Does God call people to be separate from Catholic Eucharist

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Having the Full deposit of faith in Teaching and having any or all members display it would be two very srparate things.

No one but Christ displays the fullness of the faith. Perhaps even His mother did not.
 
I think Hahn is saying that the specific requirement of the Hebrews to eat the lamb was a sign of what was to come in the New Covenant.
I think the bread represented purity, which is now achieved thru the Sacrifice, once and for all finished, only the pure Bread and wine remaing.
 
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rcwitness:
I think Hahn is saying that the specific requirement of the Hebrews to eat the lamb was a sign of what was to come in the New Covenant.
I think the bread represented purity, which is now achieved thru the Sacrifice, once and for all finished, only the pure Bread and wine remaing.
More than that! Purity in the flesh! The Lamb without blemish.

Jesus offered His body which was yhe pure word made flesh
 
You see, that also does not address what I posted. Whether he taught it or not as a teaching is irrelevant to what I ask. I know this is a usual comeback so I actually tried to phrase my post to avoid that “comeback”.

Here is what I posted again:

"That wasn’t my point. It is said so many times on here that “this was the belief since …(insert time period)…” So here we have a Pope who either did not believe it or and this is something to think about… it was never a universal belief and the Council of Rome didn’t do as so many think. Because the Pope failed to receive the memo of something as important as this. As Pope and if this was the belief and a conclusion of the council I would in the least expect a Pope to have been briefed on the basics…

Also the thing about his personal opinion can’t fly. And I am not even touching infallibility. For instance, do you think Pope Francis will survive if he wrote a piece (and state his personal opinion) that Contraception is actually not that bad. In that case a Pope wrote about the Canon and clearly contradicted current Catholic ideas. I for one give him the benifit of the doubt and rather think it hasn’t always been believed as claimed and the Council of Rome was less definite or clear as many more claim."

Assume anything else as you think it and reply to that post

Regards
 
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Did the CC in Lumen Gentium force same capitulation to say there is grace and salvation in these "other "churches, with differing communion views?
Force who to do what? Who “capitulated”?

LG does not call these “other churches”. They are called ecclesial communities because they lack the true marks of the Church handed down to us from the Apostles.

LG affirms that the Holy Spirit is at work drawing all those who belong to Christ into unity in One Bread, One Body. There is not room for diametrically opposed doctrines in that unity to which Christ calls us.
We do not see the sacrifice of Jesus as a symbol. You know better than that I believe.
This is the great disconnect for us. Either He gave a symbolic body on the cross, or when He said "this is my Body, he meant what he said.
 
He drank wine at the cross and declared “It is finished” (consummated). (John 19)
Actually John 19:29 uses the Gk. word for vinegar. I am not sure that qualifies as the same “fruit of the vine” that was consumed at the Last Supper. What was “finished” was the cup of his suffering, the cup He prayed about in the Garden.
it must mean that people who celebrate Communion must eat a sacrificial Lamb (Jesus).
Yes. He is the lamb that was slain for our sins.
They never drank blood or ate transubstantiated foods at the Passover celebrations.
Did you think that Catholics believed otherwise? The Passover Lamb was a type of Christ, the unblemished lamb whose blood was shed for us.
So why such a focus on “eating the lamb?” If Communion is a Passover wouldn’t there be wine and bread present too?
Because Jesus, the Lamb of God, took the Bread, blessed it, and said “this is my body”. So too with the cup.
I think that Communion can be seen as a type of Passover celebration.
Is that not going backwards?
I think consuming the unleavened bread and wine while in the presence (spiritual) of the Lamb is reflective of the Passover meal.
Yes. Even non-catholic communities have this “rememberance”. It is a reflection.
I don’t come to the same understanding that one must “eat the lamb.” This idea seems forced onto the explanation while ignoring so many other differences between the Passover and Communion.
You have said that people who don’t agree with Scott Hahn should “take it up with him”, so I guess your argument with the “forcing” is with Jesus, since it was He who decided to make the bread into His Body and the wine into His Blood.
 
Actually John 19:29 uses the Gk. word for vinegar. I am not sure that qualifies as the same “fruit of the vine” that was consumed at the Last Supper. What was “finished” was the cup of his suffering, the cup He prayed about in the Garden.

Thats true!
 
This is the great disconnect for us. Either He gave a symbolic body on the cross, or when He said "this is my Body, he meant what he said.
I can’t wrap my head around those statements. Why is it impossible for Him to be symbolic with the bread and wine symbolizing His body and blood and still give His literal body on the Cross? If I say to my friend while showing him a picture of my daughter, “this is my daughter who is coming tomorrow”, why can’t my daughter literally and physically arrive tomorrow?
 
I can’t wrap my head around those statements. Why is it impossible for Him to be symbolic with the bread and wine symbolizing His body and blood and still give His literal body on the Cross? If I say to my friend while showing him a picture of my daughter, “this is my daughter who is coming tomorrow”, why can’t my daughter literally and physically arrive tomorrow?
If your friend snatched your daughter’s picture from your hand, spit on it, or ripped it to shreds, would you say he 'profaned" your daughter, or “profaned” her picture? You can’t “profane” what is not present. Yes of course one could understand that the bread and wine are “symbolic”, but then we have the problem of the other references to it not making sense.
 
So im tending to think Scott Hahn isnt quite so accurate with His 4th cup hypothesis…

That is… i think the 4th cup referred to after the resurrection.
 
i think the 4th cup referred to after the resurrection.
Being offered vinegar on a sponge seems to hardly correlate with Matthew 26:29
"I tell you I will not drink again of this fruit of the vine until that day when I drink it new with you in my Father’s kingdom.”

The Apostles were certainly not standing around at the foot of the cross having happy hour with Jesus!
 
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rcwitness:
i think the 4th cup referred to after the resurrection.
Being offered vinegar on a sponge seems to hardly correlate with Matthew 26:29
"I tell you I will not drink again of this fruit of the vine until that day when I drink it new with you in my Father’s kingdom.”

The Apostles were certainly not standing around at the foot of the cross having happy hour with Jesus!
Right. And Hahn mentions that it was to fulfill the Scriptures that He was thirsty. Why would John address that over the 4th cup, if the drink signified the 4th cup?
 
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And Hahn mentions that it was to fulfill the Scriptures that He was thirsty. Why would John address that over the 4th cup, if the drink signified the 4th cup?
He was apparently offered something before he was nailed to the cross:

Matt. 27:33 And when they came to a place called Gol′gotha (which means the place of a skull), 34 they offered him wine to drink, mingled with gall; but when he tasted it, he would not drink it.

It has been suggested that “gall” was an opiate or another pain killer which He refused, so that does not seem to be the fourth cup either.
 
Sorry, I meant “John” mentioned it fulfilling Scripture, not Hahn.
 
Yes, and maybe it was a wine/narcotic and John called it vinegar??

He may have done so to distinguish it from a Liturgical wine context.

Im just not convinced either.

But the NAB and ESV footnotes call it wine.
 
This is the great disconnect for us. Either He gave a symbolic body on the cross, or when He said "this is my Body, he meant what he said.
And were Mary and John substance changed though to senses appeared same when when Jesus said, “Behold your mother…behold your son”…was that literal
in the flesh also or literally spiritual ?
 
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