By Fr. William Saunders
My son who made his First Holy Communion this
Spring had a very upsetting experience. His friend, who
attends a different parish and who also was making his
First Holy Communion, said to my son, "Oh, it’s just
bread and wine." My son was crushed, because he has been
taught that Holy Communion is the Body and Blood of
Jesus. I reassured him of the truth, but am I missing
something?
The upsetting experience your son had, and the poor
and erroneous catechesis his friend received prompted
our late Holy Father, Pope John Paul II, to write his
encyclical Eccesia de Eucharistia (On the Eucharist in
Its Relationship to the Church, 2003).
As Catholics, we firmly believe that the real
presence of Christ is in the Holy Eucharist. The Second
Vatican Council's Decree on the Ministry and Life of
Priests (Presbyterorum Ordinis) asserts, "The other
sacraments, and indeed all ecclesiastical ministries and
works of the apostolate are bound up with the Eucharist
and are directed towards it. For in the most blessed
Eucharist is contained the whole spiritual good of the
Church, namely Christ Himself, our Pasch and the living
bread which gives life to men through His flesh– that
flesh which is given life and gives life through the
Holy Spirit" (#5). For this reason, the Council referred
to the Holy Eucharist as the source and summit of the
whole Christian life (Lumen Gentium, #11).
Our belief in the Holy Eucharist is rooted in Christ
Himself. Recall the beautiful words of our Lord in the
Bread of Life Discourse in the Gospel of St. John: "I
myself am the living bread come down from heaven. If
anyone eats this bread he shall live forever; the bread
I will give is my flesh, for the life of the world. Let
me solemnly assure you, if you do not eat the flesh of
the Son of Man and drink His blood, you have no life in
you. He who feeds on my flesh and drinks my blood has
life eternal, and I will raise him up on the last day.
For my flesh is real food and my blood real drink. The
man who feeds on my flesh and drinks my blood remains in
me, and I in him. Just as the Father who has life sent
me and I have life because of the Father, so the man who
feeds on me will have life because of me" (John 6:51,
53-57). Note that none of this language is symbolic--
Jesus meant what He said. Moreover, even when there was
grumbling and objections, and even after some disciples
abandoned our Lord because of this teaching, Jesus no
where said, "Oh please, stop. I really meant this
symbolically." Our Lord stood by His teaching.
The meaning of Bread of Life Discourse becomes
clearer at the Last Supper on the first Holy Thursday.
There Jesus gathered His apostles to share what was
literally His last supper. According to the Gospel of
St. Matthew, Jesus took unleavened bread and wine– two
sources of basic nourishment. He took the bread, blessed
it, gave thanks, broke it, and gave it to the apostles,
saying, "Take this and eat it; this is my body." He took
the cup of wine, gave thanks, gave it to His apostles
and said, "All of you must drink from it for this is my
blood, the blood of the covenant, to be poured out on
behalf of many for the forgiveness of sins." If we
extracted the words of consecration recorded in the Last
Supper accounts of the gospels and distilled them, we
would have the words of consecration used at Mass. (Cf.
Matthew 26:26-30; Mark 14:22-26; and Luke 22:14-20.)
Think of those words! Jesus was not just giving to
the apostles blessed bread and wine. He was giving His
whole life– Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity. He was
giving His very self. How true that was! The next day,
Jesus' body hung upon the altar of the cross. His blood
was spilled to wash away our sins. As priest, He offered
the perfect sacrifice for the remission of sin. However,
this sacrifice was not death rendering but life giving,
for three days later our Lord rose from the dead
conquering both sin and death. Yes, the perfect,
everlasting covenant of life and love with God was made
by our Lord Jesus Christ.
This whole mystery is preserved in the Most Holy
Eucharist and the Sacrifice of the Mass. We too take
unleavened bread and wine, two sources of nourishment.
By the will of the Father, the work of the Holy Spirit,
and priesthood of Jesus entrusted to His ordained
priests, and through the words of consecration, that
bread and wine is transformed into the Body and Blood of
Jesus. Yes, the bread and wine do not change in
characteristics– they still look the same, taste and
smell the same, and hold the same shape. However, the
reality, "the what it is," the substance does change. We
do not receive bread and wine; we receive the Body and
Blood of Christ. We call this "change of substance"
transubstantiation, a term used at the Fourth Lateran
Council (1215) and asserted again by our Holy Father in
Ecclesia de Eucharistia (#15). Therefore, each time we
celebrate Mass, we are plunged into the whole
everpresent, everlasting mystery of Holy Thursday, Good
Friday, and Easter, and share intimately in life of our
Lord through Holy Eucharist.
