What kind of bread and wine Use Catholics in the sacrament of the Eucharist?
wafer? bread? wine? grape juice?
- Most Catholics do believe that the bread and wine are transformed into the Real Body and Blood of Christ?
- The Spanish did not expression "Al Pan Pan call and wine Wine" refers to the Eucharist?
- A Catholic priest can change bread and wine?
- Where did the Catholic sacrament of the Eucharist originate?
- In the Eucharist, you think that is appropriate for churches to exclude others from taking Communion?






1412 The essential signs of the Eucharistic sacrament are wheat bread and grape wine, in which the blessing of the Holy Spirit is invoked and the priest pronounces the words of consecration spoken by Jesus at the Last Supper: "This is my body to be given by you …. This is the chalice of my blood …. "http://www.vatican.va/archive/catechism/ …
Hi,
In most cases, the bread is a flat round wafer unleven but I have seen another type of bread used on rare occasions. The wine has alcohol in accordance with rules that the church should be a natural wine. It is usually a white wine.
Cheers,
Michael Kelly
The proper term for "wafer" is "welcome." Depends on the parish. Some use the machines, others use the bread. No matter which is used both as bread wheat is based.
The wine is used, not grape juice, because wine is what Jesus used at the Last Supper.
Unleavened bread, which is the host of wheat and wine as the wine or the Altar instricted as Bishop / Cardinal or the Pope of Archdioese
We use plates made from wheat flour and water, and wine. These elements must be "proper elements" or can not be guaranteed. We will never be able to use grape juice, bread or bread, biscuits etc
However, another thing that Mother Church is right.
Jesus did not turn water into grape juice, nor to pass over a cup of Welch's at the Last Supper.
Azim and wine!
A host (wafer) and the sacramental wine. God bless …
Kroger style wheat bread and wine.