as far as Anglican orders being valid or not...

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It is neither in connotation to the scripture you presented. Was the scripture you presented meant to be a simile or metaphor to my post?
No. It supports that “there are Christians who questioned all this in the early and ensuing centuries”, showing that it was even with Jesus Christ himself.
 
No. It supports that “there are Christians who questioned all this in the early and ensuing centuries”, showing that it was even with Jesus Christ himself.
Yes, an interesting passage. Question for you, the disciples that left Jesus, did they understand him to be speaking literally or metaphorically?
 
Real Presence in the Eucharist is a belief practiced from the beginning by the Church. There were bit and pieces writings by the Early Church Fathers which mentioned it as a matter of fact rather than the needs for a long technical explanation.

The fact there were heretics, if indeed they existed, who did not believed and resorted to go underground for fear of being caught as heretics, was proof the existence of such belief of the Church, albeit as strict as their enforcement was.

When heretics were no longer being rein in for heresy and later they began to have the freedom to start their own churches with their heretical belief, the Catholic Church had to define officially what is Real Presence to make clear this belief to the faithful and to distinguish it from the other churches that did not believe in it.

Defining doctrines was often done in this manner, not because it was a new belief, but because of the necessity to have it defined. The Church operated without interruption in a continuous apostolic succession that defining every single doctrine was not always done but often taken for granted as they were being practiced.
 
Real Presence in the Eucharist is a belief practiced from the beginning by the Church. There were bit and pieces writings by the Early Church Fathers which mentioned it as a matter of fact rather than the needs for a long technical explanation.

The fact there were heretics, if indeed they existed, who did not believed and resorted to go underground for fear of being caught as heretics, was proof the existence of such belief of the Church, albeit as strict as their enforcement was.

When heretics were no longer being rein in for heresy and later they began to have the freedom to start their own churches with their heretical belief, the Catholic Church had to define officially what is Real Presence to make clear this belief to the faithful and to distinguish it from the other churches that did not believe in it.

Defining doctrines was often done in this manner, not because it was a new belief, but because of the necessity to have it defined. The Church operated without interruption in a continuous apostolic succession that defining every single doctrine was not always done but often taken for granted as they were being practiced.
Using this logic and assuming it is factual, the Church then should be grateful for the heretics that gave them reason to make the beliefs of the Church clear to the faithful. A thousand years of unclear belief in a core doctrine is a long time.
 
Yes, an interesting passage. Question for you, the disciples that left Jesus, did they understand him to be speaking literally or metaphorically?
In the first discourse, we see from verse 40-41 that the Jews did not believe the Jesus Christ was divine when he likens himself to the mana from heaven that gives everlasting life. And then we see from verse 53 the Jews do not believe him again, in his second discourse, about eating his flesh:

35 And Jesus said to them: I am the bread of life: *he that cometh to me, shall not hunger: and he that believeth in me, shall never thirst.

38 Because I came down from heaven, not to do my own will, but the will of him that sent me.

40 And this is the will of my Father that sent me: that every one who seeth the Son, and believeth in him, may have life everlasting, and I will raise him up in the last day.

41 The Jews therefore murmured at him, because he had said: I am the living bread which came down from heaven.

47 Amen, amen, I say unto you: He that believeth in me, hath everlasting life.

52 If any man eat of this bread, he shall live for ever: and the bread which I will give, is my flesh for the life of the world.

53 The Jews, therefore, disputed among themselves, saying: How can this man give us his flesh to eat?

So the Jews thought he was speaking literally, and so did the Apostles for they were also taken aback. Now, in the Catholic teaching, the body and blood are not bread and wine, but the glorified whole Christ, which can bring everlasting life. They did not understand.
 
Being familiar with oral tradition I am surprised you feel truth is based sola writing!
I’m not saying truth is based on sola writing. How do I know these people you claim to have hidden themselves underground, actually existed? Why should I believe you, and not the people who say they have an oral tradition where Jesus was married? Or the ones that spread a rumor about Jesus and John, basing it on an oral tradition they have received? If your claims are true, there should be evidence of their existence, or did they hide their light, instead of spreading the good news? The early martyrs spread the good news, knowing they would most likely be killed? The ones that you say hid, how could their plight have been worse than the early martyrs, who everyone agrees existed?
 
