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Radical is 7 letters.Study? Why ruin a really good time? I seem to recall a lot of history courses and I am able write 7 letters after my name…if I was ever so inclined.![]()
Radical is 7 letters.Study? Why ruin a really good time? I seem to recall a lot of history courses and I am able write 7 letters after my name…if I was ever so inclined.![]()
No you can’t. Or you’d have come up with one by now.Wrong I support my claim ,not the one you want me to.
Ohh benedictus .Anyone reading us wouldn’t know what we are talking about now .why are you leading down an off the road track with your Hummer .looking better than me in my Jeep .The road we WERE on ,we both had equal footing, making sense to all.No you can’t. Or you’d have come up with one by now.![]()
This is very good and correct “context”Actually the unbelievers left because they knew it was literal and they were disgusted. Did Christ stop them to explain?
If you read John 6 - Christ re-iterates the eating of His flesh and the drinking of His blood about 5 times to make sure that the listeners get it alright.
At the first mention there was already murmuring among His disciples. But instead of softening His language He hardens it. He makes it even more unpalatable. Here’s the chance to say “I mean this symbolically” but instead, 4 times He hammers it, with the words becoming more graphic.
Mind you these are His disciples not just on-lookers These are people who would have seen him perform miracles, heard him speak so they know when He was being symbolic and when He was being literal. So they knew He meant exactly what they thought He meant. So they left.
Did He stop them? No. Did He explain that it was symbolic? No. All He had to do was explain that He was speaking figuratively and He didn’t.
The apostles felt exactly the same as those who left. And notice, He did not even explain it to the apostles even. All He said is “Will you leave too?”. Fr Barron refers to that as the most plaintive verse in the Gospel. Here is God asking His disciples would they leave too because of what He has said.
The apostles did not know what to say and even Peter’s answer was more an affirmation of faith in Him rather than a comprehension of how this is to happen.
Those who remained with the apostles are the ones who continued the practice of the Eucharist. Those who separated from the apostles (1500 years later) are the ones who like the other disciples, walked away because they didn’t understand it and could not accept Jesus words in faith.
So yes, you are the one who walked away from Jesus at the point when He was promising the greatest gift He will give His followers.
But you know what, I don’t think you will even bother to read that thoroughly to absorb it, becuase at the end of the day, you are not really interested in the truth.
I ditto everything you said and add this.This is very good and correct “context”
After you read John and everything else we have already mentioned. The only other place to go from here is Exodus and the plagues. What doe’s God tell the his people to do? Well he tells them to find themself a PURE MALE LAMB[CHRIST] sprinkle the Blood over their doors[CROSS] and then continue the feast which is to eat the lamb[Eucharist].
Did we talk about Exodus yet??? What would have happened in egypt had they not ate the Lamb? Not hard to figure out is it?
So what happened from the OT to the NT?There’s no difference in what Christ taught NT from OT.
1After these things Jesus went over the sea of Galilee, which is the sea of Tiberias. 2And a great multitude followed him, because they saw his miracles which he did on them that were diseased
4And the passover, a feast of the Jews, was nigh
11And Jesus took the loaves; and when he had given thanks, he distributed to the disciples, and the disciples to them that were set down; and likewise of the fishes as much as they would. 12When they were filled, he said unto his disciples, Gather up the fragments that remain, that nothing be lost. 13Therefore they gathered them together, and filled twelve baskets with the fragments of the five barley loaves, which remained over and above unto them that had eaten.
3(Howbeit there came other boats from Tiberias nigh unto the place where they did eat bread
Ye seek me, not because ye saw the miracles, but because ye did eat of the loaves, and were filled.
Now this is all before the question of literal or symbolic. Did Jesus literally multiply loaves?This is the **work of God, that ye believe **on him whom he hath sent.
LivingI am the **living bread **which came down from heaven: if any man eat of this bread, he shall live for ever: and **the bread **that I will give is my flesh, which I will give for the life of the world.
pablope;8315107:
Provide chapter and verse that the bible was primarily meant to unify “liturgy”
So, you cannot answer the question to come up with the chapter and verse of the Bible to state that it is the source of doctrine…and you evade the question…and you cannot even come do admit that there is no such verse…common, David…be honest and not evade a question.
