K
Kliska
Guest
No, no misapprehension. The teaching is that you can do one or the other, both are not required, because the conclusion has been drawn that both are the body, blood, soul, and divinity. In many places the laity received both, in many places just the bread.I think you lost me here. Are you under the misapprehension that Catholics do not both eat and drink?
Absolutely, and the thing that is a “symbol” can teach spiritual truth, and can serve as an outpouring of grace via faith. As I’ve said here and in other threads; most of us in Christendom are not as far off from each other as we sometimes think.Yes, there are different ways of understanding symbolism. A symbol can contain that which it also signifies.
That’s begging the question, and something I’m not here to debate. I respect that is what you believe and what the RCC teaches.I agree, so let us get back to the point, which is the ability to discern what “contradicts scripture”. According to whose perception? For example, Catholics (as do all Churches planted by Apostles) believe Jesus meant what he said (literally) when he held the Bread in His hands and said “this is my body”. But all those who have departed from the Apostolic faith consider this statement “symbolic”. So whose belief “contradicts” scripture?
As I posted in the Unity thread; the sign of unity was, and is, love. Recourse is to talk with one another, seek truth, and ask God for wisdom. The Holy Spirit is Who I trust; again not something we are that far off on. I recognize the difference, but it is only a step off. Not something I’m here to argue over as it has been argued for centuries.The question remains. When interpretations seem to contradict, what recourse have we? How are we to be One, as Jesus and the Father are One?
We will all agree on this point, however, the way you and I understand the faith that is reflected in the pages may be diametrically opposed on some points. Catholics read scripture in the light of Sacred Tradition (the preaching of the Apostles preserved infallibly in the Church by the Holy Spirit). All Protestants suffered some loss during the Reformation when separation from Sacred Tradition occurred.
What if certain interpretations of the Teachings of the Apostles are so divergent from what has been handed down to us that they constitute “a different gospel”?
This is all begging the question; asking those with a different view to accept your premises in the same manner you are asking us to accept your conclusion without the premises being supported and found “sound” first. Again, I’m not going there. I would say that we should be very hesitant to declare someone damned; for saying someone is “preaching a different gospel” is in effect, according to Paul, declaring them accursed. There are false gospels out there, but I can only speak for myself when I say that when we focus on Christ and preach Him, as revealed in scripture, as you believe you do, and I believe I do we have to be careful to not “damn” a brother or sister in the process. I’m not saying you are doing that, but by your question about “a different gospel” something could be being implied.Do you believe that God will lead an individual Christian into a direction/conclusion opposite of what He has already revealed to the Church?