In the first discourse, we see from verse 40-41 that the Jews did not believe the Jesus Christ was divine when he likens himself to the mana from heaven that gives everlasting life. And then we see from verse 53 the Jews do not believe him again, in his second discourse, about eating his flesh:

35 And Jesus said to them: I am the bread of life: *he that cometh to me, shall not hunger: and he that believeth in me, shall never thirst.

38 Because I came down from heaven, not to do my own will, but the will of him that sent me.

40 And this is the will of my Father that sent me: that every one who seeth the Son, and believeth in him, may have life everlasting, and I will raise him up in the last day.

41 The Jews therefore murmured at him, because he had said: I am the living bread which came down from heaven.

47 Amen, amen, I say unto you: He that believeth in me, hath everlasting life.

52 If any man eat of this bread, he shall live for ever: and the bread which I will give, is my flesh for the life of the world.

53 The Jews, therefore, disputed among themselves, saying: How can this man give us his flesh to eat?

So the Jews thought he was speaking literally, and so did the Apostles for they were also taken aback. Now, in the Catholic teaching, the body and blood are not bread and wine, but the glorified whole Christ, which can bring everlasting life. They did not understand.
Thanks for replying. Verse 48 I am that bread of life…also verse 63 it is the spirit that quickeneth; the flesh profited nothing: the words that I speak unto you, they are spirit, and they are life.

I think you may have meant disciples instead of Apostles?

yes, it says many of his disciples deserted him because they took him literally. When Jesus asked the 12 if they were going too, Peter replies …you have the words of eternal life.

How do we know that the 12 did not understand Him as talking metaphorically? Doesn’t Peters response seem to indicate knowledge of what Jesus was meaning?

I hope I am not seeming arguementive, I have long wondered on this .
 
I’m not saying truth is based on sola writing. How do I know these people you claim to have hidden themselves underground, actually existed? Why should I believe you, and not the people who say they have an oral tradition where Jesus was married? Or the ones that spread a rumor about Jesus and John, basing it on an oral tradition they have received? If your claims are true, there should be evidence of their existence, or did they hide their light, instead of spreading the good news? The early martyrs spread the good news, knowing they would most likely be killed? The ones that you say hid, how could their plight have been worse than the early martyrs, who everyone agrees existed?
I see your point. The early martyrs were not wanted, hunted and killed as heretics by the Church were they?
 
I have a little problem with your last paragraph. It would be nice to say this was reality however there are Christians who questioned all this in the early and ensuing centuries and were cast aside as heretics and survived underground to save their lives.
I know of no heresy condemnations primarily about the Real Presence until the eleventh century. Perhaps you can enlighten me.

Certainly people who were heretical on other grounds, like the Gnostics and in a more nuanced way the Nestorians, were accused of denying or having an incorrect understanding of the Real Presence.

But I don’t know of any Christians with an orthodox Christology/Trinitarian theology who were condemned for denying the Real Presence.

This is actually a potential argument for the Protestant position, since Ratramnus, for instance, was never condemned until Berengar drew on his work several centuries later, and various Fathers, most notably Augustine, said things that sound like a “Calvinist” theology of the Eucharist at times (though Augustine also said things about Eucharistic sacrifice and worshiping Christ in the Host that are radically different from Protestant Eucharistic theology).

But the idea of “secret believers” who held to proto-Protestant views underground is generally a fantasy invented by people who can’t support their views from early evidence.
 
Thanks for replying. Verse 48 I am that bread of life…also verse 63 it is the spirit that quickeneth; the flesh profited nothing: the words that I speak unto you, they are spirit, and they are life.

I think you may have meant disciples instead of Apostles?

yes, it says many of his disciples deserted him because they took him literally. When Jesus asked the 12 if they were going too, Peter replies …you have the words of eternal life.

How do we know that the 12 did not understand Him as talking metaphorically? Doesn’t Peters response seem to indicate knowledge of what Jesus was meaning?

