A
azcelt
Guest
where in the bible does it say that only ordained catholic priests can turn the bread and wine into the body and blood of our savior?i,m not being a wiseacre,i,m just curious about this belief. in christian unity,celt
I don’t think anyone said that only Catholic Priest can turn thewhere in the bible does it say that only ordained catholic priests can turn the bread and wine into the body and blood of our savior?i,m not being a wiseacre,i,m just curious about this belief. in christian unity,celt
Will you settle for one of St. John’s disciples and a close friend?where in the bible does it say that only ordained catholic priests can turn the bread and wine into the body and blood of our savior?i,m not being a wiseacre,i,m just curious about this belief. in christian unity,celt
So, 2 prominent Protestant theologians think we are idolators, huh? Well, this Catholic thinks that they are heretics.I like where I am comming from much better than where they are comming from.
What is CERTAIN is that Catholic Priests are authorized to Consecrate bread into the BODY, BLOOD, SOUL, DIVINITY of the Lord.where in the bible does it say that only ordained catholic priests can turn the bread and wine into the body and blood of our savior?i,m not being a wiseacre,i,m just curious about this belief. in christian unity,celt
This is my opinion. Protestants say that the Consecrated Bread is not the Body of Christ, but only a symbol.
In short, what Protestants are saying is that Jesus violated the Commmandment against graven images because a symbol is a graven image in Protestant Theology.
In Protestant Theology, the bread and wine in their church services are never turned into the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ. The bread and wine are simply turned into symbols for the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ.
Being symbols for God, these are graven images in Protestant Theology.
And Protestants in their Church Services are EATING AND DRINKING WHAT IN THEIR PROTESTANT THEOLOGY ARE GRAVEN IMAGES OF GOD.
Now, this might not apply to all kinds of Protestant Churches because some of them do have pictures of Christ and perhaps even pictures of saints. But most of them I see on TV, their churches have no statues, no pictures, and their crosses have no Corpus. That’s an indication that they view symbols as graven images.
Note: Bread Consecrated by a Catholic Priest becomes the Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity of Christ.
I don’t think Protestant Pastors are authorized to consecrate bread into the Body Blood Soul Divinity of Christ.
In both cases, Protestants believe that the bread is just a symbol of the Body of Christ.
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Gottle of Geer said:## Graven images are all symbols - but not all symbols are graven images. ##
How about, “What did Moses see when he saw THE BURNING BUSH WHICH BURNED AND BURNED AND BURNED WITHOUT BEING CONSUMED BY THE FIRE”?in the old testament it is really forbidden to make idols or images of gods and even God because no one ever seen GOD the Father. What are they going to make if they didnt see the Father?
I hope you get my point.!!
Tried in another thread. Didn’t work there either.Deut: 16,22
22 Neither shalt thou make nor set up to thyself a statue: which things the Lord thy God hateth.
This is not surprising in the least. Protestants MUST reject the doctrine of the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist because the alternative is facing the fact that their reformed history is rooted in the act of turning one’s back on Christ - literally. One cannot profess to be a christian while, at the same time, acknowledging that Christ is present in a Church to which you do not belong. Hence, to justify their continuance in the reformed tradition, they must rationalize their separation from the Church by denying the truth of its sacraments - chief among them the Eucharist.In their recent book titled “Correcting the Cults,” Norman Geisler and Ron Rhodes have this to say about the Catholic view the Eucharist and Eucharistic adoration.
“Many Protestants believe it (the Host) involves the worship of something which God-give senses of every normal human being informs them is a finite creation God, namely, bread and wine. It is to worship God under a physical image a form of worship that is clearly forbidden in the Ten Commandments (Exod. 20:4)”
… Any thoughts?
Peace
In their recent book titled “Correcting the Cults,” Norman Geisler and Ron Rhodes have this to say about the Catholic view the Eucharist and Eucharistic adoration.
