I just must ask

  • Thread starter Thread starter BILL_PICK53
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
B

BILL_PICK53

Guest
Why do non-catholic take almost all the Bible LITERALLY, but will when it comes too John chapter 6 they say it is a Symbol or figurative and the Bible does not say it is,WHY
 
Why do non-catholic take almost all the Bible LITERALLY, but will when it comes too John chapter 6 they say it is a Symoble or figurative and the Bible does noy say it is,WHY
Why do you make sweeping statements like this Bill? You don’t know. You can’t know whether or not all non-Catholics take almost all of the bible literally and I’m pretty sure that it just is not true. I know it’s not true for this non-Catholic.
 
This is the problem with interpreting the Bible for oneself. One is free to decide what is literal truth, what is myth, what is allegory, what was added later, etc etc.

The answer to your actual question is that they don’t want to believe the Eucharist is Jesus’ body and blood. It’s too hard a teaching for them, so they refuse to follow Him in this. (See Jn 6:52-66.)

God bless you, Bill!

Ruthie
 
Why do you make sweeping statements like this Bill? You don’t know. You can’t know whether or not all non-Catholics take almost all of the bible literally and I’m pretty sure that it just is not true. I know it’s not true for this non-Catholic.
Richard - he didn’t say **all **non-Catholics.

Good point though. Which protestant sects don’t take the bible literally?

The protestants I know are literalists. Hopefully we’ll get some of them to answer this very good question!
 
the Anglicans and Orthodox agree with the Catholics on the real presence, do they not? tho i dont believe we can call them protestant. so its probably not the best example.😉 peace 🙂
 
Richard - he didn’t say **all **non-Catholics.

Good point though. Which protestant sects don’t take the bible literally?

The protestants I know are literalists. Hopefully we’ll get some of them to answer this very good question!
Well, speaking just for the Protestant I was, maybe am, and those I’ve known … we DON’T take the Bible literally at every juncture. We draw the line at different places, sure, but just for example, we don’t literally believe:
  • That God has “wings”
  • That He is actually employed as a shepherd
  • That His “rest” on the seventh day was comparable to our understanding of the word or its Hebrew equivalent
  • That seeming cruces in Scripture don’t call for thought & discrimination
Protestants tend to think that the Third Person of the Trinity was sent to guide the Bible-reading believers who comprise the universal church directly, and their chosen pastors and teachers to boot (though not without interference, confusion, & disagreement in some individual cases); Catholics, that the temporal Catholic Church is the rightful mediator of this charism.

I’m sure that our Catholic brothers will kindly rush to point out all the holes they see in such a Protestant hermeneutic, but the point is, I don’t think one could fairly call it “literalist,” except when compared with its Catholic counterpart.
 
First of all, even the literalist Protestants do not actually take the whole Bible literally - and Catholics take some of it literally. Protestants don’t think Jesus is literally a vine, or a door. I would say, such people allow for metaphor where metaphor is clearly what is required. (They seem to me to be less likely though to go for drawn-out spiritual allegory, although the accept some examples.)

But for various reasons they have come to the conclusion that sacraments are NOT how God works. That being the case, only a metaphorical reading of that passage makes sense.

There are many Protestants who are not literalists, though it would be best to say that everyone is to a degree. Anglicans, Lutherans, many Calvinists, many Methodists, a lot of the national European Churches. Plus most of the really liberal groups are not literalists.
 
This is the problem with interpreting the Bible for oneself. One is free to decide what is literal truth, what is myth, what is allegory, what was added later, etc etc.

The answer to your actual question is that they don’t want to believe the Eucharist is Jesus’ body and blood. It’s too hard a teaching for them, so they refuse to follow Him in this. (See Jn 6:52-66.)

God bless you, Bill!

Ruthie
Ruthie, I recently read that lutherens also believe in the eucharist at mass. Is this true folks?
 
Why do non-catholic take almost all the Bible LITERALLY, but will when it comes too John chapter 6 they say it is a Symoble or figurative and the Bible does noy say it is,WHY
Don’t Catholics take the Bible literally?
What part of the Bible is figurative to Catholics?
 
Why do non-catholic take almost all the Bible LITERALLY, but will when it comes too John chapter 6 they say it is a Symoble or figurative and the Bible does noy say it is,WHY
From my experience talking with Baptists and non-denoms they take John 6 to be symbolic because of their experience with the Lord Supper at their worship service. When the bread is distributed like crackers in plastic wrapping and grape juice is given in tiny paper cups the impression of symbolism is presented and there is no way that they are going to believe that this"bread" is the Real Presence of Christ.

When I have told them that because they do not have a priesthood with the authority to consecrate and therefore,their bread and grape juice is symbolic, it seems to help them understand.
That is my experience. Others may not feel that way.
 
