G
Gavin
Guest
I was debating someone and they said that John 6 cannot be taken literally because The Gospel of John says that it talks about the spiritual side of Christ. I couldn’t find anywhere that suggests this. Can anyone help?
I think you should ask the person that is making this assertion to provide the evidence and then ask where the rule is that literal and figurative language cannot be used together.I couldn’t find anywhere that suggests this. Can anyone help?
This is why protesters to Catholic truth say it is symbolic and “spiritual”.John 6: 63
The Spirit gives life; the flesh profits nothing. The words I have spoken to you are spirit and they are life.
The wafer you eat does not make you alive (that is the flesh that profits nothing) but you now have this “nothing” inside you, and the Father is looking for the body and blood of the Son, to raise him to life. His body is now part and parcel of your body; God is pouring life into you and will raise you, one body with him.“Whoever eats My flesh and drinks My blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day”
Saint Gregory of Nyssa wrote in Great Catechism , 37:John 6: 63
The Spirit gives life; the flesh profits nothing. The words I have spoken to you are spirit and they are life.
https://www.newadvent.org/fathers/29083.htmFor that Body was once, by implication, bread, but has been consecrated by the inhabitation of the Word that tabernacled in the flesh. Therefore, from the same cause as that by which the bread that was transformed in that Body was changed to a Divine potency, a similar result takes place now. For as in that case, too, the grace of the Word used to make holy the Body, the substance of which came of the bread, and in a manner was itself bread, so also in this case the bread, as says the Apostle 1 Timothy 4:5, is sanctified by the Word of God and prayer; not that it advances by the process of eating to the stage of passing into the body of the Word, but it is at once changed into the body by means of the Word, as the Word itself said, This is My Body.
…Therefore, it would be incorrect to see Jesus’ statement that the flesh is of no avail in John 6:63 as a rejection of the necessity of eating the Eucharist as a requirement for eternal life, just as it would be incorrect to believe that Jesus’ becoming flesh is of no avail for the salvation of the world. In addition, at the Institution Narrative, Jesus does not use the word ‘flesh’ but says, “This is my body”.
Jesus was concerned that the 12 took him literally and that you do. He did not go running to catch those walking away from his hard words, and has no intention of running after protestants who attempt to lead you into doubting him.They were using John 6:35 to prove that Christ wasn’t being literal.