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Fruits of our Redemption

August 22, 2021 by Amy Welborn

merton

Well, look at that.

Even Thomas Merton believed the stuff, eh?

(From The Living Bread, published in 1956)

It’s fitting to think about this, considering that for most of the past few Sundays, our Gospel readings have drawn from John 6 – the multiplication of the loaves and fishes and then the subsequent Bread of Life discourse. Culminating today in the great challenge – this is such a hard teaching, some of us will just bail, others will stay.

Also appropriate considering the general anxiety about Catholics and the Eucharist. Are they coming back? Will they come back?

Do they believe the stuff?

Studies about that very issue are pursued on occasion, notably in 2019, by Pew Research. This study indicated that barely a quarter of Catholics believed in the Real Presence of Jesus in the Eucharist.

In addition to asking Catholics what they believe about the Eucharist, the new survey also included a question that tested whether Catholics know what the church teaches on the subject. Most Catholics who believe that the bread and wine are symbolic do not know that the church holds that transubstantiation occurs. Overall, 43% of Catholics believe that the bread and wine are symbolic and also that this reflects the position of the church. Still, one-in-five Catholics (22%) reject the idea of transubstantiation, even though they know about the church’s teaching.

The vast majority of those who believe that the bread and wine actually become the body and blood of Christ – 28% of all Catholics – do know that this is what the church teaches. A small share of Catholics (3%) profess to believe in the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist despite not knowing the church’s teaching on transubstantiation.

About six-in-ten (63%) of the most observant Catholics — those who attend Mass at least once a week — accept the church’s teaching about transubstantiation. Still, even among this most observant group of Catholics, roughly one-third (37%) don’t believe that the Communion bread and wine actually become the body and blood of Christ (including 23% who don’t know the church’s teaching and 14% who know the church’s teaching but don’t believe it). And among Catholics who do not attend Mass weekly, large majorities say they believe the bread and wine are symbolic and do not actually become the body and blood of Jesus.

Now. Some points:

  • To talk about what Catholics believe about the Church’s teaching on anything requires us to look honestly, at how many Catholics are taught at all  – in any formal sense. I am not going to run and do research on this but we all know that most baptized Catholics receive no formal religious instruction. Period. Those who have received formal religious instruction probably had a couple of dozen parish religious ed classes a year up until First Communion or Confirmation.
  • Most Catholic adults don’t study faith. A tiny, tiny number of people who attend Mass every week participate in formal religious education, and Catholicism just does not have the culture of laity-taking-responsibility-for-their-spiritual-formation that evangelical and historical mainline Protestantism has.
  • Now, of course, there are many ways of teaching and communicating the faith. When it comes to the Eucharist, one of the most important is through the shape and experience of the act itself. So yes, as many are saying, informality in worship teaches something. Lex orandi and whatever the rest of it is.

So: Most Catholics don’t go to Mass, most Catholics have received maybe a few dozen sessions of religious education in their life and most of the liturgies that Catholics do attend de-emphasize, via ritual and underlying assumptions, the unique presence of Christ in the Eucharist. 

And we’re surprised that most Catholics don’t believe in transubstantiation? 

Really?

As a side note: one of the ironic aspects of this discussion is – as people who have been paying attention to theological discussions of the past decades, both academic and as they’ve filtered down to popular catechetical trends – is that for a very long time “transubstantiation” has been critiqued as an inadequate and outdated way of describing the Eucharist, anyway.

They say: it’s reflective of a specific moment in time, a specific philosophical worldview and language, it’s a medieval innovation, it’s not the way the Fathers thought about it, and so on. This was very much a part of how Church leaders and teachers were taught from the 60’s on through probably the early 90’s – and may be still, for all I know. It’s what was drilled into my head.

What I do know is that “transubstantiation is a limiting and unnecessary concept for speaking of Eucharist” was assumed  by those in Catholic formation for decades.

So, yeah. Add that reason to my side-eye at people being shocked at these survey results. About transubstantiation.

But I want to get beyond that and approach the matter from a slightly different angle. Perhaps in reading this, some of you will detect my usual hobbyhorses. Well, that’s the way it goes. Most people have one message they’re trying to get out there to the world, and that’s it.

On hearing it, many of his disciples said, “This is a hard teaching. Who can accept it?”

It’s right there. This is a hard teaching.

