A
Assyrian412
Guest
Hey all, so I’ve been following Catholic Answers for a while now and they have seemed to always point out that the Early Fathers were unanimous on the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist.
I found this article, written by a protestant, attempting to prove that the early Fathers actually looked at it symbolically. Many of the proofs of the real presence seem to be refuting gnostics who did not believe Jesus actually came in the flesh; but it seems like this could be interpreted to mean that the Eucharist could not be symbolically said to be the flesh of Christ if Christ had no flesh…
Anyway, if anybody could make sense of the quotes from the following article and explain what these Fathers really meant, it would help me out. I would greatly appreciate it.
I assume the context is key but I am not very familiar with debates about the Eucharist so I figured somebody could help. Here it is…
onefold.wordpress.com/early-church-evidence-refutes-real-presence/comment-page-1230/#comments
I found this article, written by a protestant, attempting to prove that the early Fathers actually looked at it symbolically. Many of the proofs of the real presence seem to be refuting gnostics who did not believe Jesus actually came in the flesh; but it seems like this could be interpreted to mean that the Eucharist could not be symbolically said to be the flesh of Christ if Christ had no flesh…
Anyway, if anybody could make sense of the quotes from the following article and explain what these Fathers really meant, it would help me out. I would greatly appreciate it.
I assume the context is key but I am not very familiar with debates about the Eucharist so I figured somebody could help. Here it is…
onefold.wordpress.com/early-church-evidence-refutes-real-presence/comment-page-1230/#comments