A priest is a mediator between God and man. In the NT there is only ONE mediator between God and man – Jesus.
Russ, your Paster is a mediator between God and yourself when he teaches and he does teach; your church is a teaching church, with teachers and pupils!!! In the NT there is only ONE mediator between God and yourself – Jesus.
You say that the “function of (a mediator between God and man) can be clearly identified in the bible”. Please show me this from the NT.
According to what Paul the Apostle recounted in 1 Corinthians 11:23–26, in the course of the Last Supper, and with specific reference to eating bread and drinking from a cup, Jesus told his disciples, “Do this in remembrance of me”.
Do what, as per all scholars???
Paul the Apostle, circa 54 AD, wrote of the Last Supper:
For I have received of the Lord that which also I delivered unto you, that the Lord Jesus the same night in which he was betrayed took bread: And when he had given thanks, he brake it, and said, Take, eat: this is my body, which is broken for you: this do in remembrance of me. After the same manner also he took the cup, when he had supped, saying, this cup is the new testament in my blood: this do ye, as oft as ye drink it, in remembrance of me. For as often as ye eat this holy bread, and drink this holy cup, ye do shew the Lord’s death till he come.
Do what, in remembrance of Jesus? Can anyone do this or just the apostles and their successors via the imposition of the hands?
The Synoptic Gospels and Paul recount that Jesus took some bread, said a prayer (which Matthew and Mark refer to as a “blessing,” Luke and Paul as a “giving thanks”) --gave the pieces to his disciples, and told them: “This is my body.”
Russ, why don’t you believe Jesus; His apostles did?
…At the end of the meal, he took a cup (Luke mentions another cup at the start of the meal), probably of wine, offered a prayer (a “thanksgiving” in Matthew and Mark, no direct mention in Luke and Paul, who use the adverb “likewise”), gave it to his disciples, and spoke words associating it with his blood. Paul and Luke mention an instruction to “do this in memory of me”. And the Eucharist, which is recorded as celebrated by the early Christian community at Jerusalem and by St Paul on his visit to Troas (Acts 20:7), was held to have been instituted by Christ.
Russ, were they wrong???
The words of Institution are those used, inserted into a narrative of the Last Supper, in Catholic Eucharistic liturgies, to recall those used by Jesus on that occasion. The institution of the Eucharist at the Last Supper is remembered by Catholics, by doing exactly what Jesus told His chosen ambassadors to do, which is:
to take bread, and after blessing it break it and give it to them, and say, 'Take; this is Christ’s body… And he says to them, This is Christ’s blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many; this do to remember me!!! Mark Matthew, Luke and Paul
Russ, do what??? Jesus had yet to shed any blood on the cross, and yet He still said:
This is my body…this is my blood… Again, show me how bread symbolizes Jesus’ flesh, as compared to Jesus being the door!!!
This is a priestly function, if one believes it is really Christ’s Body, which of course you do not…In the O.T. THE priests offered up the blood, which was not theirs of course…in the N.T. the priests, via the power of the Holy Spirit, offers up the blood, which is not theirs of course; one is the presentation of many different sacrifices in real time, and the other is the re-presentation of the one sacrifice, offered up 2000 years ago, outside of time!
In the Catholic Church, and as the Divine Liturgy in the Eastern Orthodox Church, at these liturgies, Catholics and Eastern Orthodox celebrate the Sacrament of the Eucharist. The name “Eucharist” is from the Greek word (eucharistia) which means “thanksgiving” and they have been doing this since Pentecost; no changes to the breaking of the bread in 2000 years, at least until the P.R…
At which point, each major division of Christianity, stemming from the protestant reformation, has formed different theologies about the exact meaning and purpose of these remembrance ceremonies, but most of them are similar; they add the word symbol!!!
I guess, the only 2 churches that can trace their lineages back to the apostles who taught what the C.C. believes, today, are guilty of idolatry if you are right Russ! Is that the case???