“Many Protestants believe it (the Host) involves the worship of something which God-give senses of every normal human being informs them is a finite creation God, namely, bread and wine. It is to worship God under a physical image a form of worship that is clearly forbidden in the Ten Commandments (Exod. 20:4)”
So, we are worshiping a finite creation of God in voliation of Exodus 20:4 which says, “You shall not carve idols for yourselves in the shape of anything in the sky above or on the earth below or in the waters beneath the earth.”…?
Is worshiping something with an image in voilation of Exod. 20:4?
What of Colossians 1:15 which says, “He (Christ) is the image of the invisible God”…?
Are we violating Exod. 20:4 by giving our worship to Christ?
It is Christ in the Eucharist that we worship, as it is God in the flesh that we worship.
Any thoughts?
Peace
Quite the assumption, my friend…Norman Geisler and Ron Rhodes are very correct in their observations.
I have read many of Norman Geisler’s and Ron Rhodes’ books, and their books withstands the test of Scripture.![]()
Correction, Norman and Ron are HERETICS. There is a difference! :yup:First, Norman Geisler and Ron Rhodes are schismatics! They don’t even follow their own Bible when it says to be loyal so who cares what they spew out! Just read the NT and it admonishes the schisamtics routinley!
Then how come many of us don’t? How can something be a necessity when a large number of people don’t do it? Something is wrong with your theory here.Protestants MUST reject the doctrine of the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist
No, this is a serious misreading of the history of the Reformation. The Reformers did reject the doctrine of the Eucharistic sacrifice. They did not reject the doctrine of the Real Presence as a whole. Zwingli did; Luther emphatically did not; Calvin was in between.because the alternative is facing the fact that their reformed history is rooted in the act of turning one’s back on Christ - literally.
This generalization is not just at variance with the facts–it’s downright laughable. For one thing, Catholics acknowledge that Christ is fully present sacramentally in the Orthodox Church, so you’re showing serious ignorance of your own Church’s teaching. Furthermore, your Church recognizes that Christ is present in some way even among us miserable Protestants. Even more to the point, as a matter of fact Protestants routinely acknowledge Christ’s presence in each other’s churches and in Catholic and Orthodox churches. I doubt that Geisler would deny Christ’s presence in Catholicism altogether. However, he is more polemical than most Protestant theologians (though considerably more moderate than diehard fundamentalists).One cannot profess to be a christian while, at the same time, acknowledging that Christ is present in a Church to which you do not belong.
No, that’s simply false. I know plenty of Protestants who, like myself, have no problem acknowledging the validity of Catholic sacraments. The reason we are not in communion with Rome has nothing to do with an unwillingness to recognize your sacraments, but rather with a refusal to reject our own.Hence, to justify their continuance in the reformed tradition, they must rationalize their separation from the Church by denying the truth of its sacraments - chief among them the Eucharist.
Edwin,Then how come many of us don’t? How can something be a necessity when a large number of people don’t do it? Something is wrong with your theory here.
No, this is a serious misreading of the history of the Reformation. The Reformers did reject the doctrine of the Eucharistic sacrifice. They did not reject the doctrine of the Real Presence as a whole. Zwingli did; Luther emphatically did not; Calvin was in between.
This generalization is not just at variance with the facts–it’s downright laughable. For one thing, Catholics acknowledge that Christ is fully present sacramentally in the Orthodox Church, so you’re showing serious ignorance of your own Church’s teaching. Furthermore, your Church recognizes that Christ is present in some way even among us miserable Protestants. Even more to the point, as a matter of fact Protestants routinely acknowledge Christ’s presence in each other’s churches and in Catholic and Orthodox churches. I doubt that Geisler would deny Christ’s presence in Catholicism altogether. However, he is more polemical than most Protestant theologians (though considerably more moderate than diehard fundamentalists).
No, that’s simply false. I know plenty of Protestants who, like myself, have no problem acknowledging the validity of Catholic sacraments. The reason we are not in communion with Rome has nothing to do with an unwillingness to recognize your sacraments, but rather with a refusal to reject our own.
In Christ,
Edwin