Wesley Collected Works Vol 10
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-10-177 |
| Words | 391 |
Therefore, upon consecration there is a
conversion of the whole substance of the bread into the
whole substance of Christ's body, and of the whole substance
of the wine into the substance of his blood; and this we term
transubstantiation. “Yet we must not suppose that Christ is broken, when
the host, or, consecrated bread, is broken; because there is
whole and entire Christ, under the species of every particle
of bread, and under the species of every drop of wine.”
We answer: No such change of the bread into the body
of Christ can be inferred from his words, “This is my body.”
For it is not said, “This is changed into my body,” but,
“This is my body;” which, if it were to be taken literally,
would rather prove the substance of the bread to be his body. But that they are not to be taken literally is manifest from
the words of St. Paul, who calls it bread, not only before,
but likewise after, the consecration. (1 Cor. x. 17; xi. 2628.) Here we see, that what was called his body, was bread
at the same time. And accordingly these elements are called
by the Fathers, “the images, the symbols, the figure, of
Christ's body and blood.”
Scripture and antiquity, then, are flatly against transub
stantiation. And so are our very senses. Now, our Lord
himself appealed to the senses of his disciples: “Handle me
and see; for a spirit hath not flesh and bones, as ye see me
have.” (Luke xxiv. 39.) Take away the testimony of our
senses, and there is no discerning a body from a spirit. But
if we believe transubstantiation, we take away the testimony
of all our senses. And we give up our reason too: For if every particle of the
host is as much the whole body of Christ as the whole host is
before it is divided, then a whole may be divided, not into
parts, but into wholes. For divide and subdivide it over and
over, and it is whole still ! It is whole before the division,
whole in the division, whole after the division | Such
nonsense, absurdity, and self-contradiction all over is the
doctrine of transubstantiation
6. An evil practice attending this evil doctrine is, the
depriving the laity of the cup in the Lord’s supper.