How so, Protestants/Evangelicals believe in the virgin birth of Christ, that Jesus was both fully God and fully man, and that Jesus was physically resurrected after the crucifixion. Non of which is even remotely gnostic teachings.Other than that sentence it was more, to be honest, Gnostic vague-ary.
The reason the gnostics didn’t believe that the Eucharist was the body and blood of Christ is because gnostic teaching was that Christ was not human (because all matter is evil) and only appeared as human. Ignatius is going after the belief that Christ had no flesh, he was not teaching transubstantiation.It actually holds no regard if you disagree or not, The fact is the only ones who didn’t believe were the Gnostics to which Ignatius writes:
“They abstain from the Eucharist and from prayer, because they do not admit that the Eucharist is the flesh of our Savior Jesus Christ, the flesh which suffered for our sins and which the Father, in His graciousness, raised from the dead.”
Re: Ignatius, his writings showNicene:![]()
The reason the gnostics didn’t believe that the Eucharist was the body and blood of Christ is because gnostic teaching was that Christ was not human (because all matter is evil) and only appeared as human. Ignatius is going after the belief that Christ had no flesh, he was not teaching transubstantiation.It actually holds no regard if you disagree or not, The fact is the only ones who didn’t believe were the Gnostics to which Ignatius writes:
“They abstain from the Eucharist and from prayer, because they do not admit that the Eucharist is the flesh of our Savior Jesus Christ, the flesh which suffered for our sins and which the Father, in His graciousness, raised from the dead.”
Evangelicals believe that Christ was/is fully God and fully man and will say that the bread is the body of Christ and the wine is the blood of Christ. Even Baptist will say, “take eat, for this is my Body, do this in remembrance of me” when taking the Lord’s Supper.
Not sure Ignatius shows anything beyond what scripture says with “this is (my body)” with “Eucharist is” (the Lord’s flesh), that is he does not explain change explicitly as not symbolic, nor as not literal. His letters are riddled and explained with figurative and metaphorical speech (twenty times?)…Iganatuis certainly is not a slam dunk for real presence that you find centuries later explicitly described , or transubstantiation a millennia laterWhile the term transubstantiation didn’t exist yet, the belief of elements bread and wine changing into Christs body and blood, after consecration, IS the belief.
I agree, I’ve been in plenty of “Protestant” services where the Pastor calls the bread the body of Christ. Even in Baptist churches that hold a strictly memorial view call the bread the body of Christ. Just saying the Eucharist of the body and blood of Christ doesn’t necessarily mean transubstantiation. It is common language regardless of the specific view of how the bread is the body of Christ.Not sure Ignatius shows anything beyond what scripture says with “this is (my body)” with “Eucharist is” (the Lord’s flesh), that is he does not explain change explicitly as not symbolic, nor as not literal. His letters are riddled and explained with figurative and metaphorical speech (twenty times?)…Iganatuis certainly is not a slam dunk for real presence that you find centuries later explicitly described , or transubstantiation a millennia later
Read it more carefullysteve-b:![]()
Not sure Ignatius shows anything beyond what scripture says with “this is (my body)” with “Eucharist is” (the Lord’s flesh), that is he does not explain change explicitly as not symbolic, nor as not literal. His letters are riddled and explained with figurative and metaphorical speech (twenty times?)…Iganatuis certainly is not a slam dunk for real presence that you find centuries later explicitly described , or transubstantiation a millennia laterWhile the term transubstantiation didn’t exist yet, the belief of elements bread and wine changing into Christs body and blood, after consecration, IS the belief.
Correct, just as today you and I are both against Gnosticism.Keep in mind, while Ignatius is writing against the Gnostic heretics here of his day, he’s writing against ALL those in heresy into the future.
like the “Separatists” ?It is fitting, therefore, that you should keep aloof from such [persons] ,
I was trying to be deliberately vague in my final point, when I said,steve-b:![]()
Correct, just as today you and I are both against Gnosticism.Keep in mind, while Ignatius is writing against the Gnostic heretics here of his day, he’s writing against ALL those in heresy into the future.
Ignatius makes simple and clear points in those 2 chapters ( 7 & 8).steve-b:![]()
like the “Separatists” ?It is fitting, therefore, that you should keep aloof from such [persons] ,
Who should be aloof from whom ?
Baptist definitely have a symbolic view of the eucharist, I went to a baptist church for a year and though they had a memorial view, they had closed communion only to members of the church.I agree, I’ve been in plenty of “Protestant” services where the Pastor calls the bread the body of Christ. Even in Baptist churches that hold a strictly memorial view call the bread the body of Christ. Just saying the Eucharist of the body and blood of Christ doesn’t necessarily mean transubstantiation. It is common language regardless of the specific view of how the bread is the body of Christ.
In order to support transubstantiation any ECF would have to say three specific things:
- Only the priest can consecrate the bread and wine
- When the priest consecrates the bread and wine it turns into the literal (not figurative or symbolic) body and blood of Christ.
- The bread and wine ceases to be bread and wine as it is 100% the body/blood of Christ.
YepNope.
YepNope
Nice red herring. Apparently you didn’t read the bolded on transubstantiation: elements into the body and blood of Christ. However with your selectivity of the above you neatly avoided Ignatius’ contention above, contrary to your stated contention. The contention is that it is the Body and Blood of Christ.And I am boggled that one could read earliest fathers and see only transubstantiation, and that unanimously.
Are you sure you are reading the correct post? mcq72 said this:How so, Protestants/Evangelicals believe in the virgin birth of Christ, that Jesus was both fully God and fully man, and that Jesus was physically resurrected after the crucifixion. Non of which is even remotely gnostic teachings.
So is it your contention that you agree the centurion and the thief spiritually ate the “Body of Christ” and this is what the catholic church fathers taught? I have to ask if you also contend this is true from wannano:Ok, very well thought out. Yes, how do we eat Jesus? It is not subjective for us as i think you imply.
It is quite objective. We do participate, we do literally spiritually eat, even at the foot of the cross, when we are born of the Spirit, when we first believe, unto life.
So two thousand years later, we are either like the centurion, or like the thief on the cross, where we encounter a living Jesus Christ and the Holy Ghost, in and with saving faith.
Calvary is objectively realized and we burst forth in thanksgiving, again and again, as we remember as how we came to be betrothed to the Almighty.
I’d also like mcq72 to answer this as well.I understood that Catholics see Mary as the Mother of God because Jesus is God, how then can Jesus be God if He is not a spirit for the Bible tells us that God is a spirit?John 4:24 “God is a spirit, and they that worship Him must worship in spirit and truth.”
You and mcq72 have both twisted Ignatius when he says:And this food is called among us Εὐχαριστία [the Eucharist], of which no one is allowed to partake but the man who believes that the things which we teach are true, and who has been washed with the washing that is for the remission of sins, and unto regeneration, and who is so living as Christ has enjoined. For not as common bread and common drink do we receive these; but in like manner as Jesus Christ our Saviour, having been made flesh by the Word of God, had both flesh and blood for our salvation, so likewise have we been taught that the food which is blessed by the prayer of His word, and from which our blood and flesh by transmutation are nourished, is the flesh and blood of that Jesus who was made flesh.
Do I believe you are going to keep harping on Aquainas transubstantiation? Without a doubt, becausethey do not admit that the Eucharist is the flesh of our Savior Jesus Christ, the flesh which suffered for our sins and which the Father, in His graciousness, raised from the dead.
Well transubstantiation is the dogmatic belief of the Catholic church. Not “the real presence” of Christ in the Eucharist, not that the elements become the body and blood of Christ, but that those elements literally become the body and blood of Christ and cease to be bread and wine as they are 100% the body and blood of Christ. If you are Catholic then that is the standard you must defend.Do I believe you are going to keep harping on Aquainas transubstantiation?
No, we addressed the context in which he wrote what he wrote. And that calling the Eucharistic elements the body and blood of Christ is common language among Christians. Even those who hold a Spiritual view, a symbolic view, or even a memorial view call the bread the body(flesh) of Christ and the cup the blood of Christ.You and mcq72 have both twisted Ignatius when he says:
Is it your contention that they physically, literally ate the Body of Jesus for they certainly were to follow Christ into Paradise then Heaven later, and CC says one must eat so per John 6?So is it your contention that you agree the centurion and the thief spiritually ate the “Body of Christ”
As I said in an earlier post. Digestive language is often used in the Bible as a metaphor for seeking after and being satisfied with God.So is it your contention that you agree the centurion and the thief spiritually ate the “Body of Christ” and this is what the catholic church fathers taught?
Again, the flesh, the body of Jesus was/ is quite visible. This is very objective.“they do not admit that the Eucharist is the flesh of our Savior Jesus Christ”, (Ignatius)
Yet…NOTHING