive the both
halves to receive the real Christ? So I am never receiving Christ since I partake of one
and then the other and never together? Did’nt Jesus at the last supper give one to the
apostles. Then after they received, He gave the other to them? Seperately.
After Mass is over, the priest has the remaining consecrated bread, the Eucharist, put away in the golden tabernacle in the church. These consecrated Hosts, the Eucharist, are carried to the sick in their homes. The sick are not given the Precious Blood,
but only the Precious Body. Where Christ is, He is there wholly, in Person.
Would the sick not be receiving Christ because only His Body is given to them?
But where there is flesh there is also blood.
For example, there is a story of a man in need to borrow money.
He went to his friends and they refused.
He then went to his enemy and he agreed on one condition.
That if he did not repay the debt on time, that he was entitled to anything
he requested of him. It was agreed.
Needless to say, the man did not have the money to fulfill the debt on time.
The enemy said, then what I want is a pound of your flesh.
The debtor told him he could have a pound of his flesh,
but that he could not have one drop of his blood.
“bread of heave feed me till I want no more” hymn