Difference between revisions of "Eucharist wafer"
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− | [[ | + | [[page type::article]] |
− | == | + | [[thing type::food]] [[thing type::ceremonial object]] |
− | + | [[religion::Catholicism]] | |
− | + | [[category:Christianity]] | |
+ | </hide> | ||
+ | ==About== | ||
+ | A [[Eucharist wafer]], also known as a "[[Communion]] wafer", "[[a Eucharist]]" or even "the Eucharist" (as if there were only one of them), is a circular edible cracker used in the [[Catholic]] [[ceremony of the Eucharist]]. | ||
− | + | Catholic churches typically purchase the crackers from mass producers at a few pennies each. Prior to the ceremony, the wafer is ritually blessed ([[consecrated]]) by a Catholic priest, at which point the wafer is referred to as a [[consecrated host]]. [[Catholic doctrine]] makes a number of claims about the nature of crackers subjected to this blessing and how they must be handled; see [[consecrated host]]. | |
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Latest revision as of 12:00, 17 August 2011
About
A Eucharist wafer, also known as a "Communion wafer", "a Eucharist" or even "the Eucharist" (as if there were only one of them), is a circular edible cracker used in the Catholic ceremony of the Eucharist.
Catholic churches typically purchase the crackers from mass producers at a few pennies each. Prior to the ceremony, the wafer is ritually blessed (consecrated) by a Catholic priest, at which point the wafer is referred to as a consecrated host. Catholic doctrine makes a number of claims about the nature of crackers subjected to this blessing and how they must be handled; see consecrated host.