If John 6 is speaking of the eucharist, how can non Catholics be saved?

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Jesus was talking about faith, that is how folks were saved before and after Jesus.
Can you address why folks thought this was a “hard saying”?

And why folks walked away from this?

Can you imagine any person in the pew at your church hearing a pastor say, “You are saved by faith!” and folks grumbling about this and saying how hard it is that your pastor is demanding this, and then leaving your church over this?

I know I can’t.

It’s not a hard saying at all.
 
Really?

That is certainly not a traditional Christian viewpoint.

What you are saying is that the atonement wasn’t necessary?
No, it was totally necessary. It’s benefits are simply eternal. That’s how Abraham was declared righteous by faith prior to the coming of Jesus.
 
My is that John 6 is not about the Eucharist because the Eucharist didn’t yet exist.
John 6 is about the Eucharist. The word Eucharist means thanksgiving. You are implying the Eucharist was an event that happened during the Passion so therefore could not have been foreseen. Jesus was preparing his disciples for His Passion knowing this would be a difficult concept for many. Stating the Eucharist didn’t exist makes no sense.

To the OP - We must depend on God’s mercy for our non-Catholic brothers & sisters. The Church doesn’t teach non-Catholics can’t be “saved”. Maybe there is a period of purgation in which they are exposed to the fullness of Truth and the gospel. I don’t know but I trust God. I’m the only Catholic in my immediate family so this was very concerning for me. I trust in God’s mercy.
 
John 6 is about the Eucharist. The word Eucharist means thanksgiving. You are implying the Eucharist was an event that happened during the Passion so therefore could not have been foreseen. Jesus was preparing his disciples for His Passion knowing this would be a difficult concept for many. Stating the Eucharist didn’t exist makes no sense.
I disagree. They would have no idea what he was referring to, and no way to fulfill what Jesus was telling them. That’s why it was hard and confusing. John 6 is about appropriating Jesus by faith, not about the Eucharist that didn’t exist at the time, and that is corroborated by many in the early church.
 
Can you address why folks thought this was a “hard saying”?

And why folks walked away from this?

Can you imagine any person in the pew at your church hearing a pastor say, “You are saved by faith!” and folks grumbling about this and saying how hard it is that your pastor is demanding this, and then leaving your church over this?

I know I can’t.

It’s not a hard saying at all.
It’s not hard because we see everything clearly now, having the gospels to guide us. We know the whole story. Folks then didn’t, it was hard because they didn’t understand he was talking about faith.
 
I disagree. They would have no idea what he was referring to, and no way to fulfill what Jesus was telling them. That’s why it was hard and confusing. John 6 is about appropriating Jesus by faith, not about the Eucharist that didn’t exist at the time,
What you mean, then, is that they understood him to mean that they should eat his flesh, right?

And they thought it was hard and confusing and then they left.

And you know that he really didn’t mean they should eat his flesh because…why? It’s just too hard to accept?
and that is corroborated by many in the early church.
Sources, please?

Something that states that John 6 is about appropriating Jesus by faith and not about the Eucharist.
 
It’s not hard because we see everything clearly now, having the gospels to guide us.
So for the first decades the early Christians, who actually walked with Jesus, and were disciples of the apostles, didn’t know the kerygma as well as we do now?

Is that your position?
We know the whole story.
Better than the apostles, and their disciples?

Really?
 
So for the first decades the early Christians, who actually walked with Jesus, and were disciples of the apostles, didn’t know the kerygma as well as we do now?

Is that your position?

Better than the apostles, and their disciples?

Really?
The apostles didn’t know what he was talking about, but followed him anyway. We know what he was talking about and follow him anyway. And many of the early church theologians believed John 6 was about faith, not about the Eucharist. In fact it was the majority opinion.
 
What you mean, then, is that they understood him to mean that they should eat his flesh, right?

And they thought it was hard and confusing and then they left.

And you know that he really didn’t mean they should eat his flesh because…why? It’s just too hard to accept?
Not at all. I accept that we receive Jesus bodily and blood in the Eucharist. I simply don’t think John 6 is referring to that.
Sources, please?
Something that states that John 6 is about appropriating Jesus by faith and not about the Eucharist.
"Constituting, therefore, His word as the life-giving principle, because that word is spirit and life, He likewise called His flesh by the same appellation; because, too, the Word had become flesh, John 1:14 we ought therefore to desire Him in order that we may have life, and to devour Him with the ear, and to ruminate on Him with the understanding, and to digest Him by faith. " Tertullian, On the Resurrection of the Flesh, Ch. 24.
 
