Prove Transubtantiation and I will convert

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I’m not shouting OR blustering.
**My point to Steadfast **is that he is nothing more than an antagonist. He REFUSES to listen, which is the reason that NOBODY will ever get through to him.
Like the old saying, “There is none so blind as he who refuses to see”.
You’re quite the character.

I am going to suggest that you work on becoming stronger in your faith and in the substance of your religious convictions. It is clear to me that repeated failures on the part of Catholics in this thread to mount convincing support for the idea that the ECF’s taught Transubstantiation has shaken your faith and your immediate response is to lash out at me.

I understand the impulse but I encourage you to resist it and to cultivate the virtue of humility, or, failing that, at least justice.
 
You’re quite the character.

I am going to suggest that you work on becoming stronger in your faith and in the substance of your religious convictions. It is clear to me that repeated failures on the part of Catholics in this thread to mount convincing support for the idea that the ECF’s taught Transubstantiation has shaken your faith and your immediate response is to lash out at me.

I understand the impulse but I encourage you to resist it and to cultivate the virtue of humility, or, failing that, at least justice.
Like I said - there is NONE so blind as he who REFUSES to see. You say you believe in the Real Presence but you just don’t like the WAY it happens.
Poor Steadfast. I’ll keep you in my prayers.

PS - My faith is plenty strong - but thanks for judging my heart. I guess that would make you God now, wouldn’t it?
 
It’s just a suggestion, elvis.

Looks like you’re not going to take it.

Okay.

You’re in for a hard time of it if you come unglued this easily, but I’ll pray that you learn otherwise without too much pain and reversal.

God bless
 
The burden of proof is not on me to prove that these ECF’s held to a strictly Lutheran view of the Sacrament.
Nice dodge. Come out swinging, but when someone asks you to back up your claim, retreat and claim the burden is solely on them.

Had you remained passive and not made assertions, I would agree with your statement, however, you have also made strong assertions which you should back up. Like this:
All of those could just as easily be teaching the common Lutheran view or consubstantiation.
And this:
Every passage adduced thus far can also be understood to teach and uphold the Lutheran view while Transubstantiation proper cannot be directly inferred from them…
The latter especially, is utter balderdash. The ECF’s make statements like “the Eucharist is the Body of Christ” and you expect us to accept that is somehow folly to interpret that to mean that the Bread has actually become the Body.
My point is that the doctrine as these fathers explain it, while clearly teaching a Real Presence, does not necessarily teach Transubstantiation either.
Here you imply what you deny above, that the doctrine of Transubustantiation can be inferred from the passages.

Words can be interpreted incorrectly. That’s why we look for the chain of belief and trace it back. No one denies that these men were Catholic and that their teaching influenced the Church. This same Church based on these same teachings, teaches the doctrine of Transubstantiation. Who are you to tell the faithful student that he has completely misunderstood the teacher?
The Lutheran view has the benefit of simplicity, thus it is perhaps easier to see in the quotes given, it goes no further than the fathers who just didn’t think in terms of substance and accidence as separable aspects of phenomona.

Transubstantiation is more complicated. It doesn’t stop at the idea that the bread and wine become the Body and Blood of Christ (which is as far as the ECF’s go and thus far Lutherans and Catholics both go with them) but goes on to tell us that something happened to the bread and wine in the Sacramental action. It tells us that the bread and wine cease to exist substantially. It tells us that all that remains is the appearance or “accidens” of bread and wine.
Since when did simplicity equal truth?

What kind of an argument is that?
The ECF’s never go this far.

The Lutheran view is fully in keeping with the fathers cited.

In order for it to be said that the Church’s teaching on the Sacrament “has always been” Transubstantiation, or even that the church’s belief “has always been the same” (without specific reference to Transubstantiation proper) one would expect it to be maintained by these men. In order to reasonably say that it was in fact maintained by these men one would be justified in expecting some dilation on the state of the “terrestrial elements” after the “confection” of the Sacrament, since it is key to the whole idea. But they never do this, therefore it cannot be reasonably maintained that they taught Transubstantiation.
It can be and is reasonably maintained. As I pointed out above, the same Church which now teaches the doctrine of Transubstantiation is the student of these men. It is their students who walked in their footsteps and faithfully adhered to what they had taught, who definitively stated the doctrine in no uncertain terms.

Your position is the unreasonable one. Your position is that the unfaithful student who left the fold, better understands the teaching of the shepherds. It’s nonsense.
 
Elisaph,

I am not sure what you want from me.

I asked for Transubstantiation to be shown me from the ECF’s.

This was not accomplished.

It failed not because the ones looking for it were stupid or ignorant but because it’s just not there.

The Real Presence is there, but I admit that.

I mentioned along the way that I see the Lutheran view more clearly in the passages adduced but this doesn’t make it my duty in a thread devoted to another purpose to satisfy you.

Even so, at least in the case of Irenaeus and by extension all those who teach real presence without expansion on what happens to the terrestrial elements after the consecration, I did give my reasoning.

You don’t have to accept it, but in this thread you don’t really have the right to evade your failure to achieve its stated purpose by shifting the burden to me.
 
