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ead into the Body, of the whole substance of the wine into the blood of Christ, _only the appearance_ of bread and wine remaining". Again, the Lutheran doctrine of Consubstantiation destroys the nature of the Sacrament. The Lutheran _Formula Concordiae_, e.g., teaches that "_outside the use the Body of Christ is not present_". Thus it limits the Presence to the reception, whether by good or bad. The _Figurative_ view of the Blessed Sacrament {85} destroys the nature of a Sacrament, making the matter symbolize something which is not there. It is safer to take the words of consecration as they stand, corresponding as they do so literally with the words of Institution, and simply to say: "This (bread: it is still bread) is My Body" (it is far more than bread); "this (wine: it is still wine) is My Blood" (it is far more than wine). Can we get beyond this, in terms and definitions? Can we say more than that it is a "Sacrament"--The Blessed Sacrament? And after all, do we wish to do so? (II) WHAT IT DOES. Briefly, the Blessed Sacrament does two things; It pleads, and It feeds. It is the pleading _of_ the one Sacrifice; It is the feeding _on_ the one Sacrifice. These two aspects of the one Sacrament are suggested in the two names, _Altar_ and _Table_.[6] Both words are liturgical. In Western Liturgies, _Altar_ is the rule, and _Table_ the exception; in Eastern Liturgies, _Table_ is the rule, and _Altar_ {86} the exception. Both are, perhaps, embodied in the old name, _God's Board_, of Thomas Aquinas. Both contain a truth. _The Altar_. This, for over 300 years, was the common name for what St. Irenaeus calls "the Abode of the Holy Body and Blood of Christ". Convocation, in 1640, decreed: "It is, and may be called, an Altar in that sense in which the Primitive Church called it an Altar, and in no other". This sense referred to the offering of what the Liturgy of St. James calls "the tremendous and unbloody Sacrifice," the Liturgy of St. Chrysostom "the reasonable and unbloody Sacrifice,"[7] and the Ancient English Liturgy "a pure offering, an holy offering, an undefiled offering, even the holy Bread of eternal Life, and the Cup of everlasting Salvation ". The word Altar, then, tells of the pleading of the Sacrifice of Jesus Christ. In the words of the Archbishops of Canterbury and York to Leo XIII: "We plead and represent before the Father the Sacrifice of the Cross"; or in the words of C
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