释义 |
invination|ɪnvɪˈneɪʃən| [n. of action from med.L. invīnāre: see prec.] In Eucharistic theory: A local presence or inclusion of the blood of Christ in the wine after consecration; one of the modifications of the doctrine of the real presence.
1742tr. Bossuet's Variat. Prot. Ch. (1829) I. 50 Osiander was left to defend alone his impanation and invination. 1855Pusey Doctr. Real Presence Note A. 5 What those to whom he imputes ‘impanation’ and ‘invination’ really held, was that the Body and Blood of Christ was present ‘under the form of bread and wine’, these ‘remaining in their natural substances’. |