S
semper_catholicus
Guest
Absolutely not.
Does Scripture always use Christians to mean followers of Christ?rcwitness:![]()
Interesting!
So where is the home of His body and blood?Thats a good answer! However, when a Christian says, “Jesus is here!” Or “in our hearts” they actually dont mean Jesus, but His Holy Spirit?Heaven
The Church is made up of all who believe in Christ. How can someone fit the definition of Christian (follower of Christ) but be excluded from the Christian Church? Well, I guess Catholicism has a different definition of church. That is a whole other topic.So what if a Christian is divided from the Church?
??? the consecration words were “thanksgiving” ? don’t see that word “thanksgiving”…but don’t have bible in front of meI am going to accept this as an honest question, though it seems odd.
εὐχαριστίας = thanksgiving
The ultimate thanksgiving prayer for us is the Lord’s Supper.
really ? Perfect time to be rationally preoccupied with literalness when a Man holds a piece of bread then offers same bread saying it is His body.Of course not! They did not have some irrational pre-occupation with the word “literally”.
The litmus test then is not do you understand it my way , but do you trust in the Lord and His Words, as you say. We both do that, and are beyond being present 2000 years ago at the John 6 discourse.Indeed not. In fact, it appears that John 6 is actually a litmus test for true believers. Either the listeners believed He had the Words of Life, or not, even if they did not understand them at the time.
Augustine left a LOT of writings behind. His view is very well documented.I would have a problem with this too, if that were the case. But clearly, it is not. From the writings of the post-apostolic fathers through Augustine we see the understanding that it is not a metaphor or a symbol.
guanophore:![]()
I am going to accept this as an honest question, though it seems odd.
εὐχαριστίας = thanksgiving
The ultimate thanksgiving prayer for us is the Lord’s Supper.You asked if the term "Eucharist"is in the Bible.??? the consecration words were “thanksgiving” ? don’t see that word “thanksgiving”…but don’t have a Bible in front of me
It is…
1 Corinthians 11
For I received from the Lord what I also delivered to you, that the Lord Jesus on the night when he was betrayed took bread, 24 and when he had given thanks, he broke it, and said, “This is my body which is for you. Do this in remembrance of me.” 25 In the same way also the cup, after supper, saying, “This cup is the new covenant in my blood. Do this, as often as you drink it, in remembrance of me.” 26 For as often as you eat this bread and drink the cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes.
yes, true for apostles as to original faith foundation. true for us in other ways , but a big difference from hindsight of an original onlooker and say 500 , or 1000 years later (thinking 1215 or even Radbertus)It is certainly the case that what was delivered once for all to the Church has only been understood through hindsight in many cases.
John 12:16
16 His disciples did not understand these things at first; but when Jesus was glorified, then they remembered that these things had been written of him and had been done to him.
yes , but in john 6, to those who left received such an explanation ?This is how we understand it, yes.
an explanation of how to eat ?I am not sure what constitutes and “explanation” for you?
we get accused of being like the gnostics and like those that turned away here, yet you believe more in the literal , which is what the walkers away did also. And if you try to differentiate between your literal from theirs (as in spiritual literal), you make my point that Jesus made no such distinction here , zero correction for His hearers.He corrected His hearers at virtually every other situation in which they misunderstood. In this discourse, they took Him literally, and he allowed them to walk away. They did not belong to Him, because they did not have faith.
Parsing out verses, try almost a whole chapter here in John…but yes you rely more on what was passed down to you, Tradition as you say, capitalize.Catholics, unlike our Reformed siblings, do not derive doctrines by parsing out verses. We receive the One Faith whole and entire from the Apostles,
another catch all . The inadequacy of Writ, the Word of God…and “by the foolishness of preaching should men be saved” preach what?The NT was never intended to be a full compendium of the faith.
does Paul use the word "mystery " in such positive fashion, or as something hidden only to pagans, but now revealed to us ?The reason they are called “Holy Mysteries” is that they do actually defy reason. How does it make sense? It cannot.
