C
Clare
Guest
When was it that it stopped being taught that it was the Real Body and Blood?
The first opponent to Real Presence in Transubstantiation was Berengarius of Tours (999-1088 A.D.) but he recanted in 1079 A.D.When was it that it stopped being taught that it was the Real Body and Blood?
Pohle, J. (1909). The Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist. In The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/05573a.htmAs for the cogency of the argument from tradition, this historical fact is of decided significance, namely, that the dogma of the Real Presence remained, properly speaking, unmolested down to the time of the heretic Berengarius of Tours (d. 1088), and so could claim even at that time the uninterrupted possession of ten centuries. In the course of the dogma’s history there arose in general three great Eucharistic controversies, the first of which, begun by Paschasius Radbertus, in the ninth century, scarcely extended beyond the limits of his audience and concerned itself solely with the philosophical question, whether the Eucharistic Body of Christ is identical with the natural Body He had in Palestine and now has in heaven.
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The third and the sharpest controversy was that opened by the Reformation in the sixteenth century, in regard to which it must be remarked that Luther was the only one among the Reformers who still clung to the old Catholic doctrine, and, though subjecting it to manifold misrepresentations, defended it most tenaciously.
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the Council of Trent has ever been and is now the unwavering position of the whole of Catholic Christendom.
Okay, so when did it become the norm for it to be preached within Protestant churches?I believe Huldrich Zwingli (1484-1531) was the first to preach against any kind of True Presence in the Eucharist. Correct me if I’m wrong, fellow/sister Catholics.
I agree: the real presence is most definitely the norm in most confessional Lutheran and Reformed churches.One cannot really say that preaching against any kind of True Presence is a norm in the Protestant family at large.
Yes, probably – although we do have historical Zwinglians here in Switzerland !I think the hyper nominalist/memorialist/Zwinglian (that is, “it’s just a symbol/sign and nothing more or less”) is mostly a post-19th century evangelical phenomenon that is significantly restricted to the US.
And similarly, in Calvin’s Geneva, preparing to receive was no walk in the park.It’s interesting to note that the early New England Puritans took very seriously the real presence (within their own sacramental theology) and there was an abundance of prepatory manuals to ensure worthy reception.
If I had to hazard a guess (I didn’t check that oneI’m not sure why the non-confessional Reformed perspective changed over time.
I’m not in the US! Actually it’s because I was telling a non Catholic friend about how I miss the Eucharist that this came about as she was saying how much a lovely symbol it is.I think the hyper nominalist/memorialist/Zwinglian (that is, “it’s just a symbol/sign and nothing more or less”) is mostly a post-19th century evangelical phenomenon that is significantly restricted to the US.
The Puritans were Calvinist, so they took seriously that Christ was spiritually present in Communion even though no physical transformation took place.It’s interesting to note that the early New England Puritans took very seriously the real presence (within their own sacramental theology) and there was an abundance of prepatory manuals to ensure worthy reception.
I’ll think you’ll find early Pentecostals had interesting views on the Lord’s Supper. Because they believed so strongly in the Spirit’s activity in the life of believers and the church, ordinary objects easily took on the characteristics of conduits or “points of contact” between believers and God. You see this today with the practice of anointing prayer cloths for people to carry around on their bodies. The Lord’s Supper has been understood in such away, particularly as a powerful means of healing. It’s not uncommon to hear “there is healing at the table.”If I had to hazard a guess (I didn’t check that one), I’d say that the influence of 19th-century Pentecostal revivals may have played a part. When you think that the primary way God gives Himself is the experience of a direct indwelling of the Holy Spirit, it tends to undermine the centrality of the Eucharist.