Why dear friend do you not believe in the Real Presence

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I honestly am very confused about what the Real Presence actually is. It seems to have multiple different definitions, even by those in the same denomination.

I do think that when Christians gather to worship and to participate in communion, that Christ is present among them. Matthew 18:20For where two or three gather in my name, there am I with them.” Christ promised to come to those who believe in Him and that he would be present with them. John 14:15“If you love me, keep my commands. 16And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another advocate to help you and be with you forever— 17the Spirit of truth. The world cannot accept him, because it neither sees him nor knows him. But you know him, for he lives with you and will be[c] in you. 18I will not leave you as orphans; I will come to you…23Jesus replied, “Anyone who loves me will obey my teaching. My Father will love them, and we will come to them and make our home with them." So I do believe that Christ is really present among Christians as they worship and participate in communion.

Is Christ present inside the communion wafer in some sort of a spiritual way as well? Maybe. I don’t have any reason to know that this is true, but I suppose it isn’t impossible if Jesus chose to be present in this way that it could happen.

Is Christ present inside the communion wafer in some sort of physical or substantial way? I would expect that if there was a different substance before and after the consecration, that science would detect differences in the wafers. Although there have been some Eucharistic miracles where the physical appearance of the wafers changed along with dubious science surrounding them, the vast majority of the time there is no physical change and science does not detect any changes either.

So what does actually happen at consecration? What changes actually occur? I can not understand this. How can substance and accident be defined in 21st century scientific terms? How can there be a change in substance without the substance changing? What am I missing?
Thank you susanlo for wording your enquiries in understandable language. I hope you get answers that are deserving of the integrity with which you ask.
 
…Is Christ present inside the communion wafer in some sort of physical or substantial way? I would expect that if there was a different substance before and after the consecration, that science would detect differences in the wafers…
Why do you believe that science would detect differences in the host prior to and after consecration?
So what does actually happen at consecration? What changes actually occur? I can not understand this.
Jesus Christ becomes truly and fully present. The change that occurs is that the bread becomes Jesus Christ.
How can substance and accident be defined in 21st century scientific terms? How can there be a change in substance without the substance changing?
Your questions remind me of John 6:60 (Then many of his disciples who were listening said, “This saying is hard; who can accept it?”)
What am I missing?
I don’t know what is missing in your questions, but I can tell you what was missing in mine when I asked similar questions as you are now. I needed context. I asked myself where does this teaching come from outside of the Last Supper event itself. The reason I asked myself this question was because I had seen the arguments pro-real presence and pro-symbolic expression with the words Jesus spoke when he said ‘This is my body’ at the Last Supper. I wanted collaborating evidence. Then I read John’s Gospel chapter 6 in it’s entirety and a light bulb went on that I can’t turn back off. The diciples said that the saying of eating his flesh was a hard saying and who could accept it. Jesus asks if it shocked them and seems to double down on saying he’s talking about his actual flesh. He doesn’t explain symbolism, he’s explaining reality. And then many of his disciples stopped following him after his explanation. I’m trying to imagine myself following someone I consider the messiah and then have him preaching about crazy ideas like eating his flesh - and not backing down from those comments. Wow! Jesus then asks the apostles if they are also going to leave. Peter says Jesus has the words of eternal life and where else is he to go.

Science does not have the words of eternal life, Jesus Christ does. Science isn’t the arbiter of truth. Jesus Christ is. Science is great at collaborating evidence, but doesn’t absolutely prove or disprove the words or actions of Jesus Christ. If you need absolute proof from science as to whether the bread becomes Jesus, then you’d need absolute proof on every miracle Jesus performs, including the Resurrection itself.
 
Seems, to me, the main argument is that… Jesus is in us through the Holy Spirit, so receiving Him “in flesh and blood” is not the purpose of Communion, therefore Communion must be only symbolic of remembering His Sacrifice at Calvary.

