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david_ruiz
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I showed you that your claim that this is what the Didache says is wrong. If you are going to use support, then you better check that support first.
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I showed you that your claim that this is what the Didache says is wrong. If you are going to use support, then you better check that support first.
That would be interesting study .Don’t know who wrote it.Got any names ? Your question did not answer mine however.The apostles creed says nothing of RP, but everything what Christ wanted those departing unbelievers to believe in John 6.How about you show me that those who framed the Apostles Creed did not believe in the Real Presence?
Yes.Also do you believe in the Creed? Do you believe in One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church? Do you believe in the communion of saints?
No. Creed does not either.One C website said according to Trent catechism the communion is with baptized believers that are alive .It did say by interpolation you could include those baptized who have deceased .For sure it is not the 1800 Catholic authorized saints. Saints is any baptized believer in Christ, His Body, His Church.Do you think one can pray to the saints to ask for their intercession?
That would be interesting study .Don’t know who wrote it.Got any names ? Your question did not answer mine however.The apostles creed says nothing of RP, but everything what Christ wanted those departing unbelievers to believe in John 6.
Yes.No. Creed does not either.One C website said according to Trent catechism the communion is with baptized believers that are alive .It did say by interpolation you could include those baptized who have deceased For sure it is not the 1800 Catholic authorized saints. Saints is any baptized believer in Christ, His Body, His Church./QUOTE]Meant to say for sure it is not JUST the 1880 cannonized saints.
Hi Jediliz Agree that they recognized Him in the breaking of bread. When Jesus spoke figuratively He did not always says so . Right after drinking His “blood” of the new covenant Jesus referred to it/cup as the “fruit of the vine”, not my blood (at Last Supper). …Did the early christians believe in Catholic RP ? That is what we are discussing . Proof is slim except for interpretations of a few scriptures and several Father writings that could be taken both ways. We have nothing in writing that those at the Last Supper took it any other way but figurive/spiritual.The disciples on the road to Emmaus recognized JESUS in the BREAKING OF THE BREAD.
Jesus did NOT say “this is a symbol of my body” or “this represents my body”
The Early Christians believed in the TRUE PRESENCE. It probably helped that until they were martyred (Except for JOHN) the early Christians had the VERY WITNESSES that were there are the LAST SUPPER to explain the Eucharist to them.
Here’s the text you are referring to:Hi Jediliz Agree that they recognized Him in the breaking of bread. When Jesus spoke figuratively He did not always says so . Right after drinking His “blood” of the new covenant Jesus referred to it/cup as the “fruit of the vine”, not my blood (at Last Supper).
No way. No way could it be taken both ways. Every proof points to the fact that Christians believed in Catholic RP.…Did the early christians believe in Catholic RP ? That is what we are discussing . Proof is slim except for interpretations of a few scriptures and several Father writings that could be taken both ways.
Here we go again. I have already proved you wrong on that one.We have nothing in writing that those at the Last Supper took it any other way but figurive/spiritual.
Well then please tell me exactly what the words of institution and words of invocation that is being referred here and how is that different to one of the Eucharistic Prayers?Words of institution are repeating the Lord’s words at the last supper and invocation by the Holy Ghost is just that .It is not what is said today .
Well in this case, context says that Ignatius was not simply fighting the docetists. He was also making the point that if you do not believe that this bread and wine has been transformed into the Body and Blood of Christ then you are like the docetist.Nowhere, but “contexts” generally speak for themselves.
Not subset but a major point.You are asking for the context to define itself further. I admitted you can find RP there , but in a subtext. Just my opinion.
Both point to RP.Again , it also depends which version you find more accurate .The long version says nothing of RP but stays true to short version context of all fleshly (incarnate) works of Christ.
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12659c.htmJust remembering in fondness the old days of the Radical /Lyrikal debates on RP and Augustine.I recall one point of why didn’t Augustine rebuke /correct Ambrose for his belief in RP, if indeed Augustine thought it all figurative. It was said Ambrose was definitely an RP man .Have not read a stitch on Ambrose and RP. Apparently one could read him and come away with a different RP than CC RP, according to catholic monk Ratranmus. That is all.
