R
Razanir
Guest
Any evidence to back this opinion up?Because they understand him to be talking figuratively.
What you’re saying is A ∴ A.
Any evidence to back this opinion up?Because they understand him to be talking figuratively.
I tried to bring up some of the relevant points in my last response to you. But additionally, consider the problem that there is no universally agreed upon value for A. In their way, the Real Presence and Other positions are each consistent in their way, and the difference doesn’t arise from the words of the biblical texts, but rather from the analytical framework in which those texts are understood.Any evidence to back this opinion up?
What you’re saying is A ∴ A.
=Attejohannes;10293616] Reconciliation (Confession):
Catholics believe the sacrament of reconciliation flows from the power of “binding and loosing” granted to the Apostles and their ministerial successors, the ordained clergy, as well as Jesus’s instructions that “whose sins you forgive are forgiven them.” In the sacrament the repentant sinner confesses his sins to the priest or bishop, who, as God’s minister, in turn pronounces absolution, which declares that the confessed sins are forgiven by the grace of God through Jesus Christ. In order to be valid, the Church requires that the person confessing be truly repentant, and thus states that while one may deceive the priest or bishop, one cannot deceive God and the sins will be retained if true contrition is lacking. At the conclusion of the rite, the absolved sinner is given some form of penance, generally some prayers to say. These are not “repayment” or “expiation” for the sin properly speaking, but merely intended to help the sinner pray to reflect on their past sins and avoid temptations in the future. Any baptized Christian past the age of reason is eligible to receive the sacrament.
Lutherans recognize the importance of the sacrament of reconciliation but do not count it as a sacrament. Most Lutheran liturgies begin with a general absolution administered to the congregation, though on request most pastors will still hear private confessions. (What follows is my theory, any Lutherans please confirm or correct me!) **The reason it is not held to be a proper “sacrament” despite the importance Lutherans attach to it is because Lutherans believe that God has already forgiven any sins, confessed or not, in his Church through his gift of grace. Thus the Lutheran absolution does not actively impart grace like the Catholic one, which actively forgives confessed sins, but rather simply declares the reality of grace that was already imparted. ** To restate, while Catholic absolution itself removes the burden of sin from a repentant Christian, Lutheran absolution simply reminds the penitent Christian that the burden has already been removed.
Some Lutheran answers:
Yet in a supernatural, incomprehensible way. IOW, what we do know that that bread and wine are consecrated. Based on Christ’s words, they are body and blood. I’m uncomfortable with the “simultaneous” language.There was a question of the bread and wine left over after the Communion. The usual practice, at least in Finland, is that the celebrant consumes the remaining consecrated bread and wine. Regarding the presence of Christ in the Eucharist we often compare the mystery with the Incarnation. Christ was truly God and truly Man, and His humanity did not change because of His divinity. Likewise the consecrated elements in the Communion are simultaneously bread and wine and the Body of Christ.
Two thoughts on this.Regarding the sacramental status of Reconciliation, the main reason to omit it from the list was the desire to emphasize the definition of sacraments as “visible signs of invisible grace”, meaning that some concrete material (water at baptism, bread and wine at Communion) should be present. Reconciliation, is considered something like preached God’s word, extremely important. but not a sacrament.
Sometimes even members of the family may do things differently.I just feel that I have to tell a Finnish anecdote, very Lutheran, I would say.
In Northern Finland a man came very nervous to his neighbour, because he had something to confess. “I have stolen timber from your wood”, he said, and continued: “I have asked forgivance from Jesus, but I have to also ask you, and I will compensate the wood”.
“You are forgiven”, answered the neighbour, “and Jesus and I are such kind of men that when we forgive there is no talk about compensation”
Well, regarding the natural law of things, we should be happy that in faith we are dealing with the supernatural.Sometimes even members of the family may do things differently.
Mary the mother of Jesus, a story was told, would get up in the middle of the night, open the back door and let sinners in, those that Peter refused entry, and much to the puzzlement of Jesus the next day when he saw the uncouth characters in his Father’s house.
The neighbour and Jesus above would probably be more generous than the Father who insisted that he compensated for the sins of the world by none other but the life of his Son.
Certain things need to make good; it is the natural law of things.
Ok granted.Well, regarding the natural law of things, we should be happy that in faith we are dealing with the supernatural.
It is not certainly natural, in the human eyes not even just, that the owner of the wineyard gives the same daily wage for the laborers that have been working only for one hour as to those who have toiled for the whole day. That is not called the natural law of things, that is called grace.
