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Archimedeez
Guest
This is a not-so-elegant way of saying: “This comment ends the argument and I’m going to ignore it because I don’t like it.”Thats a extended response, which I see as saying.
“as a learned person I can see nothing happens to the bread and can measure nothing happening, but it obviously does happen , because thats what the church says, we cant explain it and we don’t have to”
Vikvak01 answered you in a very logical, reasonable, and even kind fashion. The answer addressed your question. But you’re still talking because you’re trying to tie the people on the forum in knots with the idea of “excreting Jesus.” The idea is abhorrent, and you’re banking on that to stir people up.
I just wanted to let you know that some of us see what you’re doing before I show you for the forum troll that you are.
The molecules don’t change they are simply changed whilst unchanged.
If you were to chemically analyze the consecrated host, it would be identical in every way to bread…but its actually Jesus.
We know it’s Jesus not because we can see or feel or even chemically prove it is, but we know because the Apostles told us Jesus told us “this is my blood”.
If this was all fine, you’d have stopped by now. It’s been pointed out already that transubstantiation isn’t a chemical process. You’re agreeing with that here. I’m going to remind you of said agreement in a moment.Thats all fine.
You’ve entirely missed the point here. The host, like any other food, may eventually exit the body. We’ve already agreed that the conversion from simple cracker to divinely infused host doesn’t confuse or baffle us. But somehow you’re getting hung up on the fact that not all of the host material remains permanently in the body.But based on the knowledge that the flesh is real and being digested, (and a lot of catholics are saying they are absorbing the host),what is the process that stops the host from exiting the body.
Help me here.
Lets use tears as a example.
Any of the foods thus far discussed is chemically broken down into its constituent macromolecules prior to absorption by the body. As per CCC 1377, the species (presumably the standard composition of bread or wine) must subsist for the presence of Christ to persist. At the point of chemical breakdown, the Eucharistic presence of Christ ceases to endure. The point of chemical breakdown is no later than the small intestine for any food substance. There’s no such thing as a “bread molecule.” You don’t have wine in your tears.The receiver intakes the wine. The wine becomes blood. The wine is wine only in its chemical composition and atomic structure. The polymers are absorbed, (filling the person with the holy spirit-as it is said) and a certain proportion of the real presence will end up in the tear ducts. A catholic crying soon after communion, perhaps with joy over her love of Jesus, will be expelling the host from the body in her tears.
I just gave you the answer, and a citation. Enjoy.To avoid this,the presence has to leave the body or avoid contact with the body.Literally vanishing completely at the picosecond of digestion.I still cant find from the church,anything at all about how this process occurs or even if it does occur. Most answers seem to be accepting absorption but shuddering even at the thought of excretion
It’s been considered. And answered. Read the Catechism.Speculating here, but the reason may be that to even consider this question is heresy. So it’s not considered.
The people in the medieval times were, it would appear, significantly more clever than you give them credit for. The explanation given in the Catechism is reasonable and valid, and has little trouble holding up against onslaughts by forum trolls.Apparently someone in medieval times made a ruling on it, but what that was or what evidences they used are elusive. They’re also MEDIEVAL! Without the benefits of modern biology, people in antiquity simply put food into their mouths and didn’t know anything about how it interacts with the body. Well, OK they didn’t know.but we do know now, and there at least ought to be some theory on how it happens.