The fact is there is none, that is why you avoided answering with your response. If there is none, so why do you make it the source of doctrine?
And there is no such verse to say it was meant for liturgy…why would there be such a verse…very silly indeed, David.
So, if there is no verse to state that the Bible is to be the source of doctrine, and no verse for it to unify the liturgy…so what is the Bible for?
There’s Catholic Church here that has this verse carved in stone above the alter by the ceiling. They didn’t have enough room to fit the entire verse, so its cut short after “forever”.then get to John 6:51
Well why don’t you go back to the road we were on and maybe make your case. But of course you can’t.Ohh benedictus .Anyone reading us wouldn’t know what we are talking about now .why are you leading down an off the road track with your Hummer .looking better than me in my Jeep .The road we WERE on ,we both had equal footing, making sense to all.
david ruiz;8322940:
pablope;8315107:
There are .I chose to evade cause it is different thread.Have ans. many times .
What ,that is what you basically said .“it was to to have a standard set of writings to be read during liturgical services.” -your words.And there is no such verse to say it was meant for liturgy…why would there be such a verse…very silly indeed, David.
Well why don’t you go back to the road we were on and maybe make your case. But of course you can’t.
Instead of this post, you could have come up with your case and yet here you are wasting keystrokes on a no-post.
And no, we didn’t have equal footing. You were off-balanced from my last post. A proper response should get you back on balance again.
/QUOTE"]I think we can confidently say that despite some disagreements, they (ECF’s) viewed the Eucharist as the Body and Blood of Christ."-benedictus
“Not if you are talking about the first hundred years .” -dave’s response -page 47…shall we start all over …I have read upto abvout 130 a.d of ECF’s .Not much if anything showing RP When RP was more manifest, not sure ,except most agree it was there toward 3-4 c for sure…Am not saying a word on the second hundred years .Have not read it. Got it .That is ALL i am saying .Stop putting words where they are not.
I am sorry that you find this confusing…here’s how you can tell the difference:To david ruiz, or Radical, or anyone else who disbelieves:
Did Jesus give us His real flesh or symbolic flesh on the cross for the life of the world?
Thank-you.Your list could go on as to what they did NOT do back then.Thanks againWhat about the Didache? Does it speak of the RP in relation to the eucharist? Does it even discuss the “sacrifice of the mass” as held by the CC today? Just a question…but the Didache was the first early document outside the NT which explained the eucharist…and it did so with no hint of “re-presenting” the sacrifice of Christ…nor did it indicate the bread and wine were His blood and body.
While this nicely applies to an individual’s spiritual growth, and perhaps of things dealing with end times ,but otherwise ,your explanation is unscriptural .What ,so the Holy Spirit will leave many in the dark for say, 1800 years, before we can surely say, “Mary was Immaculate”.or 1200 years before "I will transubstantiate myself ",etc. etc.Because a doctrine develops ,in NO WAY proves or disproves it’s apostolicness. Just as you say The Didache does nor rebuke RP , it does not rebuke Symbolism either. Again ,your assumption is that because indeed some things rightly became defined (trinity) ,that all things defined are right by the Catholic Church.Unfortunately the Didache does not give us a detailed theological understanding of it nor does it discuss the Liturgy.However,it does not rebuke the RP or the understanding of the RP. The problem with many opponents of the RP and other doctrines is their failure to understand doctrinal development. Many have the belief everything was all layed out explicitly,which is absolutely false.Precisely why Jesus says in the Gospel of John the Holy Spirit will guide into ALL truth,not instantly.
This is NOT today’s Confession .Notice the "thanksgiving " ,nothing of sacrifice or re-presenting .If you shall say, "Look, it is the seeds of Catholic expression " , I will say "it is not a seed of protestant expression , it IS proteststant expression " no development needed.Didache? You know I happened to reading Benedict XVI and he mentions the principles being laid out on the Didache. Though not complete, we see confession, communion and the RP in its early stages.
