H
hansard
Guest
I’ve always wondered why the physical consumption of god (any god) is even necessary. I ingest the body/blood/soul/divinity of Jesus, but to what end?
I can see it as a memorial (do this in memory of me), but if it’s the metaphysical body and blood of Jesus, then I have to wonder what it achieves.
“…unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you.”
It’s almost ridiculous that people take this literally, in light of everything that has just gone before in that chapter.
I can be just as close to God through prayer or, more importantly, by living justly and charitably and forgiving those who do me wrong. This was always the plan.
I know John 6 is seized upon as a justification. It makes me suspicious that these crucial statements appear only in the last gospel, written much later than the others. It’s a handy piece of revisionism, probably at the behest of the church’s leaders at the time.
It is also slightly problematic that we accept John 6 as literal - and I mean rolled-gold, unambiguously literal - and yet we accept so much else of what Jesus said on the level of the symbolic and metaphorical.
I can see it as a memorial (do this in memory of me), but if it’s the metaphysical body and blood of Jesus, then I have to wonder what it achieves.
“…unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you.”
It’s almost ridiculous that people take this literally, in light of everything that has just gone before in that chapter.
I can be just as close to God through prayer or, more importantly, by living justly and charitably and forgiving those who do me wrong. This was always the plan.
I know John 6 is seized upon as a justification. It makes me suspicious that these crucial statements appear only in the last gospel, written much later than the others. It’s a handy piece of revisionism, probably at the behest of the church’s leaders at the time.
It is also slightly problematic that we accept John 6 as literal - and I mean rolled-gold, unambiguously literal - and yet we accept so much else of what Jesus said on the level of the symbolic and metaphorical.