Because the thanksgiving (Eucharist) is in memory of what He did, shed his blood for us . We do not primarily show his work by the crucifix but by “communion”. Every time we commune, we show /proclaim/preach -to those gnostics -the Lord’s death, His real flesh and blood shed for us .This is true remembrance whether you believe it to be symbolic -of the real Calvary, or trans… or consub… or spiritual - they all point to a real remembrance of Calvary . Maybe some gnostics but not sure about this. Again, what is more important, to believe He was incarnated, or just what communion belief they have ? The fact is they didn’t believe in the incarnation if i recall, so of course they would not participate in any remembrance of that .
I can’t tell if I should take your arguments seriously anymore, but I’ll still attempt to do so. He refers directly to the Gnostics as heretics because they deny that the Eucharist is the flesh of Christ. Explain to me why he says this, if all he meant was ‘it is a remembrance of the flesh of Christ.’ He must deserve an admonishment for being way too literal or emphatic, unless, of course, he was actually refering to the Eucharist as the flesh of Christ.
You are also making a false dilemma: what is more important, to believe in the Incarnation or the True Presence? Both. Obviously.
You also didn’t actually address my argument, as you never do: he places importance in other sections on the literal Incarnation, but for some reason, in this section, denounces the Gnostics based on a specific result of the Incarnation: the Eucharist. Why? He condemns them for denying it is the flesh of Christ. Why? Maybe because, like the others, he believed it was Christ’s flesh?
This has been adressed.Rome had ties to Corinh thru paul and his friends,and John was very old if not deceased. and the letter came from the Roman church presbytery , not Clement. This has been discussed already also.
Clement wrote the letter. As a bishop. And, as Ignatius, pointed out bishops and presbyters as distinct from one another. John, who was alive, was able to write (as I pointed out), because he wrote Revelations during this time frame.
Your ‘discussion’ of Ignatius, Clement, and Ireneaus on authority and bishops, along with the real presence of Ignatius and Justin, hardly counts as discussion. You posit theories based, yet again, on absence, and what ‘should’ have been addressed.
Sometimes I bring up what they did say , like Barnabus- be bound by what is written. It is usually the later ones that are definitely get more CC in views.Well, they all say Jesus is Lord ? You wanna lump them all together ? Is that 1500 years of writing ? And they are all unanimous in all things?
Why do you think they get more and more ‘Catholic’ as they go on? Maybe it’s that the heresies grew more and more formal, or touched upon different things that needed to be addressed? No, couldn’t be.
And of course I want to lump all the Fathers together. The faith is unified. Or at least it is supposed to be. We see instances where fathers went astray (Tertullian, Eusebius), but we see the issues resolved in councils and by other fathers, and then a unanimous decision is eventually made. How, and why, would I want to separate their doctrine by individual father? It’s impossible to do this when the faith is supposed to be unified in it’s proclamation. Looking at it, as you do both Scripture and history, in isolated junctures leads to the disunity and confusion of Protestantism. Proof text can be found anywhere. I can make any darn doctrine I want by citing various individuals from history. It is how they developed in understanding as a whole that separates Faith from fiction.
Totally agree. It proves nothing, Evidence is something else though, which all we have. What , you didn’t like it when Ignantius mentions bishops of many churches and is silent on Rome’s Doesn’t one father say Rome had presbyters ruling for a time until head bishop was needed. This is not a father being silent but being very specific. Is this why most historians say Rome was ruled by a group of presbyters for up to a century ?
AGAIN, YOU ARE USING AN ARGUMENT BASED ON SILENCE. Irenaeus lists all the bishops that came after Peter. Why would I be upset that Ignatius doesn’t? You using his ‘silence’ is a fallacy, as I have pointed out numerous times.
This is a father not mentioning something. He is NOT being specific. You are using SILENCE as proof. Stop.
And shall I answer as I hear often from others cause it was not needed, for Scripture was still adhered to and works had not proliferated yet?
I answered why they (Sola Scriptura and Sola Fide) weren’t mentioned: because I have fathers speaking definitively against them. Ireneaus speaks against interpreting Scripture without apostolic authority. Boom. Doctrine opposed to Sola Scriptura. Numerous fathers speak of taking the road to death after coming to faith. Boom. Doctrine against Sola Fide. My arguments are BASED ON AN EXISTING DOCTRINE. You are USING AN ARGUMENT BASED ON NOTHING. Fallacy, anyone?
Continued…