You can buy them at any christian book store or at the super market.
You can buy communion wafers at religious supply stores, online retailers, or at some churches.
It is basically wheat, flour, and water for the wafers. The mix is flattened, cut into circles, and baked lightly. Wine is typically grape juice. Both are blessed--consecrated-- as being the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ.
Roman Catholic AnswerThey are called Hosts. They are small wafers of unleavened bread that have been consecrated by a priest and are now the Body of Christ, through the miracle of transubstantiation.
You can buy them @ dollar general around Christmas time. Or you can just buy them off of the Internet.
there are 8 vanilla wafers in one serving of nilla wafers.
Roman Catholic AnswerStrictly speaking, they should only be called "Hosts" when they are consecrated and are now physically and really the Body of Christ, at which point they would be on the altar, or stored in the Tabernacle. The small rounds wafers used for Hosts are just bread and usually stored in the sacristy or a convenient freezer before use, they are not technically "hosts" before they are used, just wafers.
As Catholics we present wine and unlevened bread (as wafers) to the priest because Jesus ate these and served them to his disciples saying when you eat this bread and drink this wine think of me for they are the body and blood of Christ.
Nilla Wafers is the Nabisco brand name for vanilla wafers.
The Body of Christ Porcelain Plate?
Body of Christ = Leib Christi
Nilla Wafers is the Nabisco brand name for vanilla wafers.
Silicone Wafers