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The Eucharist is the Sacrament of the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ.
Holy Communion is a sharing in the Eucharist in which Christ is truly present.
The priest, recalling the words and actions of Jesus at the Last Supper,
consecrates the bread and wine, which are changed, by the power of the
Holy Spirit, into the Body and Blood of Christ. This is why the Church has
traditionally employed the word “transubstantiation” to describe the change
totally changed into the substance of Christ’s Body and Blood. While the
appearances of bread and wine remain, the Risen Lord Jesus is actually
present, and so it is he who is actually received in Holy Communion—Body
and Blood, soul and divinity.
Want to know more about what Church teaches on the Eucharist? Click here
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