D
Dauphin
Guest
The fundamental reality and substance of the Eucharist is not mutually exclusive with a symbolic and spiritual understanding. You see passages that seem to give the Eucharist an obviously spiritual meaning and then you conclude that It isn’t actually the Body and Blood of Christ. In doing this, you fail to recognize that Scripture contains absolute confirmation that the Eucharist has both literal and metaphorical elements. This kind of mistake is precisely why we have a competent authority for the interpretation of scripture.Yes, it was painfully obvious to me that it wasn’t literal when looked at in light of the whole of scripture and especially in light of the beginning of that discourse where he says what things give “nourishment”:John 6:35 "And Jesus said unto them, I am the bread of life: he that cometh to me shall never hunger; and he that believeth on me shall never thirst. " Coming to Jesus and believing in Him are that eating and drinking, for they are the things Jesus says will leave you satisfied/not hungry or thirsty (spiritually). Now, if you are thinking with a carnal mind (no offense and not directed at anyone) you will expect his following discourse on eating and drinking to be literal, fleshly, eating and drinking instead of the spiritual, eating and drinking that the believer in Christ partakes of through the Spirit and the Word of God. And the very next verse even explains why the critical mass of disciples would fall away when he is through with His upcoming discourse: 36But I said unto you, That ye also have seen me, and believe not
Even when Jesus walked the earth people did not believe Him and would not believe ANYTHING He taught no matter how simple or complex b/c they weren’t ready to follow Him. Indeed many people still even today turn from Jesus b/c their understanding is not from the right disposition of humility and contrition. They will refuse to try to see the spiritual meaning behind something through their pride and unwillingness to change their lives and conform to Christ (not talking to anyone here specifically and not even to Catholics in general. I know of many holy Catholics and do believe many of the saints were indeed saints).
K, really gotta go for now…
Peace
It’s really shockingly absurd that protestants can hold seriously to the idea that the Eucharist isn’t the Body and Blood of Christ. This view is completely alien to the Bible and the Church of Christ. Previous to the second millenium, you won’t find any evidence of the protestant belief in the Eucharist purely as an ordinance. This sort of nonsense started with Berengarius of Tours and found its culmination in the protestant heresies. Why do you think that all the apostolic churches, the ones that weren’t founded by flawed humans, have a belief in the real presence and in the words of Christ “This is My Body… This is My Blood”?
The key here is that you’ve made yourself the ultimate judge of all truth. You believe that all authority for the authentic interpretation of scripture rests in you. This is evidence of the worst kind of relativism; the kind that says “God does exist, but by golly, He thinks just like I do!”.
Because you refuse to believe that Christ ordained a competent authority to teach His Gospel, you are left only with your own flawed and subjective interpretation.