4:19 In church thou shalt confess thy transgressions, and shalt not betake thyself to prayer with an evil conscience.
9:1 But as touching the eucharistic thanksgiving give ye thanks thus.
9:2 First, as regards the cup:
9:3 We give Thee thanks, O our Father, for the holy vine of Thy son David, which Thou madest known unto us through Thy Son Jesus;
9:4 Thine is the glory for ever and ever.
9:5 Then as regards the broken bread:
9:6 We give Thee thanks, O our Father, for the life and knowledge which Thou didst make known unto us through Thy Son Jesus;
9:7 Thine is the glory for ever and ever.
9:8 As this broken bread was scattered upon the mountains and being gathered together became one, so may Thy Church be gathered together from the ends of the earth into Thy kingdom;
9:9 for Thine is the glory and the power through Jesus Christ for ever and ever.
10:1 And after ye are satisfied thus give ye thanks:
10:2 We give Thee thanks, Holy Father, for Thy holy name, which Thou hast made to tabernacle in our hearts, and for the knowledge and faith and immortality, which Thou hast made known unto us through Thy Son Jesus;
10:3 Thine is the glory for ever and ever.
10:4 Thou, Almighty Master, didst create all things for Thy name’s sake, and didst give food and drink unto men for enjoyment, that they might render thanks to Thee;
10:5 but didst bestow upon us spiritual food and drink and eternal life through Thy Son.
10:6 Before all things we give Thee thanks that Thou art powerful;
10:7 Thine is the glory for ever and ever.
Admittedly it is merely a step on the way towards.
cause the benefit was(never hungering)For the bread to be now, how is it that it has to be figurative?
Would have to read full article .Of course i would have to deny that Luthers idea of justification was brand new .He denied it was new .It was "new "in the sense that it had not been taught for centuries.ndeed. Not to get off topic, but Alister McGrath, a Protestant scholar, acknowledges that this notion of justification was unheard of before the Reformation.
I shall use a favorite Catholic term -develop. Luther had to re-develop this notion of salvation by grace .BUT, the seeds were always there .Indeed Augustine had a similar “salvation” to Luther ,as did St Francis, ,and probably many other mystics .Bottom line ,as long as it didn’t rock the boat ,you know ,put em in a monastery ,make an "order’ out of them ,make them “mystical” but still Catholic, that was ok .But for the everyday layman ,to have a "mystical experience with Christ himself …It’s ironic to see Protestants here refuse to accept Catholic doctrinal developments as not in line with what Christ and his apostles taught when one of their fundamental principles was invented by one fallible man, Martin Luther.
.Nothing to do with 'AmericaHaha, this certainly reveals an American cultural bias against authority.I said “if” we have aproblem with authority ,then you have a problem with a church "lording over " -controlling
Again nothing to do with my point .We all have bishops/presbyters .Why do you suggest we don’t ? We All aspire to unity , like Paul and Ignatius. Igantius also said to be under the guidance of whom ? The bishop (nope-but obey him), the pope -nope- Ignatius doesn’t even acknowledge the office ,but names 16 other bishops ,but not even a hint of leadership or guidance from any roman bishop of bishops.So who are we ALL under the guidance of -who could be this Vicar ? Ignatius ,in Ephesians CH 20 - "ye being under the guidance of the “Comforter”…or ,“Yield him reverence (the bishop), submit to him, or rather not to him, but to the Father of Jesus Christ, the Bishop of us all”.And it doesn’t line up with Ignatius of Antioch
Just scripture .Confess your faults one to another .Do you have any evidence that confession of serious sins to other Christians was optional in the Early Church,
It has been suggetsed that some things carry over from the OT,this is one of themand that going to God directly for the forgiveness of such sins was ever taught?
Actually the is strong writings talking of Christians confessing before the entire congregation. It would be centuries before it was “delegated” to strictly a priest behind a confessional..Methinks you’re reading your presuppositions into history.