Not my paradigm. Christ’s paradigm. And literal is obviously higher.Only in your paradigm where you view literal as higher and symbolic as trite comparatively
Perhaps to you but not to Christ. All this spiritual and meaningful stuff mean zilch if what Christ wanted you to do is a literal doing of what He commanded..Another paradigm would understand that both are quite personal, and spiritual, and intensely meaningful,
Yes, we do both remember, but with regards the rite and ritual of how this is to be done, He was very specific about that. And very clear.but that there is a difference in discernment. Yours is not “less” just wrong… We both participate in his command to remember.
Actually not. If it is really symbolic, then all it will be is that the bread we eat is just bread, we just understood wrongly so we still complied with the command to remember and believe in the eating and drinking of His flesh. Put it this way: we are thinking there is more but in actual fact that is all there is. So if that is all there is we still complied so get the promise.Your logic fails cause when one is wrong they are wrong, and “miss out” and obey not in truth and spirit- you in RP if it is truly symbolic , and me in figurative , if it is truly literal .
Analogy does not fail because the Israelites were never told that it will be the original lamb.Analogy fails .It is like the Israelites the following year celebrating/remembering the first passover and insisting it miraculously becomes the original lamb/blood.
And since Christ was insistent in Johh 6 that it was literal, ( He told them over and over again to make sure they got exactly what He said), then you better eat His bread and drink His blood.Your analogy does not carry over .Every instance must be analyzed on its own merit .If RP is true , it holds up .If figurative is true , it does not .If the blood was literal (it was in Exodus) then you better indeed smear real blood back in exodus. If Blood is figurative in John 6, you better participate figuratively (by faith eat His words and all that His flesh accomplished for us).
You are rehashing old arguments which I have already rebutted.Correct .Didache says, “The Fathers Holy Name tabernacles in us”. It has nothing to do with RP .This quote is found as part of our thanksgiving prayer. It begins by: We give thee thanks, Holy Father, for thy Holy Name, which thou hast made to tabernacle in our hearts…,it goes on to thank for knowledge of Christ, then for food ,then for spiritual food . The first part is a lot like the Our Father -Hallowed be thy name .It is the Fathers name that is in our hearts .A name is representative at least .It is certainly not saying Jesus flesh has just been eaten .It is the Father, and that, His name .Later he mentions spiritual food .Nothing to do with flesh . Nothing like today’s Catholic communion prayer of transubstantiation /offering up to father etc.
Who said that it is?Totally false interpretation of Didache. The Father’s holy name is not the blood and flesh of Christ.
Wrong. You continue with your failure to understand what I am getting at.False.You continue with circular reasoning , saying the Didache must be about RP, for their writers were.
Since the early Chrisians were RPers then it stands to reason that they were RPers. And this is also evident in the text.Pure speculation.There is no evidence writers were RP ers.
Yes, the position was presented but it was rejected because there was zilch support for it. You cannot support it from the Bible, nor from the early Christian writings. The overwhelming evidence is for RP. Just talk to the other Apostolic Church. They are as old as the us and we all date back to the Apostles - to Christ. And guess what - we both believe in RP.The position has been presented that the only way of believing was figurative/spiritual in first century.
They did not have to spell it out because everyone believed. They had no idea that 2000 years later there would ever be people who would claim to be Christians and yet not be part of the Apostolic Church and not believe in RP.That is why they did not have to spell it out even more.
No but if you did a little research you will find out that they all belonged to the Catholic Church. Back then, there was only one Church - the Catholic Church.That would be interesting study .Don’t know who wrote it.Got any names ?
Well no. The Apostles Creed did not contain everything that that Christ was trying to get accross to the unbelievers. The Apostles creed does not mention anything about what Christ said in John 6 at all nor what Christ said at the Last Supper.Your question did not answer mine however.The apostles creed says nothing of RP, but everything what Christ wanted those departing unbelievers to believe in John 6.
Well duh, the 1800 (assuming that your count is correct since I have not checked) canonized saints happen to be “baptized and have been deceased”.]Yes.No. Creed does not either.One C website said according to Trent catechism the communion is with baptized believers that are alive .It did say by interpolation you could include those baptized who have deceased .For sure it is not the 1800 Catholic authorized saints. Saints is any baptized believer in Christ, His Body, His Church.
