'Endued and clothed with Christ': Cranmer's 'Answer to Gardiner' and the Church's communion with Christ
The word corporally may have an ambiguity and doubleness in respect and relation. One is to the truth of the body present, and so it maybe said, Christ is corporally present in the sacrament; but if the word corporally be referred to the manner of the presence, then we should say, Christ's body were present after a corporal manner, which we say not, but in a spiritual manner, and therefore not locally nor by manner of quantity.
Cranmer - rather mischievously - welcomes this agreement, while yet knowing a crucial difference of understanding remains, as pointed to at the conclusion of this extract:
In this comparison I am glad that at the last we be come so near together, for you be almost right heartily welcome home, and I pray you let us shake hands. For we be agreed, as me seemeth, that Christ's body is present, and the same body that suffered: and we be agreed also of the manner of his presence. For you say that the body of Christ is not present but after a spiritual manner, and so say I also. And if there be any difference between us two, it is but a little, and in this point only; that I say that Christ is but spiritually in the ministration of the sacrament, and you say, that he is but after a spiritual manner in the sacrament.
It is, says Cranmer, "but a little difference" in the understanding of the Lord's spiritual presence in the Sacrament. Gardiner, however, has already declared that the difference is fundamental:
Where this author would have Christ none otherwise present in the sacrament, than he promised to be in the assembly of such as be gathered together in his name, it is a plain abolition of the mystery of the sacrament, in the words whereof Christ's human body is exhibite and made present with his very flesh to feed us.
For Cranmer, this statement by Gardiner is entirely incoherent. If, as Gardiner has admitted, the nature of Christ's presence in the Sacrament is spiritual, not corporal, how can Cranmer be accused of "a plain abolition of the mystery"?
And why should you be offended with this my saying, that Christ is spiritually present in the assembly of such as be gathered together in his name? And how can you conclude hereof, that this is a plain abolition of the mystery of the sacrament, because that in the celebration of the sacrament I say, that Christ is spiritually present? Have not you confessed yourself, that Christ is in the sacrament but after a spiritual manner? And after that manner he is also among them that be assembled together in his name. And if they that say so, do abolish the mystery of the sacrament, then do you abolish it yourself, by saying, that Christ is but after a spiritual manner in the sacrament, (after which manner you say also, that he is in them that be gathered together in his name,) as well as I do that say, he is spiritually in both. But he that is disposed to pick quarrels, and to calumniate all things, what can be spoken so plainly or meant so sincerely, but he will wrest it into a wrong sense?
It is at this point that Cranmer rather beautifully expounds the meaning of Christ's spiritual presence to the Church, both sacramentally and apart from the Sacrament:
I say that Christ is spiritually and by grace in his Supper, as he is when two or three be gathered together in his name, meaning that with both he is spiritually, and with neither corporally. And yet I say not, that there is no difference. For this difference there is, that with the one he is sacramentally, and with the other not sacramentally, except they be gathered together in his name to receive the sacrament. Nevertheless the selfsame Christ is present in both, nourisheth and feedeth both, if the sacrament be rightly received.


Gardiner comes off a bit like a lot of lay Roman and Eastern Catholic and Orthodox apologists, when it comes to understanding the Real Spiritual Presence.
ReplyDeleteA good point. There were 16th century examples of eirenic humanists on both sides of the Reformation divide who sought to emphasise what was held in common but, yes, online 'apologists' tend to do otherwise!
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