I shall attempt to explain things differently, because it seems you have rarely understood what I was saying.
The NT directs its readers to Christ. There is one mediator, namely Christ between us and God….seems that you want to add a mediator, namely your church, between us and Christ.
Did you miss the many places in the Bible, indeed the primary revelation to Paul, that the Church IS Christ? Christ is the Head of the Body. Or the fact that the Church is the pillar and foundation of truth, that Christians are told to go to the Church for resolution of disputes, that Paul speaks of the authority of the apostles as greater than the angels, and that people are to follow what they teach because the Holy Spirit guarantees the inerrancy of their teaching, and how Paul instructs the Church on how to set up successors, following traditions passed on, etc. If you ignore the Church you are ignoring Christ (there’s even a passage that says just that!). Good luck with that.
reflecting actual apostolic teaching w/o non-apostolic additions
The Catholic Church has no non-apostolic additions since it retains apostolic succession and authority.
Yes, God himself thought it proper to reference scripture in support of his claims…the apostles taught by repeating what they had heard Christ say and by telling what they had seen Christ do. It was rare for them to introduce any novelty.
Jesus also said that the Holy Spirit would lead the Church into remembrance of all things (for he was final revelation), and John tells us that Jesus did much more than is contained in the Gospels. Seems it’s not all in Scripture, and indeed, even the Apostles didn’t remember everything, and how could they, when God is infinite? The Holy Spirit’s gift here is an eternal and ongoing mission to help us understand the infinite God revealed completely in Christ. The manner Christ chose to accomplish this was through setting up the Church.
Actually I am hung up on the use of words such as “literal”. Like Augustine, I believe that to literally eat Jesus’s flesh would result in a cannibalistic act….your manner of using “literal” causes the word to take on a meaning that is anything but “literal”.
Jesus becomes physically present in the Bread and Wine of the Eucharist. If a person has a physical presence, we typically call it a body. We consume it. How is this not literal?
This seems to be the opposite of what the RCC teaches. Doesn’t the RCC say that the substance of the bread is changed into the substance of Christ’s body such that the bread ceases to be present and that the body becomes present? It seems that you have it exactly backwards. At most, you should say that the substance of the body is manifested in proximity to the accidents of the bread…though I must say that the philosophy of accidents and substances seems untenable.
Nope, what I am saying is consistent with the Catechism, the Fathers, and so forth. The Bread and Wine do not take on the physical properties of flesh and blood, but that has no bearing on the Presence.
You’ve ignored all of my analogies to other manifestations. I don’t understand why.
Can Jesus become a lamppost if he wants? A burning bush?
If he did so, would he still be Jesus, a person? Would he be physically present? Don’t we call the physical presence of a person a “body?” Then why would we not call the lamppost or the bush the “body” of Christ?
If he became a lamppost or a burning bush, would we consider that lamppost or burning bush just an ordinary lamppost or burning bush?
Jesus becomes bread and wine. Once he becomes so, he is fully present. It is his physical body and blood. It need not be carved up human flesh to be so.
what physical form of his body at the Lord’s Supper? Is it bread and wine?
He was both in his human form and in the bread and wine.
If he is physically present, where are the physical attributes of that presence…if you say it is the physical attributes of the bread and wine then it is bread and wine that are physically present. I suspect, as with “literal” your manner of using “physical” and “present” results in terribly distorted meanings for both of those words.
When Jesus was in human form, was that form just a normal human form? Or did it also contain Jesus’s full divinity? In the same way, the Bread and Wine is no longer “just” bread and wine.
Answer my questions above and maybe I’ll understand what you think is so wrong with how I’m using the words “physical” and “present.” Or maybe you’ll understand that I’m not the one twisting words.
as he was at the incarnation? Hardly. At the incarnation his presence could be sensed. His body possessed physicality.
If Jesus chooses to incarnate himself as Bread and Wine, can’t the Bread and Wine be sensed? Doesn’t it possess physicality? That someone is too blind to recognize it as Christ himself is only a conviction against themselves, not against what Jesus is doing, for many, many people who saw Jesus as a living man did not perceive that he was the Christ. Do not blame Jesus for your inability to see.
the same sort of edification that prayer and meditation achieves.
So communion is no different? Is it necessary? Why? Do the Sacraments actually “DO” anything special, or are they just neat forms of prayer and meditation?