Hi, Protestant101
For a minute there, I thought I saw a ray of light coming through that anti-Catholic haze? Hmmm … ooops… my mistake. Let’s see if I can help out with this tangle of feelings and distress…
I would add to that that it is not very likely that they thus experience Jesus, because of the piece of bread they eat - no matter how many times the priest “blesses” it.
Use your imagination: put yourself at the Last Supper - this Jewish ritual meal of Passover. Read the account as written in Matthew, Mark and Luke. Then find yourself steppping forward and saying, “Ah, excuse me, Lord, but in no way is the piece of Bread, You. What are You telling these Apostles this for? Get serious - it is the ‘experience’ we are interested in … You know… the ‘feeling’.” Then sort of stand there and listen for the answer. Remember, now - the response must be Biblical. And this time, try a real source - there is nothing in the Bible about ‘experience’.
It is because of the written Word which they do dwell upon during their service that they are thus blessed by Christ’s presence - for He is ever present through and in His Word. The written Word cannot be separated from the Person of the Word, they are both a part of The One…
First thing up: do you have a reference for this?
Second item: for almost the 1st 100 years there was no completely written ‘Bible’ as we know it today. When the Holy Spirit came on Pentecost, He did not deliver a book.
The Apostles verbally taught those that came to hear the Word of God. St. Paul verbally taught Tim - and, yes, Paul also wrote to many places - but, his writings were to those he could not physically get to.
Christians did not have a Canon until the 4th Century - according to your statement above, we all just floundered around obviously ‘separated from the Word’. But guess what - that did not happen. Christ founded His Church FIRST and the Bible came afterwards. Just do the math - the first couple of centuries what do you think happened?
…but then we could get into the line of theology which is well-supported by the Bible that tells us there is life in just a look! No Bible reading! No bread eating! Just look and live!! (re the brazen serpent).
Going all the way back to the Book of Numbers and the snake had to take a lot of work. But we are no longer under the Old Covenant. Remember, Christ freed us from the Law and brought us as Adopted sons of God - so that we can cry “Abba!” (Rom 8:15) We are not crying to a snake.
May I suggest that a quick read through from Matthew to John and look how many times Jesus used a snake, snake metaphore, healed with a snake or had anything to do with any snake. I count 0 times. Don’t go looking for snakes - look to Christ - and the Word you claim to be following but seem to systematically re-write and then dispute when challenged.
Miracles can never cut the mustard for “proof,” for everyone who wants to conjure up their own religion, which I think the original catholic Church has done, can always drum up a few miracles, and some “testimonies;” but a true Christian will always want to test these by God’s Word.
Thought you had outgrown name calling? You are just going to have to try harder. There is no conjuring on the part of Catholics. By the way, just what is the origin of your religion? Without knowing any more then I do, I can honestly tell you the following: It is not from Christ, it is not Apostolic, and it is is not united in either doctrine or practice.
I am not entirely sure what you want for ‘proof’. The Jews claimed that Christ died and His Body was stolen from the grave (forget about the guards that were posted). Prior to that, the Jews witnessed Jesus raise Lazarus from the dead - and refused to believe it was so - and, in fact, began the final stage of their plot to kill Christ as a direct result.
The claim for demanding ‘proof’ can be a very unforgiving master. Are you willing to present your ‘proof’ for ‘experience’ and ‘feeling’? Think twice - demand the same of yourself as you are demanding of others.
I don’t feel that the Pope, or other Catholic leadership are doing a good job of discerning and promulgating the Bible truth of The Lord’s Supper, which all Christians should participate in and understand better. The related doctrines they spread throughout the world about Jesus being a piece of bread - is heretic, and falsehood, and misleads millions about Christ’s true character and ministry.
You are generous to a fault in providing opinions based on your ‘feelings’. Unfortunately, these ‘feelings’ do not have sturdy legs and will not support the weight of any argument - except the one being used that says, “It’s so because I said it is so.” Time to move on.
Remember that imagination exercise I gave at the start of this post? You know, telling Christ that He was not a piece of Bread. How do you respond to the Master, the night before He dies that He does not know what He is doing? that He is misleading His Apostles and that this is just Bread? Do you have a ‘feeling’ about how He will respond from a biblical basis?
God bless