So not sure why the pre-presenting ( Last Supper) would have the symbols be literal, because it was not a pre-presenting, but telling us how to to remember after the fact.
I am not sure either, and frankly, cannot intellectually grasp how Jesus could have “held himself in his hands” at the last supper. I accept what is written in the Gospels about this event because I believe the Scriptures are the inspired and inerrant word of God.
The Last Supper was not just a “telling us how to remember”, but an enactment of how we are to remember.
do this = ποιεῖτε
poieó: to make, do
Original Word: ποιέω
Part of Speech: Verb
Transliteration: poieó
Phonetic Spelling: (poy-eh’-o)
Short Definition: I do, make
Definition: (a) I make, manufacture, construct, (b) I do, act, cause.
http://biblehub.com/greek/4160.htm
The use of the term “do/make” would seem to indicate that something occurs, is caused during the celebration of the Eucharist.
eating the symbols (for bodily nourishment) and repeating their meaning per Jesus’s words are enough for remembrance, to bring us back to Calvary
Yes, this seems to be the case for those who reject the Teaching about the nature of the Eucharist. But it seems that one could repeat the words without “do/make” involved?
We do not understand Jesus words to be about “bodily nourishment”, especially in light of what Paul says about eating the meal prior to coming for the celebration of the Eucharist. Due to abuses of the “feast” there was an early separation from eating to nourish the body and eating so that we can have life in ourselves.
John 6:53 So Jesus said to them, “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of man and drink his blood, you have no life in you;
Clearly humans eat any and all kinds of food for “bodily nourishment” and have life in them without the Eucharist, so we do not understand Him to be referring here to natural flesh eating and drinking of “symbols for bodily nourishment”.
And the Lord gave memorial instructions to Moses before the actual event, just as the Lord gave to the apostles.
The difference here is that the Lord gave instructions to Moses, but not the Apostles. He enacted what He wanted to be “done/made”, giving instructions as He did so . I doubt anyone in the room really understood what “this is my body” and “this is my blood” really meant at the time.
concept I was presenting is apparently opaque to your comprehension (and not surprisingly so)
the concept I was presenting is apparently opaque to your comprehension (and not surprisingly so)
Yes, it does appear that opaque is an appropriate word. I continually marvel that the lenses of Calvin have this effect on persons.