In Ecclesia de Eucharistia, John Paul highlighted
these very points: "At every celebration of the
Eucharist, we are spiritually brought back to the
paschal Triduum: to the events of the evening of Holy
Thursday, to the Last Supper, and to what followed it.
The institution of the Eucharist sacramentally
anticipated the events which were about to take place,
beginning with the agony in Gethsemane" (#3)
Moreover, in and through the Holy Eucharist, our late
Holy Father taught that we can contemplate the face of
Christ because He is truly present: "To contemplate
Christ involves being able to recognize Him wherever He
manifests Himself, in His many forms of presence, but
above all in the living sacrament of His Body and Blood.
The Church draws her life from Christ in the Eucharist;
by Him she is fed and by Him she is enlightened. The
Eucharist is both a mystery of faith and a ‘mystery of
light.’ Whenever the Church celebrates the Eucharist,
the faithful can in some way relive the experience of
the two disciples on the road to Emmaus: ‘their eyes
were opened and they recognized Him.’" (#6).
The Catholic Church has always cherished this
treasure. St. Paul wrote, "I received from the Lord what
I handed on to you, namely, that the Lord Jesus on the
night in which He was betrayed took bread, and after He
had given thanks, broke it and said, 'This is my body,
which is for you. Do this in remembrance of me.' In the
same way, after the supper, He took the cup, saying,
'This cup is the new covenant in my blood. Do this,
whenever you drink it, in remembrance of me.' Every time
then you eat this bread and drink this cup, you proclaim
the death of the Lord until he comes!" (I Corinthians
11:23-26).
During the days of Roman persecution, to clearly
distinguish the Eucharist from the cultic rite of Mithra
and to dispel Roman charges of cannibalism, St. Justin
Martyr (d. 165) wrote in his First Apology, "We do not
consume the Eucharistic bread and wine as if it were
ordinary food and drink, for we have been taught that as
Jesus Christ our Savior became a man of flesh and blood
by the power of the Word of God, so also the food that
our flesh and blood assimilate of its nourishment
becomes the flesh and blood of the incarnate Jesus by
the power of His own words contained in the prayer of
thanksgiving."
Later, the Council of Trent in 1551 addressed the
heretical views of the Reformers. Remember Zwingli and
Calvin believed that Christ was present only "in sign";
Luther believed in consubstantiation whereby the
Eucharist is both body and blood, and bread and wine;
and Melancthon believed that the Eucharist reverts back
to just bread and wine after communion.
Trent's Decree on the Most Holy Eucharist specified,
"In the Blessed Sacrament of the Holy Eucharist, after
the consecration of the bread and wine, our Lord Jesus
Christ, true God and man, is truly, really, and
substantially contained under the appearances of those
perceptible realities. For there is no contradiction in
the fact that our Savior always sits at the right hand
of the Father in Heaven according to His natural way of
existing and that, nevertheless, in His substance He is
sacramentally present to us in many other places."
Therefore, no faithful, knowledgeable Catholic would
say that the Holy Eucharist is just bread and wine or
even just symbolizes the Body and Blood of Christ. Yes,
we pray for grace that we may believe more strongly each
day in this precious gift of Christ Himself. Perhaps we
should dwell on the words of Thomas Aquinas in Adoro Te
Devote, "Godhead here in hiding, whom I do adore; masked
by these bare shadows, shape and nothing more. See,
Lord, at thy service low lies here a heart: Lost, all
lost in wonder at the God thou art.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Saunders, Rev. William. "Transubstantiation."
Arlington Catholic Herald.
This article is reprinted with permission from
Arlington Catholic Herald
THE AUTHOR
Father William Saunders is dean of the Notre Dame
Graduate School of Christendom College and pastor of Our
Lady of Hope Parish in Sterling, Virginia. The above
article is a "Straight Answers" column he wrote for the
Arlington Catholic Herald. Father Saunders is also the
author of Straight Answers, a book based on 100 of his
columns and published by Cathedral Press in Baltimore.
Copyright © 2005
Arlington Catholic Herald