That makes more sense.QUOTE]Meant to say for sure it is not JUST the 1880 cannonized saints.
Hi Cory,=benedictus2;8523937]The question however remains: When the Lutheran speaks of Sacramental Union what do they mean by that? Do they mean that the bread is now his body (i.e. no bread remains)? Or is it a case of Christ being “under” and “in” the bread as Luther put it?
Again, you are back to metaphysics, which to me as a Lutheran is irrelevent, though I recognize that to you it is not. Christ never says they co-exist, He says the bread is His body.Because if it is, well, that statement (that Christ is in, under the bread) does not mean that it is His Body. In this instance the bread (the substance of the bread remains, but Christ co-exists in the bread and along with the bread. And this is how the other Lutheran (can’t remember his name) explained it.
When I read the Apology to the Augsburg Confession, what I believe appears Lutheran. If it is Orthodox, that’s ok too.Your understanding is not Lutheran but rather Orthodox: it is His Body and you leave it at that.
My quibble is with the use of the term substance in a metaphysical way. I can say I receive the true and substantial body and blood of Christ. I just don’t attach philosophy to it. I take Christ at His word. If, in fact, there is a change in substance and accidents remain, as Transubstantiation says, if that is what happens, then I receive His body and blood with thanksgiving. If, in a mystery known only to God, the bread is His body and the wine His blood, then I receive it with thanksgiving.No but your quibble is not so much with the change but with the word “substance”. If we can use the word “substance” in defining the Trinity then why is it not applicable when explaining what happens at the Eucharist?
Christ doesn’t tell us the answer to this.And if there is no change in the substance of the bread, then the bread remains bread. How can we then say it is no longer bread but Jesus Christ?
And for me, it isn’t a big issue. Perhaps that’s why you say my approach seems Orthodox.And as I said before, if people are happy to leave it at that then that is good. But some minds enquire. That is how we ended up with Berengarius. God gave us the intellectual faculty and at some point, this is bound to come up.
Ok.For some, to say the Bible said so is enough. But people who think would yes, I know but why did the Bible say so? How do we reconcile this with what we know and what is said in the other parts of the Bible?
I think Luther would say my understanding is not unorthoodox for a Lutheran.It is wonderful that you understand it that way. But Luther says that Christ is "i"n and “under” the bread and not that the bread is Christ.
This is what I’ve read.That is correct, transubstantiation does not entirely answer the how. But it does explain how something that appears to be bread can possibly be the Lord of heaven and earth.
Agreed.The how is answered in the Eucharistic prayer itself : by the power of the Holy Spirit.
Then I’m not just Ortodox and Lutheran, but Catholic too.And transubstantiation agrees with you - the bread is His body
Lutheranand Catholic theologians seem more and more to believe that are not in opposition, and I’m more of that mindset too.=benedictus2;8523951]I would say yes and no to this. It is indeed an attempt to understand but not all attempts to understand are equally valid. There are explanations that are false and those that are true.
If there are two opposing explanations, they can’t both be true.
The Holy Spirit has not, and never will abandon His Church Militant. Guided into truth is not a finite singular event. When you and I join the Church Triumphant, we both will have been guided into all truth. The Holy Spirits efforts to guide us now are unceasing, yet our undetanding of that guidance is clouded by sin.I mean, just think about it. If He said the Church will be guided into truth, and since He is God, that promise must hold true. If not, then it would seem that the Holy Spirit has abandoned the Church from the time she accepted transubstantiation. And if the Holy Spirit abandoned the Church then, how sure are we that He did not do so earlier than that?
We will veer off the subject, I believe with this, but in short, the question arises which part of the Church, even leaving western non-Catholics out of the equation.I have always maintained that difference is not this or that doctrine but infallibility. Because if this (i.e. infallibility) is true, then it follows that what the Church pronounces is true - with regards this, with regards Mary, with regards confession and all other moral teachings and all other matters of faith.
It is what I have been taught.I am not too sure of this. The Lutheran belief IS consubstantiation (which is in line with Luther’s own belief). You are the first Lutheran I have met who believes that the Bread IS Christ.
Pray for the day when our altars are as one, as Christ called for.I think one day you and I will be in Communion.One day, I think we will say to you: Welcome Home.
