The Catholic Church

The Church is called catholic, then, because it extends over the whole world, from end to end of the earth, and because it teaches universally and infallibly each and every doctrine which must come to the knowledge of men, concerning things visible and invisible, heavenly and earthly, and because it brings every race of men into subjection to godliness, governors and governed, learned and unlearned, and because it universally treats and heals every class of sins, those committed with the soul and those with the body, and it possesses within itself every conceivable form of virtue, in deeds and in words and in the spiritual gifts of every description.

St Cyril of Jerusalem, Catechetical Lectures, 18:23

Sharing in the Divine

Let us then, with full confidence, partake of the body and blood of Christ. For in the figure of bread His body is given to you, and in the figure of wine His blood is given to you, so that by partaking of the body and blood of Christ, you might become united in body and blood with Him. For thus we become Christ-bearers, His body and blood being distributed through our members. And thus it is that we become, according to the blessed Peter, sharers of the divine nature.

St Cyril of Jerusalem, Catechetical Lectures, A.D. 350