Altar-bread
ALTAR-BREAD: The bread used in the Roman
Catholic and Greek churches in the Sacrament of
the Eucharist. It is made from pure wheaten
flour, mixed with water, and baked, all conditions being regulated by strict law. The Council of Florence, to meet the contention
of Michael Cærularius
that the Latins did not possess the Eucharist
because of their use of unfermented bread, defined
that either kind may be validly employed. Nevertheless, it is unlawful today for a Latin priest
to use fermented, or for a Greek priest, except
in the Armenian and Maronite rites, to use unfermented bread. The practise of the Greeks
has always been the same, but in the Western
Church both fermented and unfermented bread
were employed down to the ninth century. The
altar-bread is also called a host, because of the
victim whom the sacramental species are destined
to conceal. In the Latin Church the host is circular in form, bearing an image of the crucifixion
or the letters I. H. S., and is of two sizes; the larger
is consumed by the celebrant or preserved for solemn
exposition, and the smaller given to the people in
communion. The name “particles” given to the
smaller hosts recalls the fact that down to the
eleventh century communion was distributed to
the faithful by breaking off portions of a large bread
consecrated by the celebrant. The large host of
the Greeks is rectangular in shape, and the small
host triangular. Great care is taken in the preparation of altar-breads, many synodal enactments
providing that it shall be committed only to clerics
or to women in religious communities.
John T. Creagh.