I hope I am not seeming arguementive, I have long wondered on this .
Yes, is should have been disciples, except of course, Apostle Judas. Since Jesus said twelve times that he was the bread that from heaven and four times that they would have “to eat my flesh and drink my blood.”, and did not correct the Jews and fleeing disciples that took it literally, we can say it was not figurative. They were unable to judge correctly because, as Jesus explains in John 8:15-16:
You judge according to the flesh, I judge no one. Yet even if I do judge, my judgment is true, for it is not I alone that judge, but I and he who sent me.
 
I see your point. The early martyrs were not wanted, hunted and killed as heretics by the Church were they?
So, your view seems to be the Church destroyed all the writings from the early Christians that held your view of the Real Presence, and hunted and tried to kill those aforementioned Christians, so they went into hiding.

But my friend’s view is that the Church destroyed writings and hunted those early Christians, not because they didn’t believe in the Real Presence, for he believes they did, but because they were teaching that Jesus was married. He also believes all the reformers would have tried to hunt these true Christians down, so they stayed hidden until the 20th century.

And then another acquaintance believes the early Christians were hunted by the Church, and their writings destroyed, because they were teaching that Jesus had no problem with homosexuality. They have also remained hidden until the 20th century.

I know one thing. If I believed the Church was destroying all these writings, and hunting early Christians, leaving no traces of these people, I would worry about writings they let survive. Like the Bible.
 
So, your view seems to be the Church destroyed all the writings from the early Christians that held your view of the Real Presence, and hunted and tried to kill those aforementioned Christians, so they went into hiding.

But my friend’s view is that the Church destroyed writings and hunted those early Christians, not because they didn’t believe in the Real Presence, for he believes they did, but because they were teaching that Jesus was married. He also believes all the reformers would have tried to hunt these true Christians down, so they stayed hidden until the 20th century.

And then another acquaintance believes the early Christians were hunted by the Church, and their writings destroyed, because they were teaching that Jesus had no problem with homosexuality. They have also remained hidden until the 20th century.

I know one thing. If I believed the Church was destroying all these writings, and hunting early Christians, leaving no traces of these people, I would worry about writings they let survive. Like the Bible.
You know what, there is a whole bunch of words being put in my mouth that I never said so let’s just forget the whole thing.
 
How do we know that the 12 did not understand Him as talking metaphorically? g?
I think this is where examining Church history becomes helpful. The Didache and Justin Martyr’s first apology are good starters.

Wannano, what is your belief on Communion? Obviously it differs from us but do you believe in the real presence?
 
I know of no heresy condemnations primarily about the Real Presence until the eleventh century. Perhaps you can enlighten me.

Certainly people who were heretical on other grounds, like the Gnostics and in a more nuanced way the Nestorians, were accused of denying or having an incorrect understanding of the Real Presence.

But I don’t know of any Christians with an orthodox Christology/Trinitarian theology who were condemned for denying the Real Presence.

This is actually a potential argument for the Protestant position, since Ratramnus, for instance, was never condemned until Berengar drew on his work several centuries later, and various Fathers, most notably Augustine, said things that sound like a “Calvinist” theology of the Eucharist at times (though Augustine also said things about Eucharistic sacrifice and worshiping Christ in the Host that are radically different from Protestant Eucharistic theology).

But the idea of “secret believers” who held to proto-Protestant views underground is generally a fantasy invented by people who can’t support their views from early evidence.
I don’t know of anybody being accused of being a heretic because of their belief in the substance of the Eucharist until around 1000AD when the belief in transubstantiation was formalized. Before that many different beliefs were acceptable. Certainly starting with Cyril of Jerusalem and Ambrose in the 4th Century, there were those stating that the Eucharistic elements changed in substance. Augustine came after them and taught differently.

