Do you REALLY believe you give to eat the real body, blood, soul and DIVINITY of Jesus The Christ, to those who kneel at you altar? REALLY? ... ! Catholic Mass is a blasphemy of evil origin.
Do you REALLY believe you give to eat the real body, blood, soul and DIVINITY of Jesus The Christ, to those who kneel at you altar?
YES. I accept the Truth that Jesus told us:
****54Whoever eats* my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise him on the last day. 55For my flesh is true food, and my blood is true drink. 56Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood remains in me and I in him.
At Mass, the faithful can truly come facie ad faciem Deiface to face with God.
What we see at Mass not only visually imparts the Churchs teachings; it also brings us into a richer relationship with God, who, in St. Bonaventures words, “descends upon the altar . . . [as] he did when he became man the first time in the womb of the Virgin Mary.”
The Mass and the Bible are inseparable, and together they orient the Catholic faithful toward the destiny to which all humans are called: heaven.
The Christian can recognize the biblical nature of Catholic worship in the first prayer of the Mass, the sign of the cross. The language of the prayer comes directly from Matthew 28:19, where Jesus commands his apostles to go out into all nations and baptize them in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit.
https://www.catholic.com/magazine/print-edition/the-mass-is-profoundly-biblical
Your statement: “Catholic Mass is a blasphemy of evil origin.”
Is that coming from you or from Satan?
“Incredulity is the neglect of revealed truth or the willful refusal to assent to it.”
“Heresy is the obstinate post-baptismal denial of some truth which must be believed with divine and catholic faith, or it is likewise an obstinate doubt concerning the same.”
The doubt or denial involved in heresy must concern a matter revealed by God and solemnly defined by the Church (for example, the Trinity, the Incarnation, the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist, the sacrifice of the Mass, the pope’s infallibility or the Immaculate Conception and the Assumption of Mary).