What happens at Communion?

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When the bread/host is consecrated at Mass it doesnt stop being the Body of Christ. This is why we have tabernacles and monstrances but…does it stop being the Body and Blood of Christ after a person consumes it? If it doesn’t, what happens? I remember reading that some Christians believe the Body and Blood of Christ will be there for 15 min untill something happens.
They never even mention this when you are converting so maybe I am asking a stupid question since we all understand what happens?
And why do we use the term Consume rather than Eat?
 
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Once you receive holy communion, you will be a tabernacle to the living Lord forever.

Regarding your question on whether to call it “eating” or “consuming” the host, it’s a matter of preference.

Jesus said, “Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood will have eternal life.” so I think either or should suffice.

I hope this helps you.
 
Even if you receive communion once your whole life, the Lord will always be within you and will never leave.
 
Here is a good resource for determining what occurs.

http://www.therealpresence.org/eucharst/a.html

From the site, regarding Holy Communion:
HOLY COMMUNION. The Eucharist is the sacrament that preserves the soul’s union with God and fosters that union by making a person more holy especially in the practice of the supernatural virtue of charity. As a sacrament of the living, to obtain the graces intended, a person must be in the state of God’s friendship when receiving, otherwise the reception becomes a sacrilege (I Corinthians 11:27-29).

The union of the communicant with Christ in the Eucharist is effective in the moral order. Though physically present in the communicant, Christ is not physically united with him. Only the consecrated species, since they alone can come in contact with material things, are physically united with the communicant.

Communion aims specifically at producing a likeness to Christ in the communicants. Their acts of mind and will, as a result of Communion, are to become more conformable to the acts of Christ’s mind and will. Their body, too, is to become more like Christ’s sacred body.

This is the primary purpose of the sacrament, a special union of the soul with Christ. What is special about this union is that the Eucharist is extraordinarily powerful in conferring actual graces that prompt a person to make acts of love for God and one’s neighbor. Moreover, these graces inspire one to live for Christ habitually, even under great difficulties, as shown by the readiness to love the unlovable, and to promote loving community in spite of great natural diversity.

The secondary purpose of Communion is to assimilate the body of the communicant to the body of Christ in two ways: it curbs or mitigates all disordered passions, especially those against chastity, and it confers a new title to the final resurrection of the body in heavenly glory.

A final effect of Communion is to remove the personal guilt of venial sins, and the temporal punishment due to forgiven sins, whether venial or mortal.
 
Past thread that addresses your question:
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Eucharist Liturgy and Sacraments
How long does the Real Presence stay after consumption of the Eucharist? I have OCD and it’s really hard for me to eat, drink or even breathe through my mouth after I’ve received because I fear particles of Jesus might be left around. I know there’s protocol for if you get His Blood on your sleeve, for instance, but what if there’s remains of the Blood on your lips and you kiss your mother’s cheek? Or you sneeze after Communion and you fear that there may have been particles in your mouth?
 
After communion Christ stays within you. After you consume the Eucharist, the host and wine is still the body and blood of Christ.
 
We cannot rationalize it. It is a Christian mystery. Most importantly, it is a gift of God for our spiritual benefit.
 
Our Lord certainly thought of things like this when He instituted the Eucharist. If it doesn’t bother Him, it shouldn’t bother you.

I do not normally receive the Precious Blood (I receive only the host, on the tongue, only from a priest or deacon), but I keep a bottle of water in my car and take a drink of it once I am out of Mass. I do this as much because the host is dry, and I tend to have dry mouth, as for any other reason.

Christ remains truly present as long as there remain recognizable bread and wine appearances. The common opinion is that it takes 15 minutes or so for these appearances to deteriorate in your system. The graces received, of course, remain with you.
 
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