G
Gabriel_of_12
Guest
Well here is the problem with your St.Augustine writings when you try and force a Calvinistic approach. Calvin follows St.Augustine’s morality teachings but fails as you do to follow St.Augustines teachings on the Sacraments.I wish that you would have clarified this sooner…it would have saved a lot of time. For the record, I believe that Jesus is truly (and bodily) present in your Eucharist to the same extent as Augustine believed that that Jesus was truly (and bodily) present in the waters of baptism.![]()
CCC 1324 “The Eucharist is the source and summit of the Christian faith”.
The difference between your understanding of the True presence and St.Augustines Catholic faith and sacramental teachings reveals that the bread and wine become the body and blood of Jesus Christ sacramentally truly present body, blood, soul and divinity of Jesus Christ.
Your interpretation leaves doubt and faith becomes suspended, the Catholic faith in the True presence is never doubted and remains a reality of Jesus body and blood Truly present. A feeling or human sense does not make Jesus present in the Eucharist. God makes this happen by His Word and Catholics faithfully obey Jesus in our “Amen” to the True body, blood, soul and divinity of Jesus Christ Truly in our presence.
Here is a reality check for you; “The Church is a sacrament” CCC 774,775, “The Church in Christ” is a sign and instrument, that is, of communion with God and of unity among all men". The Catholic Church is “the Body of Christ Human and divine”.
A Sacrament has no symbolisms or metaphors attached to them. “a Sacrament is the finger of God touching our humanity”, a Sacrament is a visible sign instituted by Jesus Christ to part grace upon the believer.