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EA_Man
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“‘This is my body,’ that is, the figure of my body. A figure, however, there could not have been, unless there were first a veritable body.”EA_Man:
Regarding the ECF’s use of the word “figure” or “symbol”, here is a discussion as to how those terms are to be understood:
Darwell Stone on Tertullian from A HISTORY OF THE DOCTRINE OF THE HOLY EUCHARIST
"Another kind of phraseology is found most markedly in Tertullian… Tertullian more than once uses like language with explicit reference to the Eucharist. He asserts our Lord’s intention to have been to show that bread was ‘the figure (figura) of His body’ : he explains the words ‘This is My body’ as meaning ‘This is the figure (figura) of My body’; he interprets the words of institution as placing our Lord’s body under the head of, or in the category of, bread (corpus eius in pane censetur) [Adv Marc iii,19; iv,40; De Orat 6]. He says also that our Lord by the use of bread ‘makes present (repraesentat) His very body’ [Adv Marc i,14].
“The consideration of this type of phraseology must include some discussion of (a) the meaning of the words ‘symbol’ [in Clement of Alexandria] and ‘figure’ (figura) [in Tertullian]; (b) the meaning of the word translated ‘makes present’ (repraesentat); (c) the relation of the passages here quoted to other statements of the same writers.” [something which Schaff did not address] (Stone, volume 1, page 29)
FIGURA IN TERTULLIAN – "This is the FIGURE of My body"
After Stone points out the different meanings, associations and tendencies of the words “symbol” and “figure” even in present language and cultures, he goes on to say
From www.bringyou.to/apologetics/
Why then does Tertullian make a distinction between FIGURE and VERITABLE unless he meant that there was a distinction that actually existed?
Also, Tertullian uses the word REPRESENTS and METAPHOR to convey a symbolic meaning rather than a literal one.