Don’t Catholics take the Bible literally?
What part of the Bible is figurative to Catholics?
John Martignoni has an excellent response on his website (The Bible Christian Society). It’s short so I include it here.
Actually, there is no truth to that, whatsoever. Catholics interpret the Bible in a “literal” sense, while many fundamentalists, Evangelicals, and others interpret the Bible in a literalist sense. The “literal” meaning of a passage of Scripture is the meaning that the author of that passage of Scripture intended to convey. The “literalist” interpretation of a passage of Scripture is: “that’s what it says, that’s what it means.”
Let me give you an example to illustrate the difference. If you were to read a passage in a book that said it was “raining cats and dogs outside”, how would you interpret that? As Americans, in the 21st Century, you would know that the author was intending to convey the idea that it was raining pretty doggone hard outside. That would be the “literal” interpretation…the interpretation the author intended to convey. On the other hand, what if you made a “literalist” interpretation of the phrase, “it’s raining cats and dogs”?
The “literalist” interpretation would be that, were you to walk outside, you would actually see cats and dogs falling from the sky like rain. No taking into account the popularly accepted meaning of this phrase. No taking into account the author’s intentions. The words say it was raining cats and dogs, so, by golly, it was raining cats and dogs! That is the literalist, or fundamentalist, way of interpretation.
If someone 2000 years in the future picked up that same book and read, “It was raining cats and dogs outside,” in order to properly understand that passage in the book, they would need a “literal” interpretation, not a “literalist” interpretation. Now, think about that in the context of interpreting the Bible 2000-3000 years after it was written.
Literal, or Catholic, interpretation vs. literalist, or fundamentalist, interpretation.
 
John Martignoni has an excellent response on his website (The Bible Christian Society). It’s short so I include it here.
Literalism–1] Adherence to the explicit sence of a given text or doctrine.
2] Literal portrayal; realism.

Literal–1 a] According to the letter of the scripture.
b] Adhering to fact or to the ordinary construction or primary meaning of a term or
expression.
c] Free from exageration or embellishment.
d] Charicterized by a concern mainly with facts.
2] of, relating to or expressed in letters.
3] Reproduced word for word.

So you are saying that Catholics take the scripture as symbolic according to your “raining cats and dogs” by saying it really don’t mean cats and dogs are coming down but it is a symbol of it raining hard.
So when Jesus said this is my body, this is my blood, he really means it as a symbol of his body and blood and not his real body and blood. So according to what you wrote, that would be the literal meaning. Or would it be a Literalism meaning that it is his real body and real blood. But it couldn’t mean that because that is, according to you, a non-Catholic meaning.
 
Why do non-catholic take almost all the Bible LITERALLY, but will when it comes too John chapter 6 they say it is a Symbol or figurative and the Bible does not say it is,WHY
Which non-Catholics are you talking about, Bill? There are a LOT of non-Catholics. 😉
 
Why do non-catholic take almost all the Bible LITERALLY, but will when it comes too John chapter 6 they say it is a Symbol or figurative and the Bible does not say it is,WHY
The key is to ‘know when to hold them and know when to fold them’ if you don’t mind me borrowing from a well known movie.
 
This is the problem with interpreting the Bible for oneself. One is free to decide what is literal truth, what is myth, what is allegory, what was added later, etc etc.

The answer to your actual question is that they don’t want to believe the Eucharist is Jesus’ body and blood. It’s too hard a teaching for them, so they refuse to follow Him in this. (See Jn 6:52-66.)

God bless you, Bill!

Ruthie
There’s enough Biblical evidence not to take your understanding of ‘communion’.

BTW, the CC doesn’t take it as literal as you make them out to take it. Why are the ‘bread’ and the ‘wine’ offered to all each and ever time ‘communion’ is taken? Remember Jesus offered His Body AND His Blood. Also remember the ‘Last Supper’ included Both the Body AND the Blood.

Before anyone accuses others of not being accurate, don’t you think they themselves should be accurate, especially when they are supposed to have ALL the correct understandings?

1Corinthians 11:

23 ¶ For I received from the Lord that which I also delivered to you: that the Lord Jesus on the same night in which He was betrayed took bread;
24 and when He had given thanks, He broke it and said, “Take, eat; this is My body which is broken for you; do this in remembrance of Me.”
25 In the same manner He also took the cup after supper, saying, “This cup is the new covenant in My blood. This do, as often as you drink it, in remembrance of Me.”
26 For as often as you eat this bread AND drink this cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death till He comes.

Note: Paul did NOT say, ‘for as often as you eat this bread and drink this cup you eat the Body of Jesus and Drink His Blood.’
 
Literalism–1] Adherence to the explicit sence of a given text or doctrine.
2] Literal portrayal; realism.

Literal–1 a] According to the letter of the scripture.
b] Adhering to fact or to the ordinary construction or primary meaning of a term or
expression.
c] Free from exageration or embellishment.
d] Charicterized by a concern mainly with facts.
2] of, relating to or expressed in letters.
3] Reproduced word for word.

So you are saying that Catholics take the scripture as symbolic according to your “raining cats and dogs” by saying it really don’t mean cats and dogs are coming down but it is a symbol of it raining hard.
So when Jesus said this is my body, this is my blood, he really means it as a symbol of his body and blood and not his real body and blood. So according to what you wrote, that would be the literal meaning. Or would it be a Literalism meaning that it is his real body and real blood. But it couldn’t mean that because that is, according to you, a non-Catholic meaning.
I noticed that too. The CC is ‘literalist’ when it comes to ‘communion’. Evangelicals take it literal (as Jesus intended), IMO. Funny how that works out. 🙂
 
1 Cor. 11:27–28:
Whoever, therefore, eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord in an unworthy manner will be guilty of profaning the body and blood of the Lord. Let a man examine himself, and so eat of the bread and drink of the cup.
Note: it does NOT say ‘Whoever, therefore, eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord in an unworthy manner will be guilty of profaning the symbolic remembrance of the body and blood of the Lord.’
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top