Hello everyone,
I am in need of wisdom of a certain topic that I am having trouble understanding.
Does the holy spirit come at a specific moment in the liturgy (the epiclesis) or is it a process throughout the whole liturgy (with the epiclesis being the climax) that turns the bread and wine into the body and blood of Lord Jesus Christ?
I understand the point that this is a mystery and we have no explanation of how or what happens, but I am confused of which one is true. I have been taught one my whole life but have recently been introduced to the other while preparing a lesson. So I need to know which one is the right teaching of the church.
God Bless you all,
Son of Christ
Comments
Is this "idol worship"?
https://blogs.ancientfaith.com/orthodoxyandheterodoxy/2013/08/14/the-doctrine-of-transubstantiation-in-the-orthodox-church/
So whilst some orthodox theologians believe that it changes at the institition or epiclesis, others say that we do not know when it changes exactly. As such, both views are acceptable in orthodox circles.
Probably the biggest difference between the Latin church and the Orthodox Church on this is that the Latin church insists dogmatically that it changes during the institution, specifically the elevation (which was introduced to combat early Protestantism thought rejecting literal presence).