Cool…just looked it up also in Greek parallel and there it is…thank you rcw…lol but now i gotta chew on this for awhile, and adjust to this new (name removed by moderator)ut, insight…peaceYou asked if the term "Eucharist"is in the Bible.
It is…
1 Corinthians 11
For I received from the Lord what I also delivered to you, that the Lord Jesus on the night when he was betrayed took bread, 24 and when he had given thanks, he broke it, and said, “This is my body which is for you. Do this in remembrance of me.” 25 In the same way also the cup, after supper, saying, “This cup is the new covenant in my blood. Do this, as often as you drink it, in remembrance of me.” 26 For as often as you eat this bread and drink the cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes.
Maybe P’s should start saying that line to each other’s denominations and whip some of those offshoots back in line.You seem to be suggesting the HS allowed the Church to lose the truth.
“and let us not suppose that because God can , that He does” (transubstantiate).This is one of the cases where even though it quacks like a duck, walks like a duck, and looks like a duck, it isn’t a duck.
If I may, and to show susanio is in good company on this :So where is the home of His body and blood? Is it not the Church?
with no substance changes, no mysticism, but symbols telling the HIStory of their (our) journey.On Passover, the Jews celebrated an enacted ritual (anamnesis) that involved slaughtering and consuming a lamb.
If I may, the better argument I have heard from CC is that then they are both symbolic and literal at same time…indeed the elements are at least symbols to some, or the understanding begins there.From the writings of the post-apostolic fathers through Augustine we see the understanding that it is not a metaphor or a symbol.
Of course not, it is a spiritual communion! My point is that the Gnostics who did not want to accept the Church’s dogmatic pronouncements continued in their beliefs and practices heedless. Creating dogmas only helps the faithful from departing from the Truth. It does not compel those who have already rejected it to change.Christian brothers and sisters who commune without transubstantiating, are not positing as the Gnostics.
No, in no sense are we like the disciples who followed only for what they would get from Him, fashioning Him in their image, their desires.
There seems to be a disconnect here, but for the record, I agree that my siblings in Christ who experience reverence for Jesus in their observation of the Lord’s Supper are neither Gnostics or like those who stopped following because they only wanted a full belly.Christian brothers and sisters who commune without transubstantiating, are not positing as the Gnostics.
It is just impossible for those of us who have been raised on the Apostolic faith to wrap our minds around some of the practices that began at the Reformation.This is one of the cases where even though it quacks like a duck, walks like a duck, and looks like a duck, it isn’t a duck.
Certainly God is not limited by time and space, as we are. He demonstrated through His resurrected Body that he could appear and disappear from view. I must confess that I abhor the word “accidents” in reference to the Bread and Wine, but I have had to accept that this is a description that the Church found necessary to most easily define what the Apostles meant by “this IS my body”.Saint Robert Bellarmine maintains that our Lord can be locally present here on earth, in the Eucharist, even though He is also present in Heaven. He teaches that a body can be in two places at once. So, in the Sacrament of the Eucharist, that very same body, which died on the Cross and rose again and ascended to Heaven, is also locally present under the accidents of bread. Is Jesus Locally Present in the Eucharist? | the reproach of Christ
I am sure this seemed necessary to Augustine, but with what we know now about physics, it is clear that there is reality that exists outside of time and space. Heaven is more properly defined as a “state” rather than a “place”. But certainly Augustine was ringing clear on the ancient doctrines that Jesus became flesh, and took that flesh with HIm into Heaven. But we know that this “flesh” was not like the flesh He had before He was crucified, like our flesh.“The body with which Christ rose,” says he (Augustine), “he took to heaven, which must be in a place . . . . . We must guard against such a conception of his divinity as destroys the reality of his flesh.
