S
Socrates4Jesus
Guest
BRB.
Will you tell me about one of these miracles, JD?Well I’ve looked at the first three pages of this thread and the last few pages…I guess what I have to say is that you definitely need to look at more than the bible.
If you didn’t know the bible wasn’t put together untill around 400AD.
On this website they have a few articles on the eucharist (maybe you’ve looked at them? I dont know) that examine what the early church fathers had to say about the eucharist.
You can find them here:
catholic.com/library/Christ_in_the_Eucharist.asp
catholic.com/library/Real_Presence.asp
catholic.com/library/Who_Can_Receive_Communion.asp
catholic.com/library/Sacrifice_of_the_Mass.asp
Have you ever head of the miracles of the eucharist??
Clergy who have doubted the real presence of the eucharist just like yourself have been shown the truth in some pretty amazing miracles.
If not I would suggest that you google it.
Are you saying, JJ that the drop of water the priest puts in the wine is the Holy Spirit?Don’t forget the water that flowed from Jesus’ heart along with the blood when the soldier pierced His heart on the cross. Also, if you’ll notice before the cosecration at Mass, the priest pours a drop of water into the chalice containing the wine.
I’ll answer if that’s Ok…the answer is No.Are you saying, JJ that the drop of water the priest puts in the wine is the Holy Spirit?
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Certainly that is OK, Mary! I hope it’s OK that i ask you, what did Jesus mean, here?I’ll answer if that’s Ok…the answer is No.
No, Socrates, I am not…that is all just a bit too cosmic for my earthly thinking.Are you saying, then, that whether the body and blood of Christ is really the Eucharist is a mystery, wrapped in an enigma, swallowed by the black hole of all that is unknown and unknowable?
http://www.sanfranciscosentinel.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/10/black-hole.jpg
First off you can read here about the mingling of the water and wineyourcatholicvoice.com/print.php?print=news&ID=1098Certainly that is OK, Mary! I hope it’s OK that i ask you, what did Jesus mean, here?
10Jesus answered her, “If you knew the gift of God and who it is that asks you for a drink, you would have asked him and he would have given you living water.” 11"Sir," the woman said, "you have nothing to draw with and the well is deep. Where can you get this living water? … 13Jesus answered, “Everyone who drinks this water will be thirsty again, 14but whoever drinks the water I give him will never thirst. Indeed, the water I give him will become in him a spring of water welling up to eternal life.” (John 4)
Woo Hoo!Wow! How about that. I WAS the 1,000th poster. I don’t know about the drop of water being the Holy Spirit, but I know it’s a necessity for the consecration, for whatever reason.Maybe someone can explain why the drop of water in the chalice is required.
No rush! Just wanted to verify that the drop of water was not the living water about which Jesus spoke.First off you can read here about the mingling of the water and wineyourcatholicvoice.com/print.php?print=news&ID=1098
I’ve got a great audio tape on a lecture Scott Hahn gave on this passage of Scripture. There is a whole lot more going on than what appears to us “modern” dayer’s. I will get back to you on this I promise.
Do you think, then, that the substance of the Eucharist is not a mystery? (Maybe i should not have been so quick to cross it off the list.)No, Socrates, I am not…that is all just a bit too cosmic for my earthly thinking.![]()
Maybe…and maybe not. We have no scientific data that tells us anything about the glorified body of Jesus. You are right if one thinks only in terms of what we know about earthly “non-glorified” bodies, but this may be too limiting. One must admit possibilities because we do know from the evidence in the gospels that Jesus resurrected body was not ordinary. We simply do not know what the mechanism is for all of this.Yes, and no.
Yes, because it is entirely possible that God can change the attributes of atoms. One example being the mass of the atoms of Peter’s body being reduced to the point where he was light enough to walk on water.
No, because it is absurd to think that a body can exist without atoms.
God can change the attributes of atoms, and change the molecular bonds of atoms, and add or remove atoms, but if He were to remove all atoms from a body, that body would cease to exist. It would be an atomless body, or a disembodied body, or a bodiless body–all three of which are logically impossible and irrational nonsense.
That’s my opinion, anyway. If you can explain how an atomless body is not a self-contradictory idea, that would do much to bridge the gap from where i am and where you stand.
http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/rational/library/content/RationalEdge/jul01/m_chasm_sf.jpg
Does ToAslan have to “Walk Like an Ephesian?”Any idea what i meant by calling you an Ephesian, ToAslan?
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Oh yeah, it is a mystery…no doubt about that.Do you think, then, that the substance of the Eucharist is not a mystery? (Maybe i should not have been so quick to cross it off the list.)
The drop of water signifies the water that poured forth from the side of Jesus together with His blood.Wow! How about that. I WAS the 1,000th poster. I don’t know about the drop of water being the Holy Spirit, but I know it’s a necessity for the consecration, for whatever reason.Maybe someone can explain why the drop of water in the chalice is required.