they take that from the bishops and the priests there. >> well, of course, at one level, communion refers to the hosts, the bread that the faithful are receiving that catholic believe has been transformed into the body of jesus christ. and so, when we talk about receiving communion, that's what we usually mean. but of course, communion also has a broader sense, meaning the kind of unity of the church, the unity of the faithful. and we also talk, of course, in catholic tradition about the communion of saints, the idea that saints are kind of the fabric that knits the church together, you know, through time and across space. and this is a great moment in which two new members of that communion of saints have been formally recognized as such. popes john xxiii and john paul ii. and you mentioned earlier, delia, that john paul ii had this great devotion to the communion of saints, and of course, that's right. you'll remember in one of his