In Augustine’s On Christian Doctrine Book III he clearly states:
“24. If the sentence is one of command, either forbidding a crime or vice, or enjoining an act of prudence or benevolence, it is not figurative. If, however, it seems to enjoin a crime or vice, or to forbid an act of prudence or benevolence, it is figurative. “Unless you eat the flesh of the Son of man,” says Christ, “and drink His blood, you have no life in you.” John 6:53 This seems to enjoin a crime or a vice; it is therefore a figure, enjoining that we should have a share [communicandem] in the sufferings of our Lord, and that we should retain a sweet and profitable memory [in memoria] of the fact that His flesh was wounded and crucified for us.”
newadvent.org/fathers/12023.htm

I have seen quotes taken from Augustine to support his belief in transubstantiation such as:
“What you see is the bread and the chalice; that is what your own eyes report to you. But what your faith obliges you to accept is that the bread is the body of Christ and the chalice is the blood of Christ. This has been said very briefly, which may perhaps be sufficient for faith; yet faith does not desire instruction”
But when you read further in this sermon (earlychurchtexts.com/public/augustine_sermon_272_eucharist.htm) he states:
“My friends, these realities are called sacraments because in them one thing is seen, while another is grasped. What is seen is a mere physical likeness; what is grasped bears spiritual fruit.”
I wonder if your quote on worshipping the host is from Augustine’s Exposition of the Psalm 98?
“He walked here in very flesh, and gave that very flesh to us to eat for our salvation; and no one eats that flesh, unless he has first worshipped: we have found out in what sense such a footstool of our Lord’s may be worshipped, and not only that we sin not in worshipping it, but that we sin in not worshipping.”
At the end of this paragraph he clarifies that it is spiritually and not carnally understood:
“Understand spiritually what I have said; you are not to eat this body which you see; nor to drink that blood which they who will crucify Me shall pour forth. I have commended unto you a certain mystery; spiritually understood, it will quicken. Although it is needful that this be visibly celebrated, yet it must be spiritually understood.”
newadvent.org/fathers/1801099.htm

Actually Theodoret (393-457), wrote a dialogue in order to combat a heresy denying the 2 natures of Christ. In his diaglogue ‘Orthodoxos’ represents the orthodox belief while ‘Eranistes’ represents the heretic. The Eucharist is used as an example in Dialogue 2:
"Eran.— As, then, the symbols of the Lord’s body and blood are one thing before the priestly invocation, and after the invocation are changed and become another thing; so the Lord’s body after the assumption is changed into the divine substance.

Orth.— You are caught in the net you have woven yourself. For even after the consecration the mystic symbols are not deprived of their own nature; they remain in their former substance figure and form; they are visible and tangible as they were before. But they are regarded as what they have become, and believed so to be, and are worshipped as being what they are believed to be…"

I think of what these men are stating at their time and comparing that to statements made in the Council of Trent like:
“If any one denieth, that, in the sacrament of the most holy Eucharist, are contained truly, really, and substantially, the body and blood together with the soul and divinity of our Lord Jesus Christ, and consequently the whole Christ;** but saith that He is only therein as in a sign, or in figure, or virtue; let him be anathema**.”
It seems clear that the understanding changed over the centuries. I wonder if Augustine and Theodoret taught in the 1500’s if they would be considered heretics.
 
Actually Theodoret (393-457), wrote a dialogue in order to combat a heresy denying the 2 natures of Christ. In his diaglogue ‘Orthodoxos’ represents the orthodox belief while ‘Eranistes’ represents the heretic. The Eucharist is used as an example in Dialogue 2:
"Eran.— As, then, the symbols of the Lord’s body and blood are one thing before the priestly invocation, and after the invocation are changed and become another thing; so the Lord’s body after the assumption is changed into the divine substance.

Orth.— You are caught in the net you have woven yourself. For even after the consecration the mystic symbols are not deprived of their own nature; they remain in their former substance figure and form; they are visible and tangible as they were before. But they are regarded as what they have become, and believed so to be, and are worshipped as being what they are believed to be…"
I forgot to include the link: newadvent.org/fathers/27032.htm
 
Using this logic and assuming it is factual, the Church then should be grateful for the heretics that gave them reason to make the beliefs of the Church clear to the faithful. A thousand years of unclear belief in a core doctrine is a long time.
There was no effort until the last few decades to add to the US constitution the wording that marriage involved a man and a woman. That doesn’t mean the average American in prior 2 centuries was “unclear” about this core doctrine, or that it was “invented” in the 1980s.

