A reader writes:
My friend’s Mother who has been a Catholic all her life and will stay in the Church, has been having problems believing in the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist. Any reading you know of she can do?
It’s a little hard to know what to recommend without understanding more precisely what the source of her difficulty is (i.e., which objections to the Real Presence she finds troubling).
In general I would recommend the material in the library and This Rock archive at www.catholic.com that deals with this. It hits about every objection that I’m aware of to the Real Presence.
If the problem is just a general psychological difficulty of accepting something that is contrary to the senses then some of the following points may be helpful for her to contemplate:
- There are many times in life where appearances are misleading and we need to act on what we know to be the case, appearances notwithstanding.
- We have Jesus’ word on this really emphatically in Scripture.
- It’s been the unbroken faith of the Church ever since.
- We can have faith in God to guide his Church into correct beliefs.
- God is omnipotent and even the things that seem unimaginably hard to us are equally easy for him as the smallest acts. It is as easy for God to make Jesus present in the Eucharist as it is for him to create a single atom or pick up a piece of paper or cause a gentle breeze to blow. Being omnipotent, God does not expend resources when he does things and so all things are equally easy to him. He is completely un-strained by everything he does since he has infinite resources to draw upon (that’s what omnipotence does for you). Something may seem hard to us, but that’s because of our limited resources. It’s not hard to God. For him, everything is easy. It’s just a question of what he chooses to do, and he’s told us that he’s chosen to do this.