I disagree. They would have no idea what he was referring to, and no way to fulfill what Jesus was telling them. That’s why it was hard and confusing. John 6 is about appropriating Jesus by faith, not about the Eucharist that didn’t exist at the time, and that is corroborated by many in the early church.
John 6:53-58, it is true that the Eucharist was not in existence yet, at least in a way in which the faithful could participate in it. Jesus here was giving us a view of what was going to be innaugurated at the Last Supper, the language he used is unmistakeably Eucharistic. But His teaching here really had a dual meaning at this point in time imo, one was literal and one was figurative. The figurative part is that Jesus is the source of our salvation, and by eating this bread (following Him and His Word) that came down from heaven we have eternal life in us. I am quite sure that even His disciples didn’t fully understand what He was talking about (the literal part) at this point, but they said “Master, to whom shall we go, you have the words of eternal life”.
 
The Eucharist is eternal. But it goes into finite bodies that are inclined to sin, and if someone commits a grave sin, he is out of the Church, as the Church is the living body of Christ…the only perfection we can claim as Church is our profession in the Creed…however.

We do receive the Living Word of God Made Flesh.

Holy Communion is that…without split or division in our faith.

I do believe, however, from a personal experience, that Christ’s sacred presence is there when they receive Him out side of universal communion with the Church…at their communion gatherings…considering they are not in state of serious sin.
 
The apostles didn’t know what he was talking about, but followed him anyway. We know what he was talking about and follow him anyway. And many of the early church theologians believed John 6 was about faith, not about the Eucharist. In fact it was the majority opinion.
I asked for sources, please.
 
The apostles didn’t know what he was talking about, but followed him anyway. We know what he was talking about and follow him anyway. And many of the early church theologians believed John 6 was about faith, not about the Eucharist. In fact it was the majority opinion.
I’d also like a Scriptural source that says that we see things better than the early Christians who walked with Him and talked with him.

Right now, it sounds like you’ve been duped into believing a man-made tradition, Salu.
 
I never said I believe the Eucharist is eternal.
But you do believe some actions of Christ are eternal.

So, logically, you have to explain why you don’t believe that the Eucharist, given first at the Last Supper, can’t be eternal also.

What Scripture verse says this?
 
Not at all. I accept that we receive Jesus bodily and blood in the Eucharist. I simply don’t think John 6 is referring to that.
LOL!
"Constituting, therefore, His word as the life-giving principle, because that word is spirit and life, He likewise called His flesh by the same appellation; because, too, the Word had become flesh, John 1:14 we ought therefore to desire Him in order that we may have life, and to devour Him with the ear, and to ruminate on Him with the understanding, and to digest Him by faith. " Tertullian, On the Resurrection of the Flesh, Ch. 24.
That doesn’t mention John 6, Salu.

Can you offer some other sources? At least 10, please, since you said it was corroborated by “many” in the early Church.
John 6 is about appropriating Jesus by faith, not about the Eucharist that didn’t exist at the time, and that is corroborated by many in the early church.
 
The Eucharist is eternal. But it goes into finite bodies that are inclined to sin, and if someone commits a grave sin, he is out of the Church, as the Church is the living body of Christ…the only perfection we can claim as Church is our profession in the Creed…however.

We do receive the Living Word of God Made Flesh.

Holy Communion is that…without split or division in our faith.

I do believe, however, from a personal experience, that Christ’s sacred presence is there when they receive Him out side of universal communion with the Church…at their communion gatherings…considering they are not in state of serious sin.
In non-Catholic communion, assuming that they believe that the bread and wine is actually transformed into the body and blood, do they need to say any particular prayer of consecration (Eucharistic Prayer) for it to be a legitimate consecration, at least in the Catholic Church’s eyes? I know we believe that it has to be done a certain way, but what is the least that needs to be done for a legitimate non-Catholic communion to be valid? We believe that a priest needs to perform the consecration, what about other non-Catholics? Hope you understand what I’m asking for.🙂
 
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