Many Protestant denominations have in recent decades begun taking explicit positions in denominational statements, and in sermons, about same sex marriage, legal abortion, and other recent concerns. There is often detailed explanation provided of the Christian position, far more than would have been regarded as necessary in 1960. That does not mean they were “unclear” in 1960, nor that people benefit from the heretics that have run the media since then, making such explanations today necessary.
 
… I was reading a book by deceased Anglican Bishop Charles Gore that stated no valid priestly consecration before the 9th century EVER mentioned the power to offer sacrifice. Correct me but wasn’t one of Leo XIII’s argument was that Anglicans removed all mention of “sacrifice” from the BCP?

If no mention of sacrifice was ever mentioned in Catholic circles before the year 800, then how can the church say that Anglican orders are invalid? And didn’t Benedict XVI redo some of the new missal readings by borrowing from the 1928 BCP?

My inquiring mind would love to know. Thanks.
My apologies to the origin of this thread, it was not my intent to derail it. I responded to a comment in post #20 that the Real Presence had not been questioned for 1000 years. In retrospect I should have left it alone.
 
I don’t know of anybody being accused of being a heretic because of their belief in the substance of the Eucharist until around 1000AD when the belief in transubstantiation was formalized. Before that many different beliefs were acceptable. Certainly starting with Cyril of Jerusalem and Ambrose in the 4th Century, there were those stating that the Eucharistic elements changed in substance. Augustine came after them and taught differently.
Did he now? All one needs is one quote from St. Augustine, to realize he believed in transubstantiation. Before I give it, here are some quotes from leading Protestant historians on St. Augustine:
“One could multiply texts like these which show Augustine taking for granted the traditional identification of the elements WITH THE SACRED BODY AND BLOOD. There can be NO DOUBT that he shared the REALISM held by almost ALL his contemporaries and predecessors.”
(J.N.D.Kelly, EARLY CHRISTIAN DOCTRINES, pg. 446-447)
Code:
"Yet this great church teacher at the same time holds fast the REAL PRESENCE of Christ in the Supper. He says of the martyrs: 'They have drunk the blood of CHRIST, and have shed their OWN blood for Christ.' He was also inclined, with the Oriental fathers, to ascribe a SAVING VIRTUE TO THE CONSECRATED ELEMENTS." (pg 500, HISTORY OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH by Philip Schaff (Volume 3 -- Nicene and Post-Nicene Christianity)
Code:
"Ambrose speaks once of the flesh of Christ 'which we today ADORE in the mysteries,' and Augustine, of an ADORATION [at least "in the wider sense" of bowing the knee in respect] preceding the participation of the flesh of Christ [footnotes #2 and #3 gives the original Latin from these Fathers]." (pg 502, HISTORY OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH by Philip Schaff (Volume 3 -- Nicene and Post-Nicene Christianity)
Code:
"In one part of his teaching St. Augustine is EMPHATIC that the identification of the elements WITH THE BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST is so COMPLETE that even the WICKED recipients of the Sacrament receive Christ's body and blood as REALLY, though with different effects, AS THOSE who partake of the Sacrament WORTHILY.
Code:
"Thus in his book -On Baptism against the Donatists- he says --
Code:
    'For as JUDAS, to whom the Lord gave the sop, allowed place in himself to the devil not by receiving what was evil but by receiving in an evil WAY, so one who receives the Sacrament of the Lord unworthily does not bring about that it is evil because he is evil or that he has received nothing because he has not received to salvation. For it is THE BODY AND BLOOD OF THE LORD NO LESS in the case of those of whom the Apostle said, "Who eats unworthily and drinks judgment to himself"' [5:9].
Code:
"Similarly in one of his -Sermons- he insists that it is possible to 'EAT THE VERY FLESH' and 'DRINK THE VERY BLOOD' of Christ in such a way as to 'eat and drink judgment,' and that there are two ways of 'eating that flesh and drinking that blood,' one of which leads to the recipient abiding in Christ and Christ in him, the other of which leads to judgment [Serm 71:17]."
(volume 1, page 82-83, A HISTORY OF THE DOCTRINE OF THE HOLY EUCHARIST by Darwell Stone London: Longmans, Green, and Co, 1909)
All one needs is this quote from St. Augustine, to realize he believed in transubstantiation:
“…I turn to Christ, because it is He whom I seek here; and I discover how the earth is adored without impiety, how without impiety the footstool of His feet is adored. For He received earth from earth; because flesh is from the earth, and He took flesh from the flesh of Mary. He walked here in the same flesh, AND GAVE US THE SAME FLESH TO BE EATEN UNTO SALVATION. BUT NO ONE EATS THAT FLESH UNLESS FIRST HE ADORES IT; and thus it is discovered how such a footstool of the Lord’s feet is adored; AND NOT ONLY DO WE NOT SIN BY ADORING, WE DO SIN BY NOT ADORING.” (Psalms 98:9)
Here is J.N.D. Kelly’s comment on what St. Augustine just said, again from the aforementioned book:
"‘You know,’ he said in another sermon [Serm 9:14], ‘what you are eating and what you are drinking, or rather, WHOM you are EATING and WHOM you are DRINKING.’ Commenting on the Psalmist’s bidding that we should adore the footstool of His feet, he pointed out [Enarr in Ps 98:9] that this must be the earth. But since to adore the earth would be blasphemous, he concluded that the word must mysteriously signify the FLESH which Christ took from the earth and which He gave to us to EAT. Thus it was the EUCHARISTIC BODY WHICH DEMANDED ADORATION.
And here is what everyone should immediately realize, and is the reason one can confidently say St. Augustine believed in transubstantiation. If St. Augustine does not believe the bread and wine has fully transubstantiated. If he believes that even one minute particle remains bread, then saying the Eucharist demanded adoration, would be demanding idolatry on his part. One would be adoring Jesus, AND a small particle of bread. St. Augustine would never promote idolatry, ergo, he MUST have held to an early form of transubstantiation.
 
