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AlexPetrosPio
Guest
Since you seem pretty hung up on my post that Eastern Catholics use leavened bread, I will agree with TexanKnight that your using this fact to say that you can use ordinary bread and water is in fact a Red Herring Argument. But to the point at hand: the bread used in the Eucharist, East and West, is made with simple ingredients: ONLY wheat and water (and leaven in the East). Any other ingredients make the Eucharist not only illicit but invalid.This of course shows clear misunderstanding of all statements presented. I am not adding words to the Bible, since I have clearly stated numerous times that our Lord and Savior used wine in the Lord’s Supper (and on the point of unleavened bread, you never did engage the fact that you claim that Jesus said to use unleavened bread (your exact words), yet your own Church allows for the use of leavened bread in the Divine Liturgy of the Eastern Catholic churches, rendering your argument fallacious). I do not second guess Christ, I believe what He said. The difference is in interpretation, not denying His words. And no, it is not “abread (sic) and water comment”, it is a comment regarding a sacred ordinance that I hold to be very important in my faith. I have not disparaged the rites of your Church, so I appreciate it if you do not make sad comparisons to one of the sacred ordinances of my Church to “prison food”. Wow.
As in the Passover, Christ used bread with ONLY wheat and water, therefore the Church has said that bread with ONLY wheat and water is allowed (with East including leaven to symbolize the risen Christ. However, they will not add any other ingredients).
As in the Passover, Christ used WINE, therefore the Church has said that wine is ONLY allowed, not grape juice, not water, not Pepsi, but alcoholic wine.
Any deviation from this is not only illicit but invalid.
However, as an LDS, this argument is more like a modern Evangelical Protestant with the argument of “Christ also said that He’s a door and meant that symbolically, therefore the bread is also symbolic.” That is forgetting that Paul warns partaking in the Eucharist unworthily as in Corinthians.Why give such a warning if the Eucharist is merely a symbol?
Did Christ not take bread, but a few chapters earlier said that He “is the bread that has come down from Heaven” and that “His flesh is true food” and “unless we eat His flesh and drink His blood, we have no life in us,” only to say that the bread He was holding He proclaimed “This is my Body?”
This doesn’t sound symbolic to me…
Nor has it ever, but don’t just take my word for it.