W
Wannano
Guest
Maybe I am just a little thick headed today as I am not sure I am completely understanding. I have some times read a post and not able to process it and then when I come back later and reread it it makes more sense.This is the issue. There seems to be a common thread in objections to Catholic things. People note that clerical celibacy came into being over 1,000 years after Christ, but miss that clerical sexual continence is an ancient apostolic tradition going back to the early church. Or that the Marian dogmas of the Assumption and Immaculate conception were stated in the 19th and 20th centuries, but again, are beliefs going back to the early Church and are similar on the same teachings (we can nuance the IC a little bit) of the Orthodox church). Or Purgatory supposedly wasn’t developed until a thousand years later, but miss that the early Church did believe in prayers that helped the dead and even the suffering of the faithful dead who were not damned but apparently weren’t in heaven either, but that the martyrs were made perfect through their earthly suffering and went straight to heaven.
Not to take us off topic, mind. The consistent teaching has been that we eat the flesh and blood under the appearance of bread and wine. Transubstantiation may be a formal, metaphysical statement, articulated in a certain way that clarifies what is this does and does not entail, but it’s not like the central teaching of it is anything new. It’s point of fact central to Christian life.
I am not sure, maybe you did answer my questions in an indirect way…but don’t be hesitant to tell me if I am wrong if you think I am wrong.