Brendan:
Otm,
I can assure you, I most assuradly view the Eucharist as a Sacred Meal. And I recieve the Sacred Meal in it’s entirety in any single species.
It might appear to you to be more clear, but I take great offense when you make claims that I am some how ‘passing up’ something. All you seem to be saying is that I ‘pass up’ a chance to make clear what is already perfectly clear.
Well, if it is so perfectly clear that it is a Sacred Meal by receiving only under one species, then the Church is wrong in saying that it is more clear when received under both species.
You are confusing two issues. There was an issue, at the time of Trent, that one had to receive under both species (or, to state the reverse, that Christ was not present completely, Body Blood, Soul and Divinity in either species). Trent issued a definition, and decided that the Roman rite would receive only under one species, the Host, to reinforce their teaching.
As we are well beyond that heresy, the Church has relaxed the rule and returned to the practice of the early Church, allowing us, with some encouragement, to receive under both species. And the Church has seen fit to say that reception, although not required, is a fuller sign of the Sacred Meal when done with both species than when done under one alone.
Understanding the Eucharist not only through the Gospels, but also through the Old Testament, and in particular (but not isolated to) the Passover Meal, only reinforces that.
Sadly, however, many of us are stuck in being technically right and technically minimalists. I disagree with you that by receivingf under one species, you are making (for yourself or anyone else) it perfectly clear that it is a Sacred Meal. I am not trying to offend you. However, were I to invite you to Sunday dinner, with hors d’oeuvres, a shrimp cocktail, roast leg of lamb and roasted red-skinned potatoes, fresh green beans with balsamic vinegar, a three bean salad, one of Oregon’s better Pinots, and Baked Alaska and espresso for dessert, and you ate nothing but the lamb, passing on the rest, you might say that you have had a meal at my house, and I would say that you have ignored what I served, and have a rather narrow view of what a meal is. In addition, I would say that you have been rude to your host, and I would be offended. and if you told others that you had a meal at my house, I would think that you have a rather odd idea of what a meal consists of. I would agree that you had eaten at my house, but I would not agree that you had a meal there. It would not be “perfectly clear” to me.