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Best Before Dates-Holy Communion wafer
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Are there best before dates on Holy Communion wafer packets? Catholics believe in transubstantiation i.e that really IS the flesh and blood of Christ (not just a representation of it). So is it 2000 year old Jesus's flesh they are eating, or current Jesus's flesh? Is it Jesus's flesh when it's being made in the factory? Or when the priest blesses it? How does the priest know he is really doing that properly? Can paedophile priest's have the power to change the wafers into real flesh (if so, how come? as they're sinners, not real priests) So the people who've been taking communion from sinners, haven't really recieved Communion afterall. Can you get drunk on a bottle of Communion wine, if so, how? As it's really blood isn't it?
I expect 95% of Catholics don't even know they're supposed to believe it ACTUALLY IS the body and blood of Christ.
I expect 95% of Catholics don't even know they're supposed to believe it ACTUALLY IS the body and blood of Christ.
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No best answer has yet been selected by Marijn. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.you don't need a best before date on communion wafers because as they are the flesh of christ (though a wheat based product) and christ did not die (or was resurrected) they must be living flesh so will not decay ( a bit like eating a live oyster but a bit more crunchy). As for communion wine, if the spanish can produce a wine called 'bulls blood' it isn't too much of a stretch of imagination to have one called 'christ's blood'. I would prefer a nice little chianti and some fava beans if I was having to eat the flesh of christ.
ask your friends to google eucharist for you. No, transubstantion occurs during the ceremony, not in the factory. Yes, priestly sinners can do it. Yes, you can get drunk on consecrated wine
http://www.cathnews.c...ticle.aspx?aeid=14769
http://www.cathnews.c...ticle.aspx?aeid=14769
I think the same rules must apply to food sold to the church in this country as to anyone else, so yes, packs of communion wafers would carry a best before date. This from DEFRA.
//"Use by” dates indicate time during which food is safe to eat. “Best before” dates indicate a period in which food is of optimum quality and after which it is may still perfectly edible but may decline in quality. These are mandated by law.//
//"Use by” dates indicate time during which food is safe to eat. “Best before” dates indicate a period in which food is of optimum quality and after which it is may still perfectly edible but may decline in quality. These are mandated by law.//
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