Also remember, many who acknowledge Real Presence, still do not accept Transubstantiation.
Unless someone reveals some error in your statement that I do not see, I would say you have an exact understanding of it.
So should the Holy Communion be shared by Christians who have opposing Teachings? If two Christians are Baptized and accept the Holy Spirit, should they both be convicted of opposing Teachings?
 
So should the Holy Communion be shared by Christians who have opposing Teachings?
Under certain conditions, Catholics allow Eastern and Oriental Orthodox to receive Catholic Holy Communion, even though they have different teachings on several issues such as divorce, birth control, and papal infallibility and others as well. (It should be noted that Eastern Orthodox do not approve of their faithful receiving the Sacraments from the Roman Catholic Church).
 
First, because in the moments described in the Christian canon in which Jesus is passing around bread and wine during the passover dinner …he doesn’t seem to be saying at all that in the future, these substances will actually turn into his own flesh and blood.
I can’t see how someone reading those scenes would take that leap.

Second…even if he did mean this, it doesn’t seem to be doctrine until many centuries later (the 11th century?). To claim such a supernatural thing happens and to have much of a faith built upon it…but to take so long to make it doctrine, makes it seem as though the belief of this was agreed upon or evolved over a long period of time or was…developed.

Third, no one has ever* seen* a wafter and wine turn into flesh and blood. And no one has ever been shown to have the ability to turn factory-made wafers and store-bought wine into someone’s flesh and blood. Why would someone believe it if no one has ever seen it?

Fourth…if they did, we wouldn’t know if it was *his *flesh and blood.

Fifth…the idea seems very illogical and improbable.

Sixth…we can’t even prove for sure that Jesus existed, never mind imagine his flesh and blood is in every Catholic church all over the world once a week.

And more.

.
Your fifth statement above pretty much sums up your whole post. You can’t humanly wrap your head around it. If science can’t prove it, it can’t be true.
 
The way I understand it, is that we must recognize the body and blood of Jesus of Nazareth, which was shed for the blood of the New and everlasting Covenant, as the Communion meal between God and man. This body and blood is multiplied from the Divine Substance which the Father, Son and Holy Spirit share, and descends upon the gifts of bread and wine that we bring to the altar. We in turn, are strengthened by the faith that Jesus bestows through His meritorious Incarnation, suffering massianic work, and ultimate Sacrifice unto death at Calvary. We no longer regard Him as lowly flesh, but anointed from all eternity by the Father of all creation, and the means by which we were reconciled to Him and granted the Holy Spirit which gives life.
I agree with most of this, but I am confused with the part I put in red. This explanation doesn’t rule out a spiritual interpretation with no substantial change. Does the substance change when descended upon? Or is this something outside of our physical realm, but detectable only on a spiritual level?
This type of questioning is not coming from faith, but human curiosity. And I’m not saying I’m above it.
I think this type of question is about understanding what a group actually believes. There seems to be inconsistency about what the ‘Real Presence’ is. I think ‘Real Presence’ is a poor word choice because it is so loosely defined. I prefer to use the terms transubstantiation, consubstantiation or what not which have straightforward definitions. Does Catholicism still support transubstantiation?
But it doesn’t lead to Spiritual growth and unity of Christian brotherhood.
Many Catholics here seem to think that understanding ‘Real Presence’ is the pinnacle of faith and provides spiritual benefits. “The source and summit of the Christian life” is a frequently seen phrase here. Why shouldn’t one look for a full explanation?
What leads to brotherhood, is obedience to His commands. He calls us to one faith, one Baptism, one mind, one judgment, one body and one loaf. If we claim to all receive a “relatively equal Communion” but have opposing Teachings, are we not deceiving ourselves? One Communion means, one united leadership, with a common Teaching, while allowing for various customs and practices.
What is the difference between “opposing teachings” and “various customs and practices?” I would argue that all Christians follow the leadership of Christ and obey the teaching in His Word. At my church all baptized believers are welcome to participate in communion because we don’t segregate Christianity. We see all followers of Jesus as united in Christianity. If it weren’t for a Catholic friend of mine, I would still be under the impression that Christianity was “united in leadership, with a common Teaching, while allowing for various customs and practices.” It seems that the concern that Christianity is fractured seems to be the understanding of Catholics, but it is not something I was ever aware of as I happily worshiped at many different denominations over the years with my friends who are my brothers and sisters in Christ.
 