My apologies to the origin of this thread, it was not my intent to derail it. I responded to a comment in post #20 that the Real Presence had not been questioned for 1000 years. In retrospect I should have left it alone.
You and me both. 🙂

Commenter
source of post #20 tangent, and hundreds of other tangents on CAF, and In Real Life.
 
Did he now? All one needs is one quote from St. Augustine, to realize he believed in transubstantiation. Before I give it, here are some quotes from leading Protestant historians on St. Augustine:
You quoted JND Kelly: ““One could multiply texts like these which show Augustine taking for granted the traditional identification of the elements WITH THE SACRED BODY AND BLOOD. There can be NO DOUBT that he shared the REALISM held by almost ALL his contemporaries and predecessors.”
(J.N.D.Kelly, EARLY CHRISTIAN DOCTRINES, pg. 446-447)

The difficulty with JND Kelly is that he uses ‘realism’ in a way that isn’t synonymous with ‘real presence.’ On page 440 of this book he states that:
“In examining the later doctrine of the Eucharist it will be convenient, as in Chapter VIII, to begin with the ideas currently entertained about the Lord’s presence in the sacrament. Eucharistic teaching, it should be understood at the outset, was in general unquestioningly realist, i.e. the consecrated bread and wine were taken to be, and were treated and designated as, the Saviour’s body and blood. Among theologians, however,** this identity was interpreted in our period in at least two different ways**, and those interpretations, mutually exclusive though they were in strict logic, were often allowed to overlap.** In the first place, the figurative or the symbolical view, which stressed the distinction between the visible elements and reality they represented**, still claimed a measure of support. It harked back, as we have seen, to Tertullian and Cyprian, and was given a renewed lease on life through the powerful influence of Augustine. **Secondly, however, a new and increasingly potent tendency becomes observable to explain the identity as being the result of an actual change or conversion in the bread and wine. **The connexion between these theories and the different ideas about consecration referred to in the first section of this chapter hardly needs to be pointed out.”

Pages 440-449 are of Kelly’s book are a good read and explain his understandings of what the early theologians understood about the elements of the Eucharist. archive.org/stream/pdfy-CY7YNVnvFwggDjnT/103911481-J-N-D-Kelly-Early-Christian-Doctrines#page/n451/mode/2up
Kelly gives a complex explanation of Augustine’s view of the Eucharistic elements.

To be continued…
 
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