Did you expect Jesus to say “I will not drink my blood again?” Why not ? He said it quite bluntly several times to unbelievers , so why not with the intimate disciples ?
Is that what you really think He should have said to make the fact plain enough for you to understand?
Well I took it to be , “On the night He was betrayed ,He took …bread…”.It certainly was not, "Father (or Holy Spirit) please turn the bread into His body. What do you think the words of “institution” are ?Well then please tell me exactly what the words of institution and words of invocation that is being referred here and how is that different to one of the Eucharistic Prayers?
Pure conjecture .The Holy Spirit brings all things to Remembrance.And another thing, what do you think was the invocation of the Holy Spirit for when they prayed over the gifts? It is precisely to transform these gifts into the Body and Blood of our Lord. That transubtantiation takes place is the work of the Holy Spirit.
Well in this case, context says that Ignatius was not simply fighting the docetists. He was also making the point that if you do not believe that this bread and wine has been transformed into the Body and Blood of Christ then you are like the docetist.
So the resurrected Jesus was not historic also ?http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12659c.htm
I refer you to this link on on Ratramnus.
Second. Ratramnus is in keeping with Catholic theology when He says that it is not the same “historical” body that we receive in the Eucharist. Of course it is not. What we receive in the Eucharis tis the glorified Body of Christ. The resurrected Body is not the same as the historical body. If it were so, then we would be eating a dead Christ.
While it is still the body that died on the cross, it is not quite exactly the same because it is now resurrected. The resurrected Body passes through walls and yet it has a physicality to it. So yes, Ratramnus is correct. And no, he was not saying that the presence is merely spiritual and much less merely symbolic.
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Suppose someone said if you clean the bathroom, I will take you out to dinner. Now you thought, maybe he mean symbolically clean the bathroom. So you did some “symbolical” cleaning of the bathroom (whatever that may be). This person comes home and finds the bathroom still dirty becuase you only did a “symbolical” cleaning. Obviously you won’t get that dinner.
That is a good example of a literal command. Can you give me one to show a symbolic command ?
Yes and no.As clear as any parable.As clear as John 6.Now, he will understand if you really had no idea that He could possibly mean literal. But once you have been exposed to the possibility that He might actually mean it literally and by sheer willfullness you decided to insist on a symbolic reading, well…
Yes, you complied with the command , but not in Spirit.You have made it a work , which is stench in His nostrils. Our fault would be either disobedience or of little faith, if command were literal.]Actually not. If it is really symbolic, then all it will be is that the bread we eat is just bread, we just understood wrongly so we still complied with the command to remember and believe in the eating and drinking of His flesh. Put it this way: we are thinking there is more but in actual fact that is all there is. So if that is all there is we still complied so get the promise.
Understand your point, but the evidence of effectualness is not there.]But if it is truly literal, then you miss out because all you have been eating all these time is just crackers and grape juice while we have been eating and drinking the Body and Blood of Christ JUST AS HE COMMANDED. All these time your bread was bread and your wine just plain fruit of the vine. Since the command is to eat His Body and drink His Blood, then you’ve failed miserably to follow that command.
Then why did you bring up the literal"eating" in OT as if it proves something? Besides, that is the debate, are we being told symbolic, like the Jews of old or literal ?Analogy does not fail because the Israelites were never told that it will be the original lamb.
No,because Jesus was still intact in front of them .Besides you have the problem of the apostles partaking of His “historical” body , and not His “resurrected body” ,which earlier you said it was the latter we partake of.Besides, if you go down this line of thinking, you are therefore admitting that at the Last Supper, the apostles DID EAT LITERALLY the Body and Blood of Christ
He began discourse figuratively and ended it figuratively.And since Christ was insistent in Johh 6 that it was literal, ( He told them over and over again to make sure they got exactly what He said), then you better eat His bread and drink His blood.
Well, Peter pretty much said that and Jesus ended the “discourse”. Augustine was quite explicit in this .Firstly, He did NOT say by faith eat my words and all that His flesh accomplished for us.
And twice He spoke figuratively in discourse.What did He say? Eat my flesh, drink my blood. Several times to make sure that His listeners get that He means what He is saying.