P
praxis62
Guest
Dear Nun: Thanks again for the reply. I am new to this whole blog, thread, concept, and I hope I am not making a mess of it. To be in communion means that there is agreement on the doctrinal issues, and of course, the primacy of Peter. There are Orthodox Churches that are in communion with Rome,(sometimes referred to as Uniate Churches, although this term is looked down on today by many theologians) some of them were present at the recent conclave and liturgies that celebrated B16. Most are not. The “not” group would include the Russian and Greek Orthodox Church, probably the majority of Orthodox Churches are in this catagory. We pray that will change some day, the sooner the better.
Different religious traditions can use the same terminology but mean very different things by it. As far a Lutherans go, they do not share the same concept of "Real Presence’ that the Catholic Church has. The Lutheran understanding sees real presence (I use sm caps to distinguish between the two, not as a gesture of triumphalism) as being something that is in effect while the congregation is gathered together worshipping, and the Eucharistic liturgy is being celebrated. After the liturgy is over the real presence “dissapates” for lack of a better word. When I was in the ELCA we would just pour any remaining wine out into a flower bed behind the Church, and toss the bread to the birds. Seen from their point of view it makes perfect sense. Martin Luther liked the term “consubstantiantion” to describe his understanding of the presence of Christ. The Catholic understanding is that the “Real Presence” in the the host, is “truly and substantially” the Body of Christ, and it remains so. That why the Catholic Church has elaborate tabernacles, Eucharistic Adoration, Expositon, Euchatistic Processions, etc. For us, God is not just passing through, transitory. (I’m not trying to be crude, I don’t know how else to say it.) The Methodist Church also has a doctrine of real presence, but it is very different from ours. “Transubstantiation” is the word that is generally used by Catholic theologians to “describe”-desiginate might be better (as if anyone could describe a mystery like that) the Catholic understanding. The substance (the inner reality of the bread and wine) has changed, but not the accidents, i.e., the appearances. The Orthodox Church doesn’t use the “T” word, their understanding is the same as ours, but as already stated, they do not agree with us on the issue of Papal Primacy, and therefore are not in communion with the Catholic Church, except for certain Orthodox Churches already mentioned.
I don’t think youve muddled your thread at all. These are very complicated questions and almost any attempt to explain them is going to fall short somewhere.
I will keep you in my prayers while you continue your journey into the Church, even after for that matter.
God Bless You
Prax
Different religious traditions can use the same terminology but mean very different things by it. As far a Lutherans go, they do not share the same concept of "Real Presence’ that the Catholic Church has. The Lutheran understanding sees real presence (I use sm caps to distinguish between the two, not as a gesture of triumphalism) as being something that is in effect while the congregation is gathered together worshipping, and the Eucharistic liturgy is being celebrated. After the liturgy is over the real presence “dissapates” for lack of a better word. When I was in the ELCA we would just pour any remaining wine out into a flower bed behind the Church, and toss the bread to the birds. Seen from their point of view it makes perfect sense. Martin Luther liked the term “consubstantiantion” to describe his understanding of the presence of Christ. The Catholic understanding is that the “Real Presence” in the the host, is “truly and substantially” the Body of Christ, and it remains so. That why the Catholic Church has elaborate tabernacles, Eucharistic Adoration, Expositon, Euchatistic Processions, etc. For us, God is not just passing through, transitory. (I’m not trying to be crude, I don’t know how else to say it.) The Methodist Church also has a doctrine of real presence, but it is very different from ours. “Transubstantiation” is the word that is generally used by Catholic theologians to “describe”-desiginate might be better (as if anyone could describe a mystery like that) the Catholic understanding. The substance (the inner reality of the bread and wine) has changed, but not the accidents, i.e., the appearances. The Orthodox Church doesn’t use the “T” word, their understanding is the same as ours, but as already stated, they do not agree with us on the issue of Papal Primacy, and therefore are not in communion with the Catholic Church, except for certain Orthodox Churches already mentioned.
I don’t think youve muddled your thread at all. These are very complicated questions and almost any attempt to explain them is going to fall short somewhere.
I will keep you in my prayers while you continue your journey into the Church, even after for that matter.
God Bless You
Prax