S
SyCarl
Guest
I would love to continue our discussion but as I have work tomorrow I must be off to bed. I will try to reply to anything tomorrow.
God bless and keep you.
God bless and keep you.
It is not inconsistent you must believe what He says and do as He tells you. Not what you feel. All the way not half way. For to eat of His Body and Drink His Blood you take Jesus within you. His Spirit becomes part of yours and your spirit within Him.The words that Jesus spoke that were spirit and life included:
How do they fit in with a literal reading of the rest of the discourse?
Jesus tells us if we believe we will have life. He also says unless you eat His flesh and drink His Blood you have no life in you. Unless believing and the eating and drinking mean the same thing, Jesus is being inconsistent.
But Jesus, conscious that His disciples grumbled at this, said to them, "Does this cause you to stumble? "What then if you see the Son of Man ascending to where He was before? "It is the Spirit who gives life; the flesh profits nothing; the words that I have spoken to you are spirit and are life.The words that Jesus spoke that were spirit and life included:
How do they fit in with a literal reading of the rest of the discourse?
Jesus tells us if we believe we will have life. He also says unless you eat His flesh and drink His Blood you have no life in you. Unless believing and the eating and drinking mean the same thing, Jesus is being inconsistent.
How is it not the same thing? explain please. You make yourself sound like the authority on the matter. What evidence do you have of it meaning something else? Did he explain himself in the exact same passage and say that it didn’t mean the same thing?Augustine does not say Jesus held Himself in His own hands. He says that in a manner He did so, which is not the same thing.
Jesus is a type of door, of which no one can get to heaven unless they go through.The whole bread of life discourse should be looked at as a whole so that the interpretation is consistent with the whole. Jesus just doesn’t start when talks about eating His body and drinking His blood. It must also be consitent with the rest of Scripture.
In the Bread of Life discourse in John 6 Jesus says a number of things.
These are unequivocal promises that anyone who eats His flesh and drinks His blood will have eternal life. There are no qualifications put on the promises; no requirements of faith or belief are given and no requirement is made that one partake in a worthy manner. If transubstantiation is true, then according to these promises all one would have to do to have eternal life is go to a Catholic Mass and partake of the Eucharist. It would not matter that this was done illicitly or without any faith at all; the requirements of the promises would be met.
Jesus says more about eating His flesh and drinking His blood.
Here another unequivocal statement is made telling us that we must eat His flesh and drink His blood. Unless we do so, nothing else can help us because no exceptions are given to the requirement. Taken together, if interpreted literally, these passages would mean that we could receive eternal life if and only if we eat Jesus’ flesh and drink His blood.
Earlier in John 6 Jesus makes other unequivocal promises.
In these promises Jesus tells us that if we believe in Him we will have eternal life. Paul also talks about the Lord’s Supper.
In this passage Paul tells us that we must partake in a worthy manner yet Jesus puts no such requirement in his statement. If Jesus’ statements about eating His flesh and drinking His blood are taken literally then those statements contradict what both Jesus and Paul say elsewhere. However, Scripture cannot contradict itself so Jesus must not be speaking literally of eating His flesh and drinking His blood. What then does Jesus mean?
It can be seen that He makes two very similar statements, “everyone who beholds the Son and believes in Him will have eternal life, and I Myself will raise him up on the last day." and "He who eats My flesh and drinks My blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up on the last day. “ It is apparent that Jesus is speaking figuratively and that eating His flesh and drinking His blood is equivalent to believing in Him. Is such figurative speaking consistent with Jesus’ other teaching?
It can be seen that throughout John’s Gospel Jesus does frequently speak figuratively. In fact, He says so Himself.
Another characteristic of Jesus’ teaching in John’s gospel is the repeated use of the phrase “I am the”.
It is clear that many of these statements are figurative since Jesus is not literally a door or a vine. The statement “I am the bread of life” fits into the pattern that Jesus established of speaking about Himself figuratively.
- The bread of life.
- The light of the world
- The door of the sheep
- The good shepherd
- The resurrection and the life
- The way, the truth and the life
- The true vine
to be continued
This was not your own analysis. This is what most protestants have taught since they lost the ability to confect the Eucharist by the power of Christ’s ordained priesthood and decided to use private interpretation of scripture as their authority.I have not regurgitated anyone else’s ideas. That was my own analysis.
false, there are many things we MUST do for eternal life that follow our belief in Christ, including obey everything he has commanded us.The words that Jesus spoke that were spirit and life included:
How do they fit in with a literal reading of the rest of the discourse?
Jesus tells us if we believe we will have life. He also says unless you eat His flesh and drink His Blood you have no life in you. Unless believing and the eating and drinking mean the same thing, Jesus is being inconsistent.
