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CHAPTER LXVI—What happens when the Sacramental Species pass away
FOR the removal of this doubt there has been invented a famous theory (famosa
positio), which is held by many. They say that when this Sacrament comes
to be changed in the ordinary process of digestion or to be burnt, or otherwise
destroyed, the accidents are not converted into substance, but there returns by
miracle the substance of bread that had been before, and out of that are generated
the products into which this Sacrament is found to turn. But this theory cannot
stand at all. It seems better to say that in the consecration there is miraculously
conferred upon the accidents the power of subsistence, which is proper to substance:
hence they can do all things, and have all things done to them, that the substance
itself could do, or have done to it, if it were there: hence without any new miracle
they can nourish, or be reduced to ashes, in the same mode and order as if the substance
of bread and wine were there.982982 The Real Presence is attached,
not to the chemical elements of bread and wine, still less to any ultimate atoms,
molecules, electrons, or the like, but to the visible appearances of bread and wine.
When these appearances disappear, the Real Presence is gone and the question is,
what has happened to what is left. St Thomas here, and Sum. Theol. 3, q.
77, art. 5, seems to hold that what is left continues in the miraculous state of
accidents functioning as substance to the end of time. But may we not plead against
the saint his own words, that at that rate “by the frequent use of this mystery
much of the corporeal nature originally created would have been reduced,” not exactly
to “nothing,” but to a state bordering on nothingness? (Chap.
LXIII.)
This solution is not commonly taken. See Pesch, S.J., Praelectiones Dogmaticae,
vol. VI, pp. 311, 312.
Also that wary theologian, Cardinal Franzelin, writes: “When the accidents are
so changed that naturally they would no longer point to the substance of bread and
wine, but to some other, it becomes necessary for the Body and Blood of Christ no
longer to remain under them. Were they to remain, it would be no longer the Sacrament
instituted by Christ under the appearances of bread and wine. When this substance
of the Body and Blood of Christ ceases to be under the changed accidents, those
changed accidents connaturally require some substance to answer to them. As then
upon the sufficient organisation of the foetus the creation and infusion of the
soul follows according to a natural law laid down by God, so when the accidents
are specifically changed and the Real Presence ceases, there follows the creation
of a corresponding substance under those new accidents, and that, we may say, connaturally,
according to a constant law laid down by God. This is equivalent to the restitution
of the matter that was before consecration (De Eucharistia, pp. 240 sq. 293).
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