CHRIST
PRESENT IN THE EUCHARIST THROUGH TRANSUBSTANTIATION
46. To avoid any
misunderstanding of this type of presence, which goes beyond the laws of nature
and constitutes the greatest miracle of its kind, 50 we have to listen
with docility to the voice of the teaching and praying Church. Her voice, which
constantly echoes the voice of Christ, assures us that the way in which Christ
becomes present in this Sacrament is through the conversion of the whole
substance of the bread into His body and of the whole substance of the wine
into His blood, a unique and truly wonderful conversion that the Catholic
Church fittingly and properly calls transubstantiation. 51 As a result
of transubstantiation, the species of bread and wine undoubtedly take on a new
signification and a new finality, for they are no longer ordinary bread and
wine but instead a sign of something sacred and a sign of spiritual food; but
they take on this new signification, this new finality, precisely because they
contain a new "reality" which we can rightly call ontological. For
what now lies beneath the aforementioned species is not what was there before,
but something completely different; and not just in the estimation of Church
belief but in reality, since once the substance or nature of the bread and wine
has been changed into the body and blood of Christ, nothing remains of the
bread and the wine except for the species—beneath which Christ is present whole
and entire in His physical "reality," corporeally present, although
not in the manner in which bodies are in a place.
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