G
guanophore
Guest
Actually, here is one Catholic that does n’t want to believe this. I find it very difficult. It is one of those concepts I just cannot rationally wrap my mind around at all. that is what Jesus said, so I choose to believe it by faith.During the Eucharist, Roman Catholics want to believe that the actual body of Jesus is what is being eaten and the wine in the cup is actually His blood.
And on what authority do you promulgate this assertion? How is it the Apostles and their disciples all misunderstood Him, and every Christian for 1500 years?Of course this is not to be taken literally.
I confess I don’t understand a great many things. I don’t know how the infinite God “empties himself, taking on the form of a slave”. I don’t know how He works infallibly through fallible men, but He does.How could Jesus, still present in His own body, say that bread and wine were His body and blood?
I think you still have some learning to do about the rememberance ceremony. the Offering had to be eaten. It symbolizes, and also containse that which it represents.Jesus told them to commemorate His sacrifice and New Covenant by using the bread and wine as symbols of His body and blood.
Jesus fulfilled the last supper, and infused it with His own presence.This concept did not originate with the Last Supper as Jews had been celebrating Passover for thousands of years in the same manner. The unleavened bread was a symbol of the bread that did not have time to rise, because their haste in getting away from Pharaoh in their flight from Egypt.
The context of the verse IS Catholicism, it having been written by, for, and about Catholics. However, if you think this is a “Roman” phenomenon, then you are just revealing your ignorance. Take it up on the Eastern forum, or better, try arging the point with the Orthodox, who have little love for Rome.If you read this verse out of context, it seems that Roman Catholics have a good point that Jesus indicated that you must eat His body and blood.
You won’t find any dispute of that here."The work of God is this: to believe in the one he has sent." (John 6:29)
The two are not to be separated.He mentioned believing only, not eating.
This is perfectly consistent with the Real Presence"I am the bread of life. He who comes to me will never go hungry, and he who believes in me will never be thirsty. (John 6:35)
Another baseless assertion. It will not for those who do not approach in faith. they profane it, and it makes them sick.If anyone believes in Jesus, his spiritual hunger will be satisfied. The Eucharist cannot satisfy one’s physical hunger. Neither can it satisfy one’s spiritual hunger. This hunger can only be satisfied by the living bread (John 6:51),** which is the living Lord Himself**.
The Passover bread is real bread from grain, and the wine really made from grapes.Obviously, real bread does not come from heaven. It comes from grain grown on the earth. Jesus could only be referring to spiritual bread. The analogy is quite clear that Jesus is the spiritual bread from heaven that gives spiritual (eternal) life. Physical bread gives physical life. Spiritual bread gives spiritual life. Jesus talked twice more about believing in Him:
"No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws him, and I will raise him up at the last day. (John 6:44)
(cont’d)