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YoungApologist3
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So people can belong to the ACC just like they can belong to an EC rite? I figured that they were just Latin rite.
I’ve seen some EO who are fine with the term transubstantiation. It strikes me that many EO, Anglicans, and Lutherans attach more Aristotlean metaphysical baggage to the term transubstantiation than the Catholic Church actually considers doctrine. It’s not Aristotlean, though it’s been elaborated in Aristotlean terms by some theologians.EO do not believe in transubstantiation or consubstantiation. In EO circles the Catholic idea is rejected and the concept is that the Eucharist comes about by a simple mystery unknown to us. EO ideas are not incompatible with Catholicism but they are not the same.
It’s all good!I should have realized that ACC could stand for quite a bit, lol!
Huh. You learn something new every day.Anyway, we were not Latin rite.
This is transubstantiation. The substance of the bread and wine is entirely gone, only with the appearance (in Aristotlean terms, “accidence”) of bread and wine. Consequently, whenever the accidence of the bread or wine is gone, so is the body and blood.I grew up believing in the True Presence in the Eucharist. So is this consubstantiation? I’m still learning a lot.
The RCC may not hold a lot of this as “valid” but we’re talking fine-tooth-comb as far as theological differences go.We hold dear the seven Sacraments of Grace, namely, the Sacraments of Baptism, Confirmation, and the Holy Eucharist, Holy Matrimony, Holy Orders, Penance, and Unction of the Sick. We believe them to be objective signs of Christ’s continued presence and saving activity among us. We believe in the holy sacrifice of the Mass and that the body and blood of Christ is truly and really present in the Holy Eucharist.
We believe in God’s gift of the apostolic ministry to His Church, asserting the necessity of a bishop in apostolic succession (or a priest ordained by such) as the celebrant of the Eucharist.
Furthermore, we hold that the Holy Orders of Bishops, Priests, and Deacons consist exclusively of men in accordance with Christ’s will and institution.
Amateur hour, indeed. Lutherans do not and never have professed Consubstantiation.Le sigh. Amateur hour around here.
Point 1 - Consubstantiation is primarily a Lutheran doctrine, not Anglican, although some Anglicans hold to it.
These points are well and good. But, my friend, “We are what we are, and we’re doing the best we can. It is not for you to set the standards by which we should be judged!”Point 2 - …
Point 3 - …
Transubstantiation is not based on reason, it is based on the supernatural, creative and transformative order that God implements through His Word. However, God’s Word is not contrary to reason, He complements and supplements it.Transubstantiation are Aristotelian concepts; they are based on reason:
Is the consecrated host truly bread or the body and blood of Jesus?QContinuum:![]()
Amateur hour, indeed. Lutherans do not and never have professed Consubstantiation.Le sigh. Amateur hour around here.
Point 1 - Consubstantiation is primarily a Lutheran doctrine, not Anglican, although some Anglicans hold to it.
As I’ve explained ad nauseum, Lutherans simply acknowledge that Christ is really, truly, physically present in every possible way (in, with, under, around, over, behind, whatever-- it’s real, not merely spiritual, like in Calvinism) and do not attempt to explain how this happens like Transubstatiationists or Consubstantiationists. Similar to the Orthodox. Or many pre-Tridentine Catholics, for that matter.
See, Consubstantiation, like its cousin Transubstantiation, supposes that changes or additions happen in the ‘accidents’ and ‘substances.’ Consubstantiation essentially creates a third ‘thing’ from the combination of bread/wine with Body/Blood, while Transubstantiation essentially believes that the first things (bread/wine) cease to exist altogether. In other words, Consubstantiation and Transubstantiation are Aristotelian concepts; they are based on reason:
- Transubstantiation reasons that the entire “substance” of the bread and wine is changed into Christ’s Body and Blood, until only the “accidents” of bread (taste, consistency, color, etc.) remain.
- Consubstantiation reasons that the bread and the wine and the Body and the Blood are united in some way that, more or less, creates some new, third substance. I don’t know of any sect today that actually believes in Consubstantiation, though even some Lutherans have been duped into using the term (but not the beliefs behind it, thank God!). Consubstantiation has been explained as:
- As an actual creation of a new, third substance
- As impanation - where the substances don’t change, but Christ’s presence is substantially stored in the substance of the bread and wine
- As incorporation - where the substances don’t change, but Christ’s presence is mingled into the substance of the bread and wine
- In countless other messy, over-thought interminglings** of the “substances” and “accidents” in an array of almost comical combinations.
- Sacramental Union, which Lutherans actually believe, does not attempt to reason out the miracle of the Sacrament of the Altar. It simply trusts in the mystery of Christ’s Words; that He does what He says He does. That He truly, physically gives Himself for us for the forgiveness of sins in (and with and under and in every inadequate human way of understanding) the bread and the wine.
These points are well and good. But, my friend, “We are what we are, and we’re doing the best we can. It is not for you to set the standards by which we should be judged!”Point 2 - …
Point 3 - …![]()
This view is akin to what many hold to in the Anglican communion. Although, as previously stated, Consubstantiation is held by some.Sacramental Union, which Lutherans actually believe, does not attempt to reason out the miracle of the Sacrament of the Altar. It simply trusts in the mystery of Christ’s Words; that He does what He says He does. That He truly, physically gives Himself for us for the forgiveness of sins in (and with and under and in every inadequate human way of understanding) the bread and the wine.
Ah, so you are not referring to the “Anglican Use” parishes that are scattered about—which used to be Episcopalian or Anglican, but the entire parish converted to Catholicism (but have been granted permission to use doctrinally corrected Anglican Mass rubrics)—but rather are referring to a denomination distinct from Catholicism?I mentioned it because I was a high church Anglican Catholic allowed to receive Communion in the Roman Catholic Church. I was hoping to address the OP’s question in showing that I believe high church Anglicans can, indeed, receive Eucharist in a Catholic parish.
The Church, who is the arbiter of such things, says you are mistaken. Therefore you are mistaken.transubstantiation- the accidents remain those of bread and wine but the essence turns to that of the blood and body of Christ
consubstantiation- the accidents remain the same but the substance turns to both that of the body and blood of Christ but also remains the substance of bread and wine.
It’s a slight difference that in my opinion has no point…
He says it is, so it is. Let me put it this way:Is the consecrated host truly bread or the body and blood of Jesus?
It’s from an episodic TV show I enjoy. Spoken by a space-faring captain to his extra-dimensional friend.Your last quote is completely lost on me, I’m afraid.
And do the consecrated host and wine appear to all the physical senses and material studies as remaining what they were?Wesrock:![]()
He says it is, so it is.Is the consecrated host truly bread or the body and blood of Jesus?