J
JimG
Guest
The quote is pretty self explanatory. As has been said before, it simply means that Jesus is completely and totally present, body and soul, including all parts of his body, as well has his divinity. I think that the distinction between Christ’s earthly body and his glorified body is not as meaningful for the Eucharist as some seem to make it.ronconte.wordpress.com/2011/05/14/is-jesus-christ-physically-present-in-the-eucharist/
What does THIS mean?
<<<<<<<<<< Is Christ’s presence physical? The answer depends on what we mean by the word physical.
Human nature, including the human nature of Christ, has a physical part, the body (or, as we say, body and blood), and a spiritual part, the soul. It would be a heresy to claim that Christ is present in the Eucharist without the physical part of His human nature, or without the spiritual part of His human nature, or without His Divine Nature. So He is physically present in the sense that the physical part of His human nature is wholly present.
However, the physical part of His human nature is glorified. The Eucharist includes both His Divine Nature and His glorified human nature: a glorified soul and a glorified body. Concerning the body of Christ: we do not eat a piece of literal flesh, nor drink a cup of literal blood. We consume the whole Christ, with His glorified human nature united to His Divine Nature.
But the glorified body is still physical; it has not been changed into something spiritual, as if the human nature of Christ would then consist of a spiritual part, the soul, and another spiritual part, like a second soul.>>>>>>>>
We too will have a glorified body in heaven. But it will still be a body, with all its parts. It is Jesus’ body, with all its parts, along with his blood, soul, and divinity–his totality in his human and divine natures, which is present in the Eucharist. The primary difference is that we do not perceive his accidents or appearances, because all we perceive are the accidents or appearances of bread and wine.