Spiritual is quite real, but the body is blood of the Lord’s Supper is more than spiritual.=Radical;9920741]
Aramaic doesn’t have an “is” so technically, it likely wouldn’t be Christ’s own words…it would be scripturally and, of course, scripture also has Jesus saying that anyone who does the will of his Father IS His real mother, brother and sister. That “IS” is merely spiritual and is very real.
I guss a Platonist might need to respond regarding whether or not it means the same as what I as a Lutheran believe. What I am saying is, if you look back at the link I provided, Lutheran and Catholic theologians (of that document) say the difference should no longer be Church dividing.you miss the point…for Bob dreams are the reality…you seem to be equivocating across philosophies and speak as if “real presence” means the same thing for a Platonist as it means for you. IMHO it is like saying that since a Jew believes in one God and since a Muslim believes in one God and since a Christian believes in one God, then all three must believe in the same God.
what is the mystery is the How. How is it that, by the poer of the Holy Spirit, mere bread and wine are the body and blood of Christ, which we receive not just spiritually by faith, but also orally by the mouth.it seems that you want to insist that those words are a mystery (beyond our understanding), but then go on to insist that they must be understood in a certain way
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Again, the Orthodox will need to chime in on this.I have a hard time believing that the Orthodox theologians will ever come round to endorsing the Aristotelian metaphysics of the Catholic claims…especially since it is a rather out-dated metaphysical view (and only getting moreso)…which is yet another reason to doubt that the union between Catholic and Orthodox will ever be real and substantial…though it is nice that they have found some merely spiritual common ground![]()
Jon