And our challenges in accepting it and bringing it to life in our own lives indicates deeper problems – as they are wont to do – and there are other other ways to look at all of this, ways that explore  what is actually taught and communicated in both whatever content ordinary Catholics do encounter in their (minimal) catechesis and in the whole weight of American Catholic life

For, honestly – and let’s be honest, shall we – the general shape of what most Catholics “hear” and witness is as follows:

  • God made you and loves you.
  • God is with you all the time, loving you as you are.
  • God is present with you all the time.
  • You can pray any time, all the time, for God is always there, and he will help you be the person he created you to be.
  • The most important element a healthy spiritual life is accepting yourself.
  • The Scriptures tell us a little bit about God, but more about the people and cultures who produced them, and what they thought about God.
  • The Gospels tell us a little bit about Jesus, but mostly tell us about the early Christian’s experiences, perspectives and interpretations.
  • Jesus is present in his Church, the Body of Christ.
  • He’s present in that Body in many ways:  in its service, its gathering, its prayer.
  • During the Mass, Jesus is present in different ways: in the gathered community, in the Word of God, and in the Eucharist.
  • Now, all of the above is true and wonderful, but …you know…of course there are other ways to experience God, as well. As many paths as there are human beings on the earth.

All (most) of those are not untrue statements. But when it comes to faith, there is, of course, much more to consider. My point is not to get lost in that particular forest.

Oh, and let’s throw this in:

Does the behavior of Catholic clergy, in general over the past decades, now frantically hectoring us to come back! We miss you!  – indicate that they actually believe it’s Jesus they’re holding in their hands and sharing with us? Beyond how worship is conducted…way beyond that – when you consider the weight of scandal and – more importantly, really, for this discussion, the excuses made for it all –  the person in the pew can’t be blamed for concluding that since so many clerics don’t seem to believe that this is the One, Really Present with them right now, to whom they are answerable for eternity – shrug. 

It’s really just this:

Catholics barely participate in the life of the Church, period. When they do experience it through catechesis and worship, they have been taught for the past few decades that there is no need for a unique, particular Presence: God is always with you anyway. You can pray all the time anywhere, anyway. The official Church’s account of the divine is no more authoritative or revelatory than your own experience, anyway. And everyone is going to heaven, anyway. 

I’ve long been entertained by self-proclaimed progressive Catholics critiquing movements that seek stronger Catholic identity as being all about “cultural” Catholicism.

Doesn’t it seem, at this point, that the fruit of the past decades has been nothing but real “cultural Catholicism” – but, ironically, without much culture? Being Catholic is not at all about believing anything. It’s about being a part of a particular group via a ritual or two. The ironic victory of cultural Catholicism, enabled by those who’ve spent their lives and careers sneering at the same. Thanks.

This is, it seems to me, about so much more than getting a better program going. It always is, isn’t it?

It’s about facing so much, and doing so honestly and without rancor or feeling threatened.

And perhaps it begins by simply returning to the beginning of this post and read the words from Thomas Merton, who welcomed the “spirit” of the Second Vatican Council (if not all of its particulars in terms of liturgy – he was conflicted), but who wrote this on the cusp of the Council, in the mid-50’s.

Would any of what he wrote make sense to many people sitting in the pews today?

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Posted in Amy Welborn | 2 Comments

2 Responses

  1. on August 22, 2021 at 10:48 am carleolson

    “The ironic victory of cultural Catholicism, enabled by those who’ve spent their lives and careers sneering at the same.”

    Nailed it. Worse, many don’t sneer at in words, but make a mockery of it in their actions while giving lip service to “lessons” they learned from growing up Catholic–all of them lessons that are more Oprah than Christ. It’s easy enough to point to Joe Biden, who is a caricature of a shadow of a one-dimensional cultural Catholic, but I see this sort of thing everywhere, even among more than a few priests and bishops.


  2. on August 22, 2021 at 11:19 am SUE KORLAN

    God loves you, but He allows you to do things that separate you from His love. When this happens, He is no longer with you unless and until you repent. He may, of course, use people He is always present with to draw you back, but until you are back you have put up a wall of separation between the two of you which God will respect by not crossing.

    The most important element of spiritual life is doing God’s will. As a practical matter, when you do His will you find problems resolve themselves quickly and you have a lot more time to do things.

    The Scriptures tell us a great deal about God, especially the prophets who wrote in opposition to the culture they lived in. Jesus was God, the Scriptures are accurate pictures of His life and give the general idea of what He said although not the verbatim words. If, as Brant Pitre suggests, Acts stops in Rome during Paul’s first imprisonment there because that’s what was happening when Luke finished the Book of Acts, then Luke’s Gospel was probably written in the 50s at the latest. He obviously uses the Gospel of Mark, and claims in the introduction that he uses a number of sources for his gospel. So the idea that there was an extended period of oral transmission is probably wrong.

    Jesus is present in His Church as the spouse of His bride. He is present in many ways there, but He is present Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity only in the consecrated species. The term used most frequently by those who opposed the first major challenger to this belief was Real Presence, as opposed to symbolic presence.

    I am blessed to have a priest living in my parish who is completely Eucharist centered. Also working on his doctorate.



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