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catholic1012015
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What’s superstitious about receiving the Eucharist? We’re talking about transubstantiation, God is God, and the Eucharist is the Body Blood Soul and Divinity of Jesus Christ.
Except that nobody said that. If you look at what the post is responding to, you’ll easily see that the reference is to the “it depends on a person’s disposition at the time of receiving” theory of getting sick. THAT does smack of superstition.What’s superstitious about receiving the Eucharist?
And nobody said our disposition doesn’t matter, either.Why wouldn’t our disposition matter to God when we receive Him?
Do you think the Church around the world was wrong when they cancelled Masses during the Spanish flu in 1918? That was before Vatican II and in a time of increased faith and Mass attendance.Not sure what’s going in here but I didn’t say anything was magical. And God is sovereign, He has the power to heal. He also can allow us to choose to do the wrong thing and we would have to ask for forgiveness for that.
As far as I am aware there is no record as to how Our Lord distributed Communion at the Last Supper. Knowing, as he did, that it was no longer unleavened bread but the body, blood, soul and divinity of Himself suggests to me, at least, that its changed nature would be emphasised by by a changed way of distributing it. Of course we all must all wait to find out the answer.However, let’s ask ourselves, how did Jesus give His body at the last supper. I’m pretty sure it wouldn’t have been on the tongue.
Do you understand that the substance has changed only, not the form? It does not become muscle cells and red blood cells, along with everything that can be transmitted. Sure, God does miracles, but Catholics do not handle snakes and presume on God’'s power to protect us. What the Church does is take reasonable precautions to avoid disease transmission and not presume of God.What’s superstitious about receiving the Eucharist? We’re talking about transubstantiation, God is God, and the Eucharist is the Body Blood Soul and Divinity of Jesus Christ.