I agree with most of this, but I am confused with the part I put in red. This explanation doesn’t rule out a spiritual interpretation with no substantial change. Does the substance change when descended upon? Or is this something outside of our physical realm, but detectable only on a spiritual level?I can’t go to far into describing details of how the substance of bread and wine are changed into the substance of the flesh and blood of Jesus. I’m not sure who can. It is a mystery. All we believe, is that we are receiving Jesus, and not only Spiritually, but a tangible for of Himself. He called this “His flesh and blood”, so that is what we call it. There is an aspect which is ineffable to His Eucharist, just as with defining God.
I think this type of question is about understanding what a group actually believes. There seems to be inconsistency about what the ‘Real Presence’ is. I think ‘Real Presence’ is a poor word choice because it is so loosely defined. I prefer to use the terms transubstantiation, consubstantiation or what not which have straightforward definitions. Does Catholicism still support transubstantiation?
 
I think this type of question is about understanding what a group actually believes. There seems to be inconsistency about what the ‘Real Presence’ is. I think ‘Real Presence’ is a poor word choice because it is so loosely defined. I prefer to use the terms transubstantiation, consubstantiation or what not which have straightforward definitions. Does Catholicism still support transubstantiation?
Catholicism still professes transubstantiation, meaning that the bread and wine are truly changed into Christ’s body and blood while retaining the appearances of bread and wine. The Orthodox profess this change, too, though some shy away from the term transubstantiation due to perceived commitments to Aristotlean-Thomistic metaphysics, though the term does predate the endorsement of A-T metaphysics by the Latin Church. It is just Latin for change-in-substance, substance meaning what it actually is, not its chemical composition.
 
My dear friend in Christ,

Many of you [but not all] do not believe Catholic Teachings on the Doctrine of the Real Presence.

I’m curious as to just WHY that is?

God Bless you,

Patrick
That’s a weird question.

There are lots of things that people believe in around the world. Most people don’t believe in most of them. Generally one needs a reason to believe in something, not a reason not to.

Just to be clear: I believe in the Real Presence and am awaiting word on when I can talk to a priest about being received into the Church.

My own major obstacle to conversion is not a lack of belief in the Real Presence but belief that the Real Presence exists in Protestant churches as well.

Edwin
 
My own major obstacle to conversion is not a lack of belief in the Real Presence but belief that the Real Presence exists in Protestant churches as well.
But isn’t this a testimony to the failure of Protestant Communion? That their Communion doesn’t hold to One Body of Teaching and acceptance of that Teaching? What good is a Communion that is divided over tenants of the faith?
 
It is just Latin for change-in-substance, substance meaning what it actually is, not its chemical composition.
This is exactly the point that I find so confusing.

I hear transubstantiation - which means a change of substance. Then I go to my knowledge of substance which is similar to the dictionary.com definitions: **1. that of which a thing consists; physical matter or material: 2. a species of matter of definite chemical composition: ** So I take away the point that if a substance changes, we should see a change in physical matter or a different chemical composition. It seems that ‘substance’ in transubstantiation is using a different and quite unique definition of ‘substance.’ That definition seems to vary greatly among those who believe in the ‘Real Presence.’ That is the part that is hard to define and understand.

I don’t find it hard to believe that the elements change in their spiritual significance and could even become holy and blessed in some way. But if there is a change in physical matter or chemical composition, I would expect science to be able to detect this. I honestly think the meaning and significance of the Eucharist is supposed to be much deeper than being limited to just a literal/physical understanding. It seems many who believe in some definition of ‘Real Presence’ also agree with this.
 
