transubstantiation|transubstantiations in English

noun

[tran·sub·stan·ti·a·tion || 'trænsəb‚stænʃɪ'eɪʃn]

act of being transubstantiated; process of becoming something else; belief that sacred wine and bread become the body and blood of Jesus in the sacrament of the Mass (Christianity)

Use "transubstantiation|transubstantiations" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "transubstantiation|transubstantiations" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "transubstantiation|transubstantiations", or refer to the context using the word "transubstantiation|transubstantiations" in the English Dictionary.

1. At that moment, James Somerset underwent a legal transubstantiation.

2. He wrote that church sacraments, such as transubstantiation, were purely symbolic.

3. The Catholic Church teaches that the bread and the wine are miraculously transformed into the literal body and blood of Christ —a doctrine called transubstantiation.

4. When, as sometimes has happened, the Coronation ceremony precedes the first meeting of Parliament, the declaration against Transubstantiation has to be made in the course of the Coronation ceremony

5. One word we will hear in the revised translation of the Creed this Advent is “Consubstantial.” It sounds like the wor d, “transubstantiation,” which we use to describe the doctrine about how the bread and wine used at Mass are transformed into the Body and Blood of Christ.

6. One word we will hear in the revised translation of the Creed this Advent is "Consubstantial." It sounds like the word, "transubstantiation," which we use to describe the doctrine about how the bread and wine used at Mass are transformed into the Body and Blood of Christ

7. Well aware of the abuses in the church, he wrote and preached against such matters as corruption in the monastic orders, papal taxation, the doctrine of transubstantiation (the claim that the bread and wine used in the Mass literally change into the body and blood of Jesus Christ), the confession, and church involvement in temporal affairs.

8. Scotus's system as opposed to Thomism: his formalism in the doctrine of God and the Trinity, his loose conception of the Hypostatic Union, his relaxation of the bonds uniting the sacraments with the humanity of Christ, his explanation of transubstantiation as an Adductive substitution, his emphasis on the supremacy of the will, and so on.

9. Taborite, Czech Táboři, member of a militant group of Bohemian Hussite reformers who in 1420 gave the biblical name of Tabor (Czech: Tábor) to their fortified settlement south of Prague.Like their more moderate coreligionists, the Utraquists, they were strict Biblicists and insisted on receiving a Eucharist of both bread and wine, though they denied transubstantiation and the Real Presence.