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steido01
Guest
Um… “This (bread) is my Body.” To what else would he be referring, except to the bread that he holds in his hands?Christ’s plain words, eh? Where does Christ mention anything about bread and/or wine during His consecration?
Read our conversation again. What I actually said was in response to YOUR accusation. “If you say so.” I do not see reason at odds with Christ’s plain words. It’s you, brother, who has to do philosophical handsprings to make Jesus not say what he very plainly states.Also, attempting to pit “Christ’s plain words” against reason and philosophy into a false dichotomy only denigrates the virtues of reason and logic that God blesses us with. Trying to supersede reason with faith, deliberate or inadvertent, is a sly tactic to try to convince people of believing in unreasonable things under the guise of them being a “mystery”.
Yes, the irony would seem to be lost on you.Ironic how you just used reason and natural knowledge to explain the Trinity (the most philosophical term we employ to explain a revealed Divine Dogma).
Indeed. So what’s to prevent Bread and Body from likewise being united in a sacramental way that is beyond human comprehension, and doesn’t require a totally human-invented theory to try and explain away the miracle with Aristotelian language? Why not simply take Christ at his word?Did you notice, though, that the Father is not the Son, and the Son is not the Father, and the Holy Spirit is neither the Father nor the Son?
I think there’s significantly less disagreement here than you’d like to admit.I have no problem with that, inasmuch as your words are distinguishing between natural knowledge and divine revelations. But, distinguishing the two does not mean to intrinsically depict natural knowledge as contradicting faith:
“Even though faith is above reason, there can never be any real disagreement between faith and reason, since it is the same God who reveals the mysteries and infuses faith, and who has endowed the human mind with the light of reason.
Not only can faith and reason never be at odds with one another but they mutually support each other, for on the one hand right reason established the foundations of the faith and, illuminated by its light, develops the science of divine things; on the other hand, faith delivers reason from errors and protects it and furnishes it with knowledge of many kinds.” - Dogmatic constitution on the Catholic faith, Chapter 4, Vatican I, 1870
Au contraire! This is fundamental in professing the Real Presence. It is not merely spiritual, and certainly not carnal, but truly, actually, really the Body and Blood of our Lord!I do not need to know what it is not.