This is exactly the point that I find so confusing.

I hear transubstantiation - which means a change of substance. Then I go to my knowledge of substance which is similar to the dictionary.com definitions: 1. that of which a thing consists; physical matter or material: 2. a species of matter of definite chemical composition: So I take away the point that if a substance changes, we should see a change in physical matter or a different chemical composition. It seems that ‘substance’ in transubstantiation is using a different and quite unique definition of ‘substance.’ That definition seems to vary greatly among those who believe in the ‘Real Presence.’ That is the part that is hard to define and understand.

I don’t find it hard to believe that the elements change in their spiritual significance and could even become holy and blessed in some way. But if there is a change in physical matter or chemical composition, I would expect science to be able to detect this. I honestly think the meaning and significance of the Eucharist is supposed to be much deeper than being limited to just a literal/physical understanding. It seems many who believe in some definition of ‘Real Presence’ also agree with this.
This is why I stay away from trying to define the actual change that takes place, further than Transubstantiation. It’s almost as the host, becomes (while the accidents are in tact) consubstantial with the Son of God. But it’s hidden from our carnal senses.

Explain to me how the senses of the disciples, on the road to Emmaus, were kept from recognizing Jesus? And how were they opened to recognize Him in the breaking of the bread? Was it a miracle? Or did they just happen to not recognize how He looked after the resurrection? And if it was a miracle, what was the purpose of that miracle?
 
Good day. For me the Real Presence means that I am really present in what I’m doing. For me the Eucharist is a teaching of awareness, mindfulness, and being present. If I were to partake of the Eucharist and not be present to it, mindful of it, then that in my mind is partaking “unworthily”.
The same holds true in anything I eat. A raisin, apple, breakfast, lunch, or dinner. If I’m not present to the moment, really present to the nourishment, if I’m wolfing things down hurriedly, mindlessly, then I’m eating “unworthily”
THANK you:)

BUT just as the raisin is actually [REALLY] present, so too is Jesus Himself in Catholic Holy Communion:thumbsup:

GBY
 
Explain to me how the senses of the disciples, on the road to Emmaus, were kept from recognizing Jesus? And how were they opened to recognize Him in the breaking of the bread? Was it a miracle? Or did they just happen to not recognize how He looked after the resurrection? And if it was a miracle, what was the purpose of that miracle?
Hmmm…I have never thought much about it. I guess there are various things people can understand and take from this account in Luke 24. I guess they could have noticed that His hands had holes in them when they saw Him break bread. Or else they recognized familiarity in the way He broke the bread and gave thanks. Also, God may have allowed their eyes to have been opened at this moment. What was the purpose of them recognizing them at this moment when they hadn’t before? I suppose it may go along with the symbolism of Jesus being the Bread of Life. What understanding do you have?
 
Because I find it to be false. What more were you expecting?
OK, 😃

And on what basis besides your personal opinion is that?

Biblical, historical and even scientific evidence and well as the TRUTH all say your worng in your understanding:shrug:

GBY

and thanks for sharing
 
John the Baptism declared that God could make sons of Abraham from stones, yet if he did no one would say the stones were actually born of men. God has power to subvert the norms of physical laws.

The modern definition of substance is different than what was meant in the original Latin. Perhaps it would be closer in modern terms to speak of a “change in essence.” The point, though, is that in relation to the Eucharist, the normal cues we use to determine what something is are irrelevant. The cues that identify it as bread and wine remain, but in essence it is no longer bread and wine but the body and blood of Christ because God has made it so.

It’s a hard teaching. Catholics see Jesus’ words, “The Spirit gives life; the flesh counts for nothing,” in part as telling us that human reason and thinking (our flesh) will find this change incomprehensible, but that it is a gift of the spirit to believe in it. There’s another topic already on John 6, and I don’t mean to make this one that, too, but it was an opportunity to expand on our understanding of those words in context.
 
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