Blessed Sacrament

The Blessed Sacrament is a devotional name used by Roman Catholics to refer to a consecrated host, that is, a communion wafer which Catholics believe has actually become the body and blood of Jesus at the moment of the Consecration during the Liturgy of the Eucharist at Mass. The Blessed Sacrament may be received by Catholics who have undergone their First Holy Communion (ie., given by a priest or other Minister of the Eucharist to a Catholic and swallowed by the communicant) as part of the Liturgy of the Eucharist during Mass. It can also be exposed (displayed) on an altar in a Monstrance. Rites involving the exposure of the Blessed Sacrament include Benediction and Perpetual Adoration. The adoration does not involve the adoration of the host but of Christ, who in Catholic theology, is believed to be transubstantiated in it. A majority of Protestants would argue that this is the precise definition of what an idol is and why an idol is worshipped— for the spirit embodied within it, though a Monstrance may be displayed on the altar in some Anglican communions.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
henry de beauchamp, 1st duke of warwick
1948 governor general's awards
executive order 9981
william paterson university
phrasal verb
descent with modification
lucius malfoy
lead poisoning
robert ashley
poisson bracket
danielle bunten berry
p vector
william paterson (jurist)
1839 in art
1906 in art
beloved
chern class
1992 in art
1949 governor general's awards
national anthem of the soviet union
anticommutative
1956 in art
viktor krum
jacobi identity
sigil (magic)
genesis p orridge
great smog of 1952
afghanistan timeline august 2003
2001 in art
chern simons form
honor jackson
airlock
list of state leaders in 1957
bernard baschet
commutative operation
franois baschet
baschet brothers
code co op
macwrite
billy strayhorn
imagewriter
penrose hawking singularity theorems
bafta games awards
john mack