R
Radical
Guest
You are wrong. For example look at John 3. When Jesus says that one must be born again, Nicodemus was confused. He responds:Jesus instructed his followers to partake of his body and blood.
When Jesus spoke figuratively, not one was shocked or confused.
“How can a man be born when he is old?” Nicodemus asked. “Surely he cannot enter a second time into his mother’s womb to be born!”
first, keep in mind that nobody left that had been enabled by the Father (John 6:65 with John 6:39, 17:12 and 18:9.) Second, the Jews had very serious attitudes about diet. The statement would have been offensive even in a figurative sense. Picture a charasmatic preacher today talking to a bunch of southern baptists and explaining to them, that in order to follow him, they would have to sodomize him. I would suggest that it wouldn’t matter to them if the preacher was only talking figuratively, the idea is so repugnant that the use of those words would alienate the audience immediately.Why did so many followers leave after his statements in John 6?
Paul did no more than restate Christ’s figurative words. The early church, for the most part, began by restating Jesus’s figurative words and slowly sank into error. The Didache refers to broken bread and refers to spiritual food and drink…no mention of body or blood.Paul, and the entire early Church documented the understanding that Jesus is indeed with us in body and spirit in the Eucharist.
Because I don’t have good reason to believe it…why deny your senses and force a literal interpretation upon a passage so that it enjoins a crime?Why deny it?