B
bogeydogg
Guest
OK… so then you are comparing the words of an anti-drug television advertisement to the infallible word of the Lord who cannot lie.But that doesn’t answer my question. He also said, “Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up.” So, that argument doesn’t hold unless there is a specific reason in the Greek to take it literally. Also, what would Luther make of the commercial I cited? Obviously I’m using that as an example and don’t expect anyone to actually be able to tell me what Luther would have said, but I believe the question makes my point; just because we call something another thing does not actually mean it is in a literal sense. An egg is not my brain, yet a man can show an egg and say, “This is your brain.” Also just as in the commercial I cited, Jesus put action along with words to show the word picture more clearly. This is My body; and He broke the bread. This is my blood, which was poured. The bread and wine were explicitly chosen as visual symbol as well as for the other symbolic values attached to those particular items.
This is your brain, this is your brain on drugs… yet again we clearly see the teaching intent and none of believe it literally.
I thought my answer covered it quite well because I, well, ignored your analogy as being so obviously bad.
And there is good reason reason in the Greek, Jesus does not say, “This bread is ‘like’ my body.” To argue since he spoke clearly but didn’t go out of way to specifically include the explanation of, “no really guys I want to be clear this is not a metaphor,” is just silly. Especially given the reaction of his followers in John 6 that show they understood exactly what he meant.
It’s exactly the same argument of all those who say, “Well he never said in bold face type ‘I AM GOD’ so he therefore never claimed to be God.” Well yes did and you can see from scripture that obviously those who heard him understood his claims.
Surely your protestant preacher does not insist that since Jesus never excluded the proviso that we might take his words, “Before Abraham was I am” to be metaphorical we therefore must take his divinity with a grain of salt.
This is a silly argument.
God Bless