The Religions Book

(ff) #1

229


See also: Beliefs for new societies 56–57 ■ Entering into the faith 224–27 ■ The Protestant Reformation 230–37


CHRISTIANITY


on the recently rediscovered
philosophy of Aristotle to clarify
previous teaching about the
Eucharist. Aquinas’s teaching
became the official doctrine of
the Roman Catholic Church.
The purpose of Aquinas’s
teaching was to explain how the
real presence of Jesus could be
found in the elements of bread and


wine. This was important because
Christians believe that the Eucharist
is a sacrament, a sacred act that is
thought to embody a religious truth
(p.226). If Jesus were not present
when the bread and wine were
shared, the sacrament would lose
its meaning and significance.

When is bread not bread?
According to Aristotle, substance
is the unique identity of an object
or person—the “tableness” of
a table, for example. Accidents
are the attributes of the substance,
and can change without its identity
altering—a table might be wooden,
and blue, but if it was metal and
pink it would still be a table.
For Aquinas, this meant that
it was possible for the substance
or essence of an object or person
(such as Jesus) to be found in the
accidents or attributes of other
objects (such as bread and wine).
He said that it was also possible
for one object to be converted into
another object: so, as the priest
prayed over the bread and the wine,
the substance of bread and wine

was converted into that of the
body and blood of Jesus (hence
the term transubstantiation—
“to change from one substance to
another”). However, the accidents
or attributes of the bread and wine
remained, so the real presence of
Jesus in bread and wine was to be
believed, but not physically seen. ■

Thomas Aquinas Thomas Aquinas is acclaimed as
the greatest theologian in the
medieval scholastic movement,
which was characterized by a
new method of contemplating the
Christian faith in an academically
rigorous way. Aquinas was born
to a noble family in Roccasecca
near Naples in 1225. While at the
university in Naples, Aquinas
joined the recently established
Order of Preachers (later known
as the Dominican Friars). He
continued his studies in Paris and
Cologne, subsequently becoming
a highly regarded teacher in the
Catholic Church. His major

contribution to Christianity
was his use of Greek philosophy,
notably the work of Aristotle,
to explain and defend Christian
theology. Known as “Thomism,”
his system of theology became
the standard within Catholic
thinking for centuries. Aquinas
died at the age of 49 in 1274,
while he was traveling to the
ecumenical Council of Lyon.

Key works

c.1260 Summa contra Gentiles
c.1265–74 Summa Theologica
(Sum of Theology)

Holy Communion is fundamental to
the faith of nearly all Christians. Roman
Catholic and Orthodox Christians
believe in transubstantiation; others
see it more as a symbolic act.

The presence of Christ’s
true body and blood in this
sacrament cannot be
detected by sense, nor
understanding, but by
faith alone.
Thomas Aquinas
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