The CF’s are not the be all and end all of Christian Tradition. They gave us a firm basis for the Real Presence, but left alone that understanding is incomplete.

For some time the Church was content without a Trinitarian doctrine. Yet no one today tries to go back in time and practice the faith as though the nature of God was never defined. In the same way, the Fathers’ Eucharistic theology has been further clarified.

Again, if Christ is present substantially, what evidence is there of that? How do we know? Is his flesh a phantom presence? Is His presence in the Eucharist only spiritual? No, we know the Church Fathers taught a real and substantial presence.

Again, the question is, if this is true in what way is Christ substantially present? If you agree that Christ is present **in the flesh **in the Eucharist I can not see how one can escape transubstantiation.

Again reference the Gospel of John where Christ says he is the Bread of Life. In this biblical metaphor it is the “bread” that is not real because it serves as a symbol of his flesh. Christ, we know is not really bread, his flesh only acts like bread. For this reason bread is the perfect Eucharistic symbol for his flesh. ** The “idea” of “image of bread” points us to the reality of his flesh in the Gospel of John.**
 
St. Cyril of Jerusalem:
Consider therefore the Bread and the Wine not as bare elements, for they are, according to the Lord’s declaration, the Body and Blood of Christ; for even though sense suggests this to thee, yet let faith establish thee. Judge not the matter from the taste, but from faith be fully assured without misgiving, that the Body and Blood of Christ have been vouchsafed to thee.
St. Cyril of Jerusalem:
Having learnt these things, and been fully assured that the seeming bread is not bread, though sensible to taste, but the Body of Christ; and that the seeming wine is not wine, though the taste will have it so, but the Blood of Christ…
In these passages from his lecture on the Body and Blood of Christ (source - ccel.org/ccel/schaff/npnf207.ii.xxvi.html)), St. Cyril seems to be stating quite plainly that the bread is no longer bread, and the wine is no longer wine - not that they are no longer bread and wine alone, but that they are no longer bread and wine at all, except in appearance. In the second passage, he refers specifically to “seeming bread” not being bread and “seeming wine” not being wine.

Does the 4th century qualify him as an ECF by your criteria?
 
In these passages from his lecture on the Body and Blood of Christ (source - ccel.org/ccel/schaff/npnf207.ii.xxvi.html)), St. Cyril seems to be stating quite plainly that the bread is no longer bread, and the wine is no longer wine - not that they are no longer bread and wine alone, but that they are no longer bread and wine at all, except in appearance. In the second passage, he refers specifically to “seeming bread” not being bread and “seeming wine” not being wine.

Does the 4th century qualify him as an ECF by your criteria?
Steadfast isn’t looking for transubstantiation EXPLAINED by the ECF’s, he wants the WORD “Transubstantiation” in their writings.
**I would challenge him to find the word, “Trinity” in the scriptures. **It’s not there - but the doctrine in - just as the doctrine of transubstantiation is in the writings of the ECF’s.
People like Steadfast come here not in charity or humility - they come here to antagonize and to ruffle feathers.
Steadfast CHOOSES to be blind so that he can continue to play devil’s advocate and lure people into arguments instead of productive dialogue.
 
In these passages from his lecture on the Body and Blood of Christ (source - ccel.org/ccel/schaff/npnf207.ii.xxvi.html), St. Cyril seems to be stating quite plainly that the bread is no longer bread, and the wine is no longer wine - not that they are no longer bread and wine alone, but that they are no longer bread and wine at all, except in appearance. In the second passage, he refers specifically to “seeming bread” not being bread and “seeming wine” not being wine.

Does the 4th century qualify him as an ECF by your criteria?
That’s very good, but the 4th century is pretty late and it appears to be a single voice.
 
**Steadfast **isn’t looking for transubstantiation EXPLAINED by the ECF’s, he wants the WORD “Transubstantiation” in their writings.
I would challenge him to find the word, “Trinity” in the scriptures. It’s not there - but the doctrine in - just as the doctrine of transubstantiation is in the writings of the ECF’s.
People like Steadfast
come here not in charity or humility - they come here to antagonize and to ruffle feathers.
**Steadfast **CHOOSES to be blind so that he can continue to play devil’s advocate and lure people into arguments instead of productive dialogue.
No, that’s not what I’m looking for.

Iron Monkey has given me what I’m looking for but it appears to have been a minority opinion from somewhat late. This is good and important because it provides an excellent precedent but it is far from convincing proof that even a majority of the ECF’s believed similarly.

Again, Irenaeus clearly did not.

And now I’m going to ignore you because you’re being annoying and unreasonable and you’re making a fool of yourself and I would spare you any encouragement in that direction.
 
As for productivity, this discussion should have been very productive for those of you who want to believe that the church currently believes exactly as it always has about the Sacrament and especially that all the fathers believed it too.

But I suspect, and this suspicion is borne of long experience, that just like many another calumny, you won’t let facts get in the way of a good story.
 
Elisaph,

I am not sure what you want from me.

I asked for Transubstantiation to be shown me from the ECF’s.

This was not accomplished.

It failed not because the ones looking for it were stupid or ignorant but because it’s just not there.

The Real Presence is there, but I admit that.

