N
ncgolf
Guest
I always wonder why this passage is so difficult while other things Christ did seem almost routine:A thought occurred to me that I want to record here before I forget it.
Some folks have made the point that Jesus used the word “gnaw/chew,” and that it indicates that he was speaking literally.
The point doesn’t carry any weight with me because, for example, if I said “it’s raining cats and dogs out,” (it is raining here now) you could look up the words “cat” and “dog” in the dictionary and find that they always mean a literal animal.
I have a classic book by E. W. Bullinger, D.D., called Figures of Speech Used in the Bible. It was originally published in 1898. One minister commented that Bullinger “was perhaps the greatest Bible scholar of all time.” The book is over 1000 pages long—this was before the age of word processors! Anyway, my point is that there are lots of figures of speech in the Bible!
Incidentally, why don’t I check to see what he has to say about John 6? . . . . . . . . . . . . oh, here it is. On page 826 he says that John 6:51 means “just as the body lives temporally by eating bread, so the new life is nourished by feeding upon Christ in our hearts by faith.”
He says John 6:53 (two verses down) means that “except you feed on Christ in your hearts and partake of His life (for the blood is the life), ye have no life in you.” E. W. Bullinger goes on to say,
That this cannot refer to the Lord’s supper is clear from the fact that it was not then instituted, and further, that it would shut out all who, from age and infirmity or other cause, had not partaken of that supper.
It cannot refer to the Mass, as there is no drinking at all in the Mass.
By comparing verses 47 and 40 with verses 53 and 54, it will be seen that believing on Christ is exactly the same thing as eating and drinking of His flesh and blood.
I hesitate to get into this too much because one man who was involved in our discussion some time back backed out, saying he thought I was doing a terrible thing, that I was trying destroy his faith. I hope you all recognize that I am not trying to destroy your precious faith in Christ, only refine it for the sake of unity between us and for the sake of your own spiritual growth. (I also expect to grow in the Lord as I am challenged.)
As long as we don’t let bitterness creep into our spirits toward each other, we can all benefit, I believe. God will be the judge of that in the end.
Love to all.
Changing water to wine at Cana. He didnt even touch it … just said draw some out and give to the steward, bam … it was wine.
Feed thousands with a few fish with lunch the next day.
Raised a guy who had been dead a few days.
Taking a bunch of ordinary fishermen, a tax collector and others and turning them into people they never dreamed of becoming.
It is obvious Jesus can do what had never been done. No matter how difficult or seemingly impossisble He made it so by merely willing it to be.
If I can ask … why the difficulty with this one? What makes it so much different than the other seemingly impossible things Jesus did?