M
mikeledes
Guest
Apophasis, I know I should not discuss this in this thread, but I cannot pass on your analysis of John 6. You said “eating” and “drinking” refers to belief in Christ. That is not stated in the text.
“He who eats My flesh and drinks my blood ABIDES in Me, and I in Him.”
So if “abides” applies to the true believers communion with Christ (volitional), then John 6:51-58 cannot refer to faith, since “abiding” comes after faith and justification, not before. So the “eating” and the “drinking” refers to an act the true believer has to perform (volitional), not to His justification (i.e. positional). Remember, the “abides in Me” language is usually used in reference to keeping commandments and bearing fruit (volitional) in order, according to you, to maintain communion with Christ (John 15:10, 1 John 3:24). So what He is saying then, is that in order to maintain “communion” with Him, you must eat His flesh and drink His Blood. That’s funny, because another name for the Eucharist is “Holy Communion.” So the point? Using your distinction between positional (“in Christ”) and volitional (“abides in Me”), John 6:51-58 can only refer to the latter because of verse 56 (“abides”) and not to the former (i.e. faith).
This is all I will say on this topic because it is beyond the purview of this discussion.
God Bless,
Michael
- Whenever Jesus uses figurative language that causes confusion or controversy, either He (John 3:3-6, 4:32-34, 10:1-11, 11:11-14, Matthew 13:36-43) or the Evangelist (John 2:19-21, 8:37-39, 21:22-23, Matthew 16:12) explains what He meant. Neither of these cases occurs in John 6. If he was referring merely to belief in Him, which is a constant theme in John’s Gospel, why didn’t He clarify His statement and even allowed disciples to abandon Him because of it. It’s not like He never talked about belief in Him before. He does it in the first half of chapter 6.
- You might say that he talks about whoever comes to Him will never hunger and whoever believes in Him will never thirst and thus what He’s talking about in the second half of John 6 is faith. That is not so. What Jesus meant was that it is through faith in Him that our spiritual needs are met and it is through faith in Him that we have access to God’s gifts and blessings. Among those gifts is the Eucharist. You cannot partake of the Body and Blood of Christ unless you believe in Christ first. So through belief in Christ we have access to one of His greatest gifts, the gift of Himself.
- You said the following about the difference between being “in Christ” and “abiding in Christ:”
So if the John 6:51-58 is about faith, then the “eating” and “drinking” should refer to our “union” with Christ, since “communion” (i.e. abides, volitional) applies to the period after we have come to believe in Christ, post-justification. However, we read in John 6:56:What you fail to understand is the difference between the terms “in Christ,” and “abiding in” Christ. The former is the true believer’s eternal “union” with Christ, being now “in Him,” a positional truth). The latter is the true believer’s “communion” with Him (volitional) which, in this context, is the cause of bearing fruit in this life. Apart from the believer “abiding” in Christ he can bear no “fruit” here. Which has nothing to do with maintaining his salvation or (divinely declared) justification, through faith, based entirely on “the redemption which is in Christ Jesus” (Rom. 4:24).
“He who eats My flesh and drinks my blood ABIDES in Me, and I in Him.”
So if “abides” applies to the true believers communion with Christ (volitional), then John 6:51-58 cannot refer to faith, since “abiding” comes after faith and justification, not before. So the “eating” and the “drinking” refers to an act the true believer has to perform (volitional), not to His justification (i.e. positional). Remember, the “abides in Me” language is usually used in reference to keeping commandments and bearing fruit (volitional) in order, according to you, to maintain communion with Christ (John 15:10, 1 John 3:24). So what He is saying then, is that in order to maintain “communion” with Him, you must eat His flesh and drink His Blood. That’s funny, because another name for the Eucharist is “Holy Communion.” So the point? Using your distinction between positional (“in Christ”) and volitional (“abides in Me”), John 6:51-58 can only refer to the latter because of verse 56 (“abides”) and not to the former (i.e. faith).
This is all I will say on this topic because it is beyond the purview of this discussion.
God Bless,
Michael