I mentioned along the way that I see the Lutheran view more clearly in the passages adduced but this doesn’t make it my duty in a thread devoted to another purpose to satisfy you.

Even so, at least in the case of Irenaeus and by extension all those who teach real presence without expansion on what happens to the terrestrial elements after the consecration, I did give my reasoning.

You don’t have to accept it, but in this thread you don’t really have the right to evade your failure to achieve its stated purpose by shifting the burden to me.
You deny what is plain to a child. Oh well.
 
You deny what is plain to a child. Oh well.
Here is rich irony.

No child, not already indoctrinated, would read those fathers and infer from them that the men were teaching that the bread and wine cease to exist, only the appearances of bread and wine remaining.
 
I don’t claim to have a fraction of the theological or apologetic horsepower of most on this thread, but I’ll make a modest post anyway concerning my opinion on the subject.

I believe in the Real Presence and I haven’t the foggiest idea how to explain the mystery. As a Catholic, my faith teaches that the theological explanation is transubstantiation. That teaching is good enough for me. I don’t understand it, nor do I really feel intellectually capable of fully comprehending the mystery.

As to whether the full theological understanding of transubstantiation was contained in the writings of the ECFs, I really couldn’t care less. They clearly taught the Real Presence. For all I know, they didn’t understand exactly how it happened either. I have no problem accepting that the understanding of the Real Presence developed more clearly over time, and in the Catholic tradition, that understanding is Transubstantiation…

I guess I don’t see what all the fuss is about. It seems like a endless argument. Steadfast will continue believing what he believes and the rest of us will believe what our faith tradition teaches.

I can live with that.

Blessings.
 
As Big Daddy Bill said, “It depends on your definition of the word is.” If the bread and wine becomes the Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity of Christ, is there room for bread and wine? “This IS my Body” indicates to me that there is nothing but Christ there. Now, you may see is as meaning “along with” or “includes” or whatever, but that is not what it means to me. Does this match the ECFs? It seems to to me, but I am just a REALTOR from Alabama, and as C-3PO would say, not much of an expert in these matters. “Is” to me is a statement of essence in this matter, and I think that the ECFs would agree.
 
No, that’s not what I’m looking for.

Iron Monkey has given me what I’m looking for but it appears to have been a minority opinion from somewhat late. This is good and important because it provides an excellent precedent but it is far from convincing proof that even a majority of the ECF’s believed similarly.

Again, Irenaeus clearly did not.

And now I’m going to ignore you because you’re being annoying and unreasonable and you’re making a fool of yourself and I would spare you any encouragement in that direction.
What does Jesus believe about Transubstantiation? Matt.26:26, Mark 14:22, Luke 22:19,1 Corinthians 11:24 Jesus is quoted as saying," this is My body" While it is not recorded that they then saw bread be physically turned into hunks of human flesh.They did not record Jesus as saying "My presence is now attached to this bread in a mystical way “Nor did Jesus say this is now both bread and My body” It would seem very clear that those who were present accepted Jesus’ words as fact, even though what they ate appeared to them as bread. He said it was his flesh.That was sufficient for them. [even though they probably didn’t totally understand.] Is it not sufficient for you?
 
Hi

I think it is just a fanciful thinking of the Catholic and Non-Catholic Christians. It can never be proved to a secular thinking, in my opinion.

Thanks
 
Hi

I think it is just a fanciful thinking of the Catholic and Non-Catholic Christians. It can never be proved to a secular thinking, in my opinion.

Thanks
paarsurrey please see post #67 on this thread along with the accompanying link and then get back to me.By the way secular only means of the age.And this is an age of little faith! When the Son of man returns will He find faith upon the Earth?
 
How does this support transubstantiation? Actually the Didache is embarrassing for proponents of the Real Presence (such as myself) to the point that some have suggested that it’s not talking about the Eucharist at all, precisely because there is no mention of the Real Presence. Edwin
I do not find this embarrassing Anyone who does not recognize the Eucharist in this passage is wearing blinders to prevent seeing reality.

The Eucharist is clearly found in the scriptures and the writings of the Early Church Fathers. That someone does or does not use the term “Real Presence” is of not matter when it is clear that they are speaking of a reality … Afterall, the Scriptures do not speal of “Trinity” nor of Three Persons, and Two Natures …

Before coca - cola existed no one could call a Coke by name, the same with Calculus and Doritos … language is used to describe a reality…the word apple is not an apple that you can eat, but it is the symbols collected to invoke the reality of the fruit…

“Real Presence” and “Transubstantiation” are words that decribe the reality of the Body and Blood of Jesus … as found in the Eucharistic sacrafice … Jesus instituted this mircale and gave Himself to us as spiritual food… how sad that you cannot see that reality…
 
This post was taken off another thread where it was off topic.
For those who believe no proof is necessary for those who dont no proof is possible"Anon.
an d perhaps.

In a time of universal deceit telling the truth is a revolutionary act (G Orwell).
I think both of these apply to the poster.
Further I would suggest that the poster who wants to see the miracle of the transubstantiation, I am reminded of Jesus saying something about a faithless generation.
Bye
GraceAngel.
 
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