A Finnish old spiritual song says something like that:
“You may have been under chastisment
for tens of years.
You may have shed your tears,
you have honestly repented.
To your astonishment, the thief of the cross is given preference over you”
Yes, something like that. We would all be lost, if God required similar type of justice with us as we tend to require in our dealingd with our fellow men.Ok granted.Do you mean like the supernatural law of God’s justice and mercy?
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I find it is interesting about God’s justice and at times it seems he would do it like how we men would too. Jesus told a story of the unforgiving servant who in turn was unwilling to forgive the debt of those who owed him. He was put in jail by the forgiving master until he paid the last penny. Even though God is merciful his justice demands that proper restitution has to be done where in cases applied. But yet it is by his love that we are set free which we can never really pay in full accordingly. We still however have to play our part for that grace to really come into effect. He is not asking an eye for an eye but the principle is nevertheless we can identify with and understand.Yes, something like that. We would all be lost, if God required similar type of justice with us as we tend to require in our dealingd with our fellow men.
Well, I read this parable slightly differently. The unforgiving servant was thrown to jail, not because of he debt (which had been TOTALLY and ONCE and IN ALL forgiven), but because he was unforgiving. The unconditional grace is conditional on our own preparedness to forgive, as indicated in the Lord’s prayer.I find it is interesting about God’s justice and at times it seems he would do it like how we men would too. Jesus told a story of the unforgiving servant who in turn was unwilling to forgive the debt of those who owed him. He was put in jail by the forgiving master until he paid the last penny. Even though God is merciful his justice demands that proper restitution has to be done where in cases applied. But yet it is by his love that we are set free which we can never really pay in full accordingly. We still however have to play our part for that grace to really come into effect. He is not asking an eye for an eye but the principle is nevertheless we can identify with and understand.
I was merely saying that the master can be very human when he threw the servant in jail for not writing off the debt that people owed him unlike what his master did to him. Sometimes when we do things like giving or some form of free act of charity we kind of expecting that the recipient response in kind. Sometimes that can even be in the form of even simple acknowledgment. In this case the master expect the servant to do he same as what he did to him which the servant did not. As a result he was at the master displeasure, thrown into jail and the cancellation of his debt rescinded until he repaid it to the last penny.Well, I read this parable slightly differently. The unforgiving servant was thrown to jail, not because of he debt (which had been TOTALLY and ONCE and IN ALL forgiven), but because he was unforgiving. The unconditional grace is conditional on our own preparedness to forgive, as indicated in the Lord’s prayer.
As a protestant I do not share this doctrin that we do what we can, and the grace complements where we inevitably fail. And of course this question leads to very deep theological waters, indeed, regarding faith and works. We are exhorted to do works for our salavation, and yet at the same time reminded that in fact it is God, who works in us.
Perhaps I should rephrase the question, then. What types of evidence supports the view that it is symbolic? An example for supporting the Real Presence being the crowd’s reaction in John 6 (I think is the passage I’m thinking of). Surely the crowd would not get so worked up over a man telling them to figuratively eat himI tried to bring up some of the relevant points in my last response to you. But additionally, consider the problem that there is no universally agreed upon value for A. In their way, the Real Presence and Other positions are each consistent in their way, and the difference doesn’t arise from the words of the biblical texts, but rather from the analytical framework in which those texts are understood.
In the same context Jesus also called Himself as Bread of Life (John 6, 35,48), and then explains that this Bread of Life is his flesh. We do not interpret this that the substance of Jesus’ body was first turned to bread and then back to flesh.Perhaps I should rephrase the question, then. What types of evidence supports the view that it is symbolic? An example for supporting the Real Presence being the crowd’s reaction in John 6 (I think is the passage I’m thinking of). Surely the crowd would not get so worked up over a man telling them to figuratively eat him
They interpret it figuratively and read the entire passage with the assumption that he is not speaking literally, with all the conclusions you’d expect from that.Perhaps I should rephrase the question, then. What types of evidence supports the view that it is symbolic? An example for supporting the Real Presence being the crowd’s reaction in John 6 (I think is the passage I’m thinking of). Surely the crowd would not get so worked up over a man telling them to figuratively eat him
Well. I repeat that we simply do not know. Even the cleverest Bible scholars just guess or have their favorite opinions based on their peculiar theological standpoints. Particularly according to the Johannine tradition, Jesus often used expressions that are problematic, whether you take them figuratively or literally.They interpret it figuratively and read the entire passage with the assumption that he is not speaking literally, with all the conclusions you’d expect from that.
