J
japhy
Guest
In philosophical terms, what a thing really is is called its “substance” or “essence”. What we perceive of that thing are its “accidents”.Could someone explain Transubstantiation in real terminology?
Also, could someone take that same explanation and adapt it for young people?
(“Substance” from the Latin sub- (under) stare (stand), thus “stand under”. “Essence” from the Latin esse (to be).)
Just as transformation is a change in form, transubstantiation is a change in substance. Instead of the form or appearance (“accidents”) of the bread and wine changing, their substance – what they are – changes. Their substance is replaced with the substance of Jesus Christ in his full humanity (body, blood, soul) and divinity. This presence is sacramental and substantial (that is, in substance), rather than physical.
As a rough analogy… consider a person before and after baptism. There is no physical or accidental change in the person (apart from getting wet, which will “wear off” soon enough) in the person, yet there is an invisible change that is not perceptible to our senses that has taken place. The change that happens to the bread and wine is invisible to our senses as well.
Does this help?