When God Lifts the Veil on the Eucharist (Morning Air)

What if, just once, you could see with your eyes the bread and wine become the flesh and blood of Christ at Mass?

On Morning Air, John Morales welcomed Catholic apologist William Albrecht to discuss Eucharistic miracles, those rare moments when God allows the hidden reality of the Eucharist to become visible. While we believe that the bread and wine truly become the Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity of Jesus Christ at every Mass, Eucharistic miracles are extraordinary signs where the consecrated Host visibly appears as flesh and the Precious Blood as real blood.

“The Lord allows for these Eucharistic miracles to occur many times because people doubt the reality and truth of His words,” Albrecht explained.

The conversation explored some of the Church’s most famous miracles, including the eighth-century Miracle of Lanciano in Italy. During Mass, a monk struggling with doubt witnessed the Host turn into visible flesh and the wine become blood. Scientific studies later identified the flesh as human heart tissue, with no preservatives found despite the miracle being more than 1,200 years old.

“To me, that is profoundly theological,” Albrecht said. “Our Lord truly gives us His Sacred Heart.”

John Morales reflected on how these miracles “pull back the veil” of faith. Normally, the appearances of bread and wine remain after consecration, but in these rare moments, God permits the faithful to glimpse the reality hidden beneath.

The discussion also touched on more recent Eucharistic miracles, including Buenos Aires in the 1990s, where scientific examination again pointed to living heart tissue. Again and again, these signs point Catholics back to Christ’s words in Scripture: “This is My Body.”

For believers and doubters alike, Eucharistic miracles serve as powerful reminders that Jesus is truly present in the Eucharist — not symbolically, but substantially.


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John Hanretty serves as a Digital Media Producer for Relevant Radio®. He is a graduate of the Gupta College of Business at the University of Dallas. Besides being passionate about writing, his hobbies include drawing and digital design. You can read more of his daily articles at relevantradio.com and on the Relevant Radio® app.