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ajcstr
Guest
Personally, I don’t like the term “transubstantiation”. You have to understand that the Church being around for so long has had to tweak and define beliefs out of practicality. For instance, is the bread no longer bread, does it return to bread at some point, can I do a DNA test on the bread after consecrated…etc, etc etc. The result is “transubstantiation”.Can someone be a Catholic if they disagree with transubstantiation and the intercession of saints?
I treat the bread and wine as the body and blood of my Lord when I receive it. I don’t get into the minutia that the Church had to get into from a practical standpoint. Now, If I believed that its just mumbo jumbo and the bread and wine remain bread and wine, I think that would be a problem because I would not be in communion when I received it and I would not be respecting it for what it is.
Intercession of the saints, as another poster alluded to, would you flat out reject it or would you be open to it just not sure? Nowhere in Catholic practice is it mandatory to seek intersession from saints. Again, if we are truly in communion and one body, then I see the logic behind it just as you would probably have no problem asking someone to pray for you.