I recall one Protestant commentary that even argued that the Jews’ disbelief in John 6:52 was precisely because they were understanding Jesus’s words in a literal sense, and that their unbelief prevented them from understanding the words is a spiritual sense, which is the general belief among Protestants, who otherwise agree with those Jews in thinking it ridiculous that they would be given the actual flesh and blood of Jesus to feed upon.
Catholics, Orthodox, Lutherans, etc of course read that and see the dissent and confusion among the Jews as arising because they were interpreting him figuratively and are now being told that Jesus IS truly offering his Flesh and Blood to eat and drink.
But again both these readings are informed by the theological lens through which you’re viewing the text.
In an almost paradoxical manner, Scripture must be interpreted before it can be read. Or else we’d all be like the Ethiopian eunuch who when asked if he understood what he was reading, replied, “How can I, unless someone instructs me?”
Keep in mind though that even this admission emerges from a Catholic mindset (which again I stress is not exclusive to Catholics and is shared by several Protestant groups though with varying degrees) and the version of sola scriptura subscribed to by the Protestants who reject the Real Presence teaches that the explicit words on the page alone are the only source a Christian needs or indeed should be permitted to use to determine doctrine. So “if it’s not explicitly in Scripture, it doesn’t exist.”
Now in practice these Protestants have their own authoritative systematic theology, that to a large degree they allow to inform their readings of contentious Biblical passages as much as Catholics do, but the difference is that while the Catholic is derived from the 2000 years witness of the Church, the Protestant one is (at least originally) extrapolated from the Bible itself with little other corroborating sources.
Well, for my part, I was merely responding to Razanir’s questions and am not “bothered” per se.May I ask why does this bother you so much? Does it not suffice that we are commanded to celebate Eucharist until the second coming. If we take our medicines, we do not need to know and even less to understand what are the pharmacological principles that are in the prescription, in order to get cured.
Well, my sympathies. And it is natural to long for a certainty. Your solution is to trust a an institution, Church, which you believe to have the gift of infallibility. I, as an outsider, wonder, how much for example in the Catholic development of doctrin is God-inspired, and how much human. The practices that Luther criticized, and which nowadays I think also Catholics agree were scandalous (or am I mistaken?) had the backing of the highest authority of the infallible Church in those days. When an outsider looks the involvement of the Papal seat in political power play, the throne of Peter contested between different aristocratic families, several Popes presiding simultaneously etc. he cannot help wondering, whether this was what Christ intended.Well, for my part, I was merely responding to Razanir’s questions and am not “bothered” per se.
But in general, having divergent and mutually exclusive positions on the Eucharist is extremely injurious to the Church visible and invisible. Protestants accuse Catholics of idolatry because we reverence the consecrated elements as the physical presence of our Lord and Savior. Catholics in turn believe Protestants profane and desecrate the same body, and in most cases we deny even that they are able to partake of the sacrament at all in their churches since they lack an ordained clergy in Apostolic Succession as we understand it.
I understand that the ideal of putting aside differences and simply agreeing to disagree can sound attractive, but the fact is these differences exist for a reason. Whenever a schism occurs it is because both parties consider the other to be too far departed from orthodoxy and have entered the realm of a “false gospel” which Paul warns against in Galatians 1:6-9 among other places.
Christianity has always been a religion based around orthodoxy. Some world religions accept a wide range of views as long as practice is uniform and consistent, but Christianity with its looking deep into the soul of man, demands not only right action, but also right belief. This is why heresy is the most pernicious crime in Christian belief, because it perverts that right belief and transforms it from a Gospel that saves into a false Gospel that condemns. And this is why beliefs, whether about the Trinity, the Eucharist, the use of music in the liturgy, or whatever else, can and do become church-dividing issues.
The institutional Church was created in part as a mechanism to prevent these divisions by erecting an earthly authority that could unquestionably define orthodoxy. But the “catholic consensus” of the first undivided centuries did not last, and parallel and opposing authorities were constructed in many parts of the Christian world, and indeed the fracturing process is still underway.
What the hand of God may be in all this splintering I don’t know, but until the Second Coming, I’ll hold to what I am convinced to be the true faith, but I won’t and indeed cannot fault anyone else for doing the same.
I truncated your post for length but your painfully obvious condescension throughout is unprovoked and unwelcome.You see that I am quite pessimistic regarding any visible unity of opinions and practices in the Christian world. With uncertainties we have to live, and put our hope to God and His love, trusting on His guidance and His patience with, what I think you Catholics call as “honest errors”.