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The sacrament par excellence, the Eucharist, has been upheld as the
foundational sacrament of Christ's Body called church, yet it has
confounded Christian thinking and practice throughout history. Its
symbolism points to the paradox of the incarnation, death, and
resurrection of God in Jesus of Nazareth, which St Paul describes
as a stumbling block (skandalon). Yet the scandal of
sacramentality, not only illustrated by but enacted in the
Eucharist, has not been sufficiently accounted for in the
ecclesiologies and sacramental theologies of the Christian
tradition. Despite what appears to be an increasingly
post-ecclesial world, sacrament remains a persistent theme in
contemporary culture, often in places least expected. Drawing upon
the biblical image of 'the Word made flesh', this interdisciplinary
study examines the scandal of sacramentality along the twofold
thematic of the scandal of language (word) and the scandal of the
body (flesh).While sacred theology can think through this scandal
only at significant risk to its own stability, the fictional
discourses of literature and the arts are free to explore this
scandal in a manner that simultaneously augments and challenges
traditional notions of sacrament and sacramentality, and by
extension, what it means to describe the church as a 'eucharistic
community'.
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