With this we will all be in agreement as we do not consider the Eucharist to be his earthly flesh, but His glorified flesh. Eating of His earthly body would make the accusations of the early Jess valid, that we are “cannibals”.For when the flesh of the Lord was upon earth, it was certainly not in heaven; and now that it is in heaven, it is not upon earth.” Augustine…Philip Schaff’s Reading of Augustine on the Eucharist – The Calvinist International
So did the folks who could not accept the teaching and left Him,mcq72:![]()
Certainly God is not limited by time and space, as we are. He demonstrated through His resurrected Body that he could appear and disappear from view. I must confess that I abhor the word “accidents” in reference to the Bread and Wine, but I have had to accept that this is a description that the Church found necessary to most easily define what the Apostles meant by “this IS my body”.Saint Robert Bellarmine maintains that our Lord can be locally present here on earth, in the Eucharist, even though He is also present in Heaven. He teaches that a body can be in two places at once. So, in the Sacrament of the Eucharist, that very same body, which died on the Cross and rose again and ascended to Heaven, is also locally present under the accidents of bread. Is Jesus Locally Present in the Eucharist? | the reproach of Christ
I am sure this seemed necessary to Augustine, but with what we know now about physics, it is clear that there is reality that exists outside of time and space. Heaven is more properly defined as a “state” rather than a “place”. But certainly Augustine was ringing clear on the ancient doctrines that Jesus became flesh, and took that flesh with HIm into Heaven. But we know that this “flesh” was not like the flesh He had before He was crucified, like our flesh.“The body with which Christ rose,” says he (Augustine), “he took to heaven, which must be in a place . . . . . We must guard against such a conception of his divinity as destroys the reality of his flesh.
With this we will all be in agreement as we do not consider the Eucharist to be his earthly flesh, but His glorified flesh. Eating of His earthly body would make the accusations of the early Jess valid, that we are “cannibals”.For when the flesh of the Lord was upon earth, it was certainly not in heaven; and now that it is in heaven, it is not upon earth.” Augustine…Philip Schaff’s Reading of Augustine on the Eucharist – The Calvinist International
But these quote reinforce my leanings toward the Eastern conceptions. It seems so much easier to leave all these things in the form of “mystery”, rather than trying to define, explain, and dogmatize them. There is a point at which it seems that our frail human minds/reasoning cannot possibly grasp such things!
I would, of course, have some suspicions, as this appears to be the nature of humanity. We are possessive creature.And if that person claimed rights to that waterfall, and you could only be in league with said person, and with no other waterfall gatekeeper, that his waterfall was purer with better proprietary nutrients, even though same river fed other waterfalls ?
Jesus Himself is the Gate. There is no other name under heaven by which we may be saved. Throughout history He has revealed Himself through certain persons and particularly the nation of Israel. Jesus said “salvation is of the Jews” to reinforce to all those who were not fully united with Jews that the Jews held the fullness of His revelation. He then revealed Himself to the Church, which is His fullness. He promised to lead that Church into “all Truth.”And notice I am not saying I need no gatekeeper for entrance…but more than one keeper is quite visible.
Ok, how about picking out one example of what Paul taught that the CC later abandoned that might be related to this thread?But that would wreck it for others
I am not sure it is. The Apostles’ taught that a valid Eucharist was one that was in unity with the Bishop. This is what we see in the writings of the post-Apostolic Fathers. What we have been debating on this thread is whether a Eucharist is valid under a different/schismatic definition of “church” that was coined during the Reformation.Catholicism has a different definition of church. That is a whole other topic.
Ok, how about picking out one example of what Paul taught that the CC later abandoned that might be related to this thread?But that would wreck it for others
Yes, it does. And schismatics, heretics, and apostates. Either the concept was taught by the Apostles, or it was not. If not, then the concepts presented by all these other cults and sects have equal or more value.Boy, sure opens the door for much that cults and sects use.
Well, what made the Bereans “more noble” was that they accepted the Apostolic Teaching with joy and eagerness. After accepting it, they went to the scriptures. Often today this is used backwards, so that one derives ones’ doctrines from the text, rather than receiving the Apostolic faith with joy from those to whom it was committed by Christ.Be Berean or “just take my word for it”