A critique of From Consumption to Communion focused on strengthening the paper’s structure and practical force. This episode asks how Eucharistic theology and systemic critique can be braided earlier, how diagnostic questions can move from appendix to action, and how the false Eucharist of modernity can expose the counterfeit communions of platforms, markets, and predatory systems. Read More
Tag: predatory civilization
Episode 42: Eucharistic Logic for a Predatory Civilization: A Debate on Consumption and Communion
A debate on Eucharistic logic for a predatory civilization. This episode asks whether the pattern of receiving, blessing, breaking, and giving can practically reshape institutions that consume labor, attention, bodies, and ecosystems — or whether Eucharistic self-gift exceeds what secular systems can realistically embody. Read More
Episode 41: The Eucharist as a Civilizational Diagnostic: From Consumption to Communion
A deep dive into the Eucharist as a civilizational diagnostic. This episode explores predatory systems that take, consume, discard, accumulate, and defend — and contrasts them with the Eucharistic metabolism of receiving, blessing, breaking open, sharing, abiding, and becoming gift for the life of the world. Read More
From Consumption to Communion: Eucharistic Ontology, Predatory Civilization, and the Life-Giving Body of Christ | ChatGPT-5.5 Thinking and NotebookLM
This white paper proposes that the Eucharist is not only a central sacrament of Christian worship, but a profound revelation of the deepest structure of reality. Against modern civilizational systems organized around extraction, possession, commodification, and predatory consumption, the Eucharist discloses an alternative ontology: life as gift, personhood as communion, embodiment as sacred participation, and community as mutual indwelling. Beginning with the scandalous language of John 6, in which Jesus offers his flesh and blood as true food and true drink, the paper argues that Christ enters the symbolic field of violent consumption and reverses it from within. He does not overcome predation by becoming a stronger predator, but by becoming self-giving food for the life of the world (United States Conference of Catholic Bishops [USCCB], n.d.-a; Benedict XVI, 2007).
The paper develops the distinction between two modes of eating: destructive consumption, which absorbs the life of others into private or institutional self-maintenance, and Eucharistic communion, which receives life as gift and becomes life-giving in return. This distinction provides a theological grammar for diagnosing contemporary ecological, economic, social, technological, and institutional crises. Systems that consume bodies, labor, ecosystems, attention, trust, and futures operate according to an anti-eucharistic logic. By contrast, the Eucharist reveals a world in which economy means nourishment, power means service, creation is received as kin and gift, and community becomes the visible body of shared life.
The paper concludes that Eucharistic theology can contribute to a life-coherent civilizational framework without reducing the sacrament to metaphor, politics, or ecology. Precisely because the Eucharist is more than a social symbol, it has social, ecological, and civilizational consequences. To receive the Body of Christ is to be incorporated into a new order of being: one that unmasks the predatory grammar of the old world and brings forth a communion-world ordered to the ongoing life of the whole.