This is what Augustine wrote:How is it not the same thing? explain please. You make yourself sound like the authority on the matter. What evidence do you have of it meaning something else? Did he explain himself in the exact same passage and say that it didn’t mean the same thing?
So in what way/manner was Jesus holding Himself in His own hands?
newadvent.org/fathers/1801034.htm
- Because there was there a sacrifice after the order of Aaron, and afterwards He of His Own Body and Blood appointed a sacrifice after the order of Melchizedek; He changed then His Countenance in the Priesthood, and sent away the kingdom of the Jews, and came to the Gentiles. What then is, “He affected”? He was full of affection. For what is so full of affection as the Mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ, who, seeing our infirmity, that He might deliver us from everlasting death, underwent temporal death with such great injury and contumely? “And He drummed:” because a drum is not made, except when a skin is extended on wood; and David drummed, to signify that Christ should be crucified. But, “He drummed upon the doors of the city:” what are “the doors of the city,” but our hearts which we had closed against Christ, who by the drum of His Cross has opened the hearts of mortal men?** “And was carried in His Own Hands:” how “carried in His Own Hands”? Because when He commended His Own Body and Blood, He took into His Hands that which the faithful know; and in a manner carried Himself, when He said, “This is My Body**.” Matthew 26:26 “And He fell down at the doors of the gate;” that is, He humbled Himself. For this it is, to fall down even at the very beginning of our faith. For the door of the gate is the beginning of faith; whence begins the Church, and arrives at last even unto sight: that as it believes those things which it sees not, it may deserve to enjoy them, when it shall have begun to see face to face. So is the title of the Psalm; briefly we have heard it; let us now hear the very words of Him that affects, and drums upon the doors of the city.
That may well be, but what I posted was the result of my reading the passages in question. I am glad that I do agree with others. While you are entitled to your opinion, I disagree that only a priest can confect the Eucharist. There is absolutely nothing in the Bible that places a limit on who can do it. God can use whoever He wishes.This was not your own analysis. This is what most protestants have taught since they lost the ability to confect the Eucharist by the power of Christ’s ordained priesthood and decided to use private interpretation of scripture as their authority.
I agree that eternal life involves many things. That is why I interpret Jesus’ words to give effect to all of them. Jesus says that if we eat and drink His flesh and blood we will have eternal life. If we are to take part of the sentence literally, why should we not take the whole sentence? The sentence says nothing about faith, just eating and drinking. Taking verses 53-60 literally would mean that I, or even an athiest, could go to a Catholic Mass, illicitly receive the Eucharist and meet the conditions of the promise Jesus has given here. After all the elements, once consecrated, would be the flesh and blood of Jesus no matter who ate them. If you start adding conditions to what Jesus uncondionally says in the passage, you are no longer taking Him at His word and are not taking what He says literally.false, there are many things we MUST do for eternal life that follow our belief in Christ, including obey everything he has commanded us.
To not believe in the True Presence, Body blood soul and divinity, is to not fully believe in Christ.
This wonderful Sacrament does not limit God to how he wants to reveal himself to pagans, unbelievers or Christians. In order to partake of the Eucharist one already has to be baptised into the New Covenant in order to partake of his divinity and come to him in his mysteries. I know Jesus does not say this in the bread discourse but he states entrance into the new covenant with Nicodemus John 3: a teacher of the Law (natural law or Flesh), and then displays the new covenant at the last supper discourses.I agree that eternal life involves many things. That is why I interpret Jesus’ words to give effect to all of them.
SyCarl it is ok, to interpret a personal reflection or meditation of the scriptures, but it is not ok, to teach your personal reflection as doctrine unless it agrees with the Teachings of Jesus and the Apostles. This the Catholic church does, it measures the teachings to Jesus, if it conflicts, it is thrown out, this is one reason why the Catholic church has survived these 2000 years. It has never changed her doctrines, only revealed them at different ages when the teachings of Jesus were contested.
I think, this is what you might be finding in the reflections of St. Augustine, many of our Catholic Saints, wrote teachings and reflections, and when they were in error, the Pope was quick to respond, many corrected their statements, and others obstinate to their teaching, which brand them a heretic.
Jesus says that if we eat and drink His flesh and blood we will have eternal life. If we are to take part of the sentence literally, why should we not take the whole sentence? The sentence says nothing about faith, just eating and drinking.
**Yes and who was he addressing? his many disciples and some Jews. Not the Gentiles yet. This audience was told they must consume his body and blood. That meant, they must break their old covenant with God, by eating flesh and blood which was against the Jewish Law to do so. Faith here does not play a part yet, because these are already in a Faith covenant of the flesh.
Jesus commands them to be delivered from the flesh covenant they must eat and drink his body and blood. That is why Jesus compares the Words he speaks are of the (Eternal) Spirit ( New Covenant which he will give in his body and blood), because the Flesh (covenant after he fulfills his Father’s will in heaven) is of no avail.
Then after the bread of life discourse is finished. The question of belief becomes a factor, to which many of his disciples leave him to return to their former way of life ( the flesh, old covenant).Not to mention the Jews who rejected his words altogether.**
Taking verses 53-60 literally would mean that I, or even an athiest, could go to a Catholic Mass, illicitly receive the Eucharist and meet the conditions of the promise Jesus has given here.
**No, it does not. You cant isolate scripture like that, like you say, it has to fit the whole of God’s ( word) saving plan, then when you are (Born anothen) saved, you are no longer of the flesh but of the Spirit. You must be of the Spirit( baptised )and in communion with the Catholic church in order to recieve this blessed Sacrament in the new and everlasting covenant in his body and blood. In the whole of the context believe and faith and action are all in the discourse.
Now in the first centuries this Holy Sacrament was not openly spoken publicly as we do here. That is why we hear other words applied to it like , the true presence, the breaking of bread, communion, lamb supper, agape feast (which was celebrated in the same day), Mysteries of God, The cup of blessing. This sacrificial meal of bread and wine did not get revealed to the catechumans coming in to the (Church) body of Christ, until they were baptised, They only heard the liturgy of the Word, and then they were excused before the Eucharist liturgy, this is still done in the Roman Catholic church today 2000 years later.**
After all the elements, once consecrated, would be the flesh and blood of Jesus no matter who ate them. If you start adding conditions to what Jesus uncondionally says in the passage, you are no longer taking Him at His word and are not taking what He says literally.
The words of Jesus are taken literally here, to those of the flesh it is foolishness, but to those of the Spirit it is eternal life and Jesus will raise our bodies on the last day, what a wonderful hope and promise just for believing and trusting him at his word. The only condition Jesus states elsewhere in order to enter the Kingdom one must be born of Water and Spirit. After you are born from above (baptised), now you celebrate your victory in the lamb supper wedding feast, in your eternal life of hope on earth, and consume the lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world. At the same time believing it is because of the lambs body and blood we are saved and are given into eternal life with God himself.
On the Catholic view anyone who eats and drinks recieves the body and blood of Christ, whatever they may believe.
This is not the Catholic view at all, please dont make such assertions, maybe put it in a question? The Catholic church will not administer the blessed sacrament to anyone who does not believe as the Catholic church teaches. Now some may not understand or care to delve in the mysteries intellectually, but by faith, and if this is what Jesus commands us to do as a citizen of the kingdom of God, then one on an act of faith obeys the Word of God.
However if the real presence is something other than an actual physical change, then He would indeed be present to those who believe in Him, but not to those who don’t. All His statements then stand in harmony to one another.
Very true, and I agree with Augustine. Jesus was carrying Himself, not physically of course and the church does not teach this. Maybe that is your misconception?This is what Augustine wrote:
newadvent.org/fathers/1801034.htm
This is the first paragraph in Augustine’s exposition of the Psalm. In it he is explaining how David changing his countenance before Abimelech, which is the heading of the Psalm, applies to Jesus. Augustine explains how being carried in his own hands applied to Jesus. He connects by saying that in a manner Jesus carried Himself in the institution of the Eucharist. He does not just say Jesus carried Himself but adds in a manner to indicate that Jesus was not actually physically carrying Himself but was in some way.
I think that you misunderstand what I am saying here. By “on the Catholic view” I am saying if the Catholic view of transubstantiation is correct, then anyone who eats and drinks the sacrament receives the body and blood. Am I wrong that Catholics believes that Jesus is wholly present in each of the hosts or any part of one? If I were to go to a Catholic church and go up to recieve during Mass, it is likely that they would give it to me without questioning my religion. (I would never do that.) I would eat the host and receive the same body and blood that a Catholic does. If Jesus statement in John 6:54 is meant to be taken literally, I would have satisfied the condition He placed on the receipt of eternal life. That cannot be what is intended. I can see no way out of this, however if it is accepted that Jesus is speaking literally in this verse. I know that Jesus says more elsewhere but if you take the verse as it stands, He makes an unconditional statement “do A and receive B”.On the Catholic view anyone who eats and drinks recieves the body and blood of Christ, whatever they may believe.
This is not the Catholic view at all, please dont make such assertions, maybe put it in a question? The Catholic church will not administer the blessed sacrament to anyone who does not believe as the Catholic church teaches. Now some may not understand or care to delve in the mysteries intellectually, but by faith, and if this is what Jesus commands us to do as a citizen of the kingdom of God, then one on an act of faith obeys the Word of God.
This is only true if you accept that the Church is limited to the Catholic Church. As a Protestant does not accept that I do not accept your conclusion.So i guess since you are not explicitly in the One Fold, with the One Shepherd, you really do not have to worry about whether or not it is actually so, as Christ’t church has defined. the same church that speaks with His own voice on these matters and always has.
I did not say that the church is limited to the Catholic church. Christ built a church, not many.This is only true if you accept that the Church is limited to the Catholic Church. As a Protestant does not accept that I do not accept your conclusion.
All I can say is I know what I experience when I recieve communion. I can feel the real presence of Jesus. It brings peace and calm as well as awe. It is really hard to put into words.
On an aside, please do not think that I am trying to change your view. I know that I would not be able to do that. What I do want to do is convey at least this Protestant’s views of the Eucharist and the reasons for them. I do not think believing in transubstantiation will help or harm anyone. God does not require us to understand what He does or how. We have been told what to do and if we do it in faith, we will receive what is promised. The Gospel was not preached with the expectation that its hearers would have to know and understand Aristotilean metaphysics. The Eucharist is a mystery and I am content to leave it that way and trust God. I don’t need to know everything.
I guess we will have to agree to disagree on this. I see absolutely no authority in Scripture that limits who can confect the Eucharist. I know that you don’t subscribe to scripture alone. I also know that Jesus is indeed present at our Eucharist.I did not say that the church is limited to the Catholic church. Christ built a church, not many.
All those who are explicitly outside of the Catholic church yet are still in Christ, are implicitly catholic. There is no salvation outside of the Catholic church, implicitly speaking. I hope you understand what I am saying.
As far as the Eucharist, it cannot be confected outside of the perameters of the Catholic church. if there is no ordained priest in union with the Church Christ instituted, then the clergy in any other church lacks the line of power given directly to the apostles and those they ordained and the bishops that were prdained by the apostles. This would be like holding an electric plug a half an inch from the socket and trying to power up whatever it is you are attempting to power up. There is no power without being directly connected.
What you experience when you receive your bread and wine at your church cannot be the Eucharist, it is impossible.
I do not gauge my faith on feeling as I did when I was protestant. i gauge it on what the Apostolic church Christ built teaches as a matter of doctrine. It is the aposltes doctrines that i hold to, not feeling, sensatinalism and the like. i am not saying that is what you base your faith on, I am just giving you my experience.
mother teresa did not feel the presence of God nearly all her life, yet lived by faith and served over 60,000 dying men in Calcutta.
This once again shows that our real obstacle is the matter of authority. We could go on for years discussing doctrines and interpretations of scripture, but the real situation is that of authority.
My authority is Sacred Scripture and The sacred Tradition of the Church Christ built upon cephas.
Jesus ordained priests(presbuteros). Does your church have a priesthood that is traceable to the apostles and Jesus Himself?I guess we will have to agree to disagree on this. I see absolutely no authority in Scripture that limits who can confect the Eucharist. I know that you don’t subscribe to scripture alone. I also know that Jesus is indeed present at our Eucharist.
**It is meant to be taken literally. Jesus is speaking literally to the old covenant bride, who reject him and leave him. Only the 12 chosen remain and Jesus states and one of them is a devil.I think that you misunderstand what I am saying here. By “on the Catholic view” I am saying if the Catholic view of transubstantiation is correct, then anyone who eats and drinks the sacrament receives the body and blood.
**Anyone present at the Lords supper and believes at the words of Jesus Christ, the bread and the wine are transubstantiated into the body,blood,soul and divinity of Jesus Christ made present in persona Christi by his designated Priest of the High Priest. And truly believes and the discerns the body and blood of Jesus Christ. This “do this rememberance of me”, is the Last Supper made present verbatim in the present. And is of the bride of Jesus Christ can partake of his divinity in the Eucharist.
If you are not of the bride of Jesus Christ and consume of the Eucharist, or do not discern the body and blood of Jesus Christ. It brings the curses that ST. Paul speaks of why many of you are sick and are dying. To partake of the body and blood of Jesus Christ with out being baptised into his body the bride of Jesus the Catholic church. It is like a woman consummating a marriage without her husband, making her a harlot bringing in the curses of God.**
Am I wrong that Catholics believes that Jesus is wholly present in each of the hosts or any part of one? If I were to go to a Catholic church and go up to recieve during Mass, it is likely that they would give it to me without questioning my religion. (I would never do that.) I would eat the host and receive the same body and blood that a Catholic does.
If a Catholic Priest is aware that non catholics are in attendance of a Mass, the Priest will give protocol to the mysteries. It is up to the individual to adhere. If he or she does not, then liability of sacrilege is upon the individual.
If Jesus statement in John 6:54 is meant to be taken literally, I would have satisfied the condition He placed on the receipt of eternal life. That cannot be what is intended. I can see no way out of this, however if it is accepted that Jesus is speaking literally in this verse. I know that Jesus says more elsewhere but if you take the verse as it stands, He makes an unconditional statement “do A and receive B”.