Dictionary
the communicant
noun
A person who receives (or is allowed to receive) the sacrament of Holy Communion
Exact(7)
We are as rapt as the communicant; we are peaceful.
That's something between the communicant and his pastor personally.
This teaching of the real presence is intended to emphasize the intimate relationship between Jesus and the communicant.
Thus symbolically identified, the communicant was inspired to speak in the first person, thereby giving birth to the art of drama.
The term is unofficially and inaccurately used to describe the Lutheran doctrine of the Real Presence; namely, that the body and blood of Christ are present to the communicant "in, with, and under" the elements of bread and wine.
It should be noted at the outset that one may study not only the intent, audience, and structure of a discursive act but also the shaping effects of the medium itself on both the communicator and the communicant.
Similar(53)
But the pain on the communicants' faces was no less.
"The Names and Residences of the Communicants belonging to Trinity Church Seneca Falls" 1833-1840.
The communicants returned to their seats, grasping the people they passed; if you listened closely, you could hear sniffling.
Perhaps the strongest supporters of the separation of church and state in the founding era were the communicants of a new, vigorous church, the Baptists.
Originally, it lasted for just thirty days, and was limited to online communications in which at least one of the communicants was located outside the United States.
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