OK, so literally breaking apart some unleavened bread. My point was to raise the question of whether the specific thing Jesus did must be copied exactly to be valid today or whether it's more about the symbolism than the exact materials used.
Well, you attempted to make that point using an invalid example.
Except that perfectly formed round wafers handed out in their perfectly round state aren't broken by anyone.
Yes, they are. I referred to that fact in the preceding post.
In which case we need to ask what else must be copied exactly.
Well, it would be none of those meaningless incidentals that you tacked onto your scenario, such as the host being "perfectly round," handing them out, where the people are seated, how many showed up for the service, and etc.
No one is arguing that all these things are essentials of a valid Eucharist when the subject of wine
vs grape juice comes up for debate.
Does this mean you believe that churches that use regular bread and tear it apart are, as you put it earlier, "highly questionable"?
I did not say that it would.
I said that to make an issue out of some wildly hypothetical thing such as your "round chocolate with a peanut butter filling" would be highly questionable (to put it mildly).
Would you regard communion as being invalid if the liquid served didn't have the same amount of alcohol in it as what we can imagine Jesus would have used?
We do not know the alcoholic content of the wine Christ used, so this obviously cannot be an issue.
Would you say someone who struggled with alcoholism should simply be excluded from communion forever, if they couldn't cope with a small amount of alcohol?
I think that is speculation more than fact. Churches do, however, make provision for people who say their alcoholism keeps them from having any wine at all touch their lips, about which I have no opinion. But if there are such people, it certainly is not a green light for everyone else to be given grape juice, chocolate, or peanut butter along with this one problem parishioner.
At what point would you argue things have to exactly match what Jesus did, and at what point would you accept that it's about, as Jesus put it, "remembrance of me"?
The church's policy is to use the same elements as Christ used--bread and wine.