Actually, we almost could have been “one” .For a brief moment in history ,there was a slight chance that many of the lutherans spiritual demands could have been “incorporated”’ and a different church would have emerged .Not totally Lutheran ,but not totally Catholic.That was sometime in the mid 1500’s during a decades old council .Me personally ,I don’t think it was ever possible back then but…Again ,that the tendencies of Rome made the development of “protestantism” inevitable .No proof ,just history and Christ’s promise to be with us always ,through the good bad and ugly of our history .Again ,some things carry over from OT. This is one of them ,that upon studying our history ,it is indeed by the grace of God the Church exists (just read about the twelve sons of Abraham- they were barely “holy-”-that is, set apart for Him).Why is that? What evidence do we have that this was the way Christ wanted things to be?
Sure ,I advise reading everything we can , but …it will only magnify what is already in the heart .Where you sit is where you stand .It all starts with scriptures .You can be like the Bereans and search it out ,and trusting like earliest ECF"s that Christ is the teacher /interpreter .OR you can be like Ignatius of Loyola ,the Jesuit, who take an oath that says if something white is declared black by the pope , then it is black…If we differ on John 6 ,we will differ on The Didache ,or Augustine.This surely isn’t optimal, and can’t change until we have everyone read the history books and see the Early Church wasn’t invisible and anti-sacramental.
Uniformity at the expense of freedom will eventually lead to freedom at the expense of uniformity (hence protestantism). As an example ,one of the first "developments ’ of Romes authority over the other Patriarchs was a forcing to observe the celebration of Easter on precisely the same day .Not because it was apostolic ,on the contrary , it did away with apostolic tradition for one segment of the church.(and gave seeds to Orthodoxy division).Does it really matter ? or does it matter that Rome must rule, covering her stern,lording-over face with the makeup of “Unity” ?What do you mean?
See, we stay true to form. If Christ is indeed alive and well on planet earth ,would it not be wise to find Him ,for He shall lead you into green pastures. Indeed He calls us to Himself , and then places us in His body .I do not attach to His body in hopes of meeting the Head. Find Him and you are in the Church . Find the Church , and maybe you will find Him (even in a baptist church). Will the real gospel step forward please ?The question remains: if Christ set up a visible church, shouldn’t we do our utmost to find it and start catechetical classes as soon as possible?
There is nothing on page 47 in any of your posts where you were able to back up your claim that the Church did not believe in the Real Presence in the first 100 years.“I think we can confidently say that despite some disagreements, they (ECF’s) viewed the Eucharist as the Body and Blood of Christ.”-benedictus
“Not if you are talking about the first hundred years .”** -dave’s response** -page 47…shall we start all over …I have read upto abvout 130 a.d of ECF’s .Not much if anything showing RP When RP was more manifest, not sure ,except most agree it was there toward 3-4 c for sure…Am not saying a word on the second hundred years .Have not read it. Got it .That is ALL i am saying .Stop putting words where they are not.
OK.Absolutely not. I am saying , like all generations who are handed down a faith, with it’s dogmas and traditions ,should not be afraid to look at from whence they came, and be fully persuaded that they indeed are genuine, and from the Lord.
As everyone knows, Sts. Augustine and Ignatius were evangelicals who looked to their pastors for spiritual guidance but the Bible for the final say.As Augustine and Ignatius point out , there is One final teacher for that, who sticks closer than a brother.
Not at all. I’m exposing your inconsistency in arguing that difficulties for a visible church disprove the need to follow that authority, but difficulties in Scripture don’t eliminate that as an infallible source of teaching.Now you are doing the" either or scenario", so often shot down when the other side tries it.
You act as if the council conceded papal infallibility so as to mollify the pope for his loss of temporal authority. Is that what you meant? If so, give proof for your insinuation.Isn’t it ironic that when the Pope was stripped of all his earthly power (1870) that he declared himself infallible and spiritual ruler of all ?
Because the visible church decided, based on a small number of criteria, not to include St. Clement’s Letter to the Corinthians or other early texts.That’s right .Why do you suppose there are no more ,cannonized writings after 100 a.d.?
Advocating obedience to a visible church is so un-Protestant that anyone at a good Protestant church who did that would likely be regarded as a closet “Romanist”. What in Ignatius’ writings sounded Protestant, anyway?when you add the rest of quotes ,he seemed more Protestant.
To who belongs the prerogative of deciding what books are inspired and which aren’t?No .it is based on the fact that some writings are deemed inspired holier even apostolic.
The Church isn’t saying that at all. The Early Church Fathers are witnesses of the faith in generations long past.Interesting though ,why did the early church deem only apostolic writings as inspired , after all ,did not they believe in perfect succession and transmission of truth ? Can not Ignatius or Barnabus or Cyprian and Augustine be on par with Paul,or Peter , as to the infallibility and inspiration of teaching (oral) and writing ? Were not they anointed and laid hands on ? Does not Iraneus (200 ?) declare such careful transmission of the “torch” , from bishop to bishop , giving us succession lists for three different cities ? Isn’t that what the Church is saying ,they are on par,yet non of their writings are cannonized .Strange.
And if their “double checking” resulted in their rejection of the truth, they’d be condemned.No ,it primarily illustrates that what is taught ,should be conforming to scripture ,and that it is the responsibility of the believer to do so, to “double check”. They were admonished for it
That one man wasn’t convinced doesn’t prove anything. Who knows what was preventing him from seeing the light? Pride? Sloth? Miscommunication?Well, of course you left out the most important part , the method , the benchmark , the foundation for discerning truth .Scripture can surely be used for that .So even by this standard Luther was at least half right ,according to Catholic view. Again ,his words were :“convince me thru scripture”. The council should have, cause apparently all tradition ,councils, papal decrees are either scripturally based, or at least do not contradict ,or are in harmony with. Again ,the Bereans did this and were admonished for it
I don’t learn my history from movies.haven’t you seen the movies?
OK. Well, I’d have to look at such hypothetical transcripts to comment. But let’s say the council didn’t use scriptural arguments; this doesn’t rule out that other Catholics with whom Luther was or could have been interacting didn’t furnish such arguments.Actually I thought it was a very famous discourse , between Luther and the Council .I am sure somewhere we have transcripts of the thing.
Of course. Faith isn’t just a matter of the head, but also of the heart. Someone can’t argue you into believing; ultimately that’s the job of the Holy Spirit.Ignatius letter to Philadelphia ch-7 I believe- that others could not find (a risen ,crucified Christ etc.-paraphrase ) in archives but he could ,thru the Spirit-paraphrase
Presbyter is the etymological ancestor of priest.Paul did not use the term "priests " it was presbyters/bishops.
Then why did he write (2 Timothy 2:2), “and what you have heard from me before many witnesses entrust to faithful men who will be able to teach others also”?Paul NEVER intimated infallible succession .
This is absurd. Luther, Calvin, and Zwingli weren’t bishops, so couldn’t pass on apostolic succession. Why should Catholics turn to Lutherans, Reformeds/Presbyterians, or Anabaptists as “anointed successors” of the apostles when nearly all Protestants deny the sacramental character of ordination?The Holy Spirit was the only infallible agent /shepherd .Having said that, Luther ,Calvin and Zwingli (I think) took part in your succession .They were "anointed " laid hands on, successors of the apostolic mission. Now choose you this day ,which annointed will you follow.
With that mindset, then we would have to also admit that Jesus is not God. A Jew can use this argument against our belief of the Divinity of Christ. He/she could say:I am sorry that you find this confusing…here’s how you can tell the difference:
If it looks like a human body, has weight like a human body, has features of a human body (you know, like arms, legs, head, torso etc.), can be touched etc, is covered in skin with some hair etc. …then it is real flesh and blood.
If it looks like bread, has the weight of a loaf of bread, is made of baked flour and other ingredients (you know like eggs, milk, salt), covered with a crust etc. …then it is bread and could only be symbolic of human flesh.
I realize that I could have supplied a much more detailed list of features to allow you to distinguish between flesh and bread, but this isn’t rocket science. The above should be sufficient to enable you to sort through your confusion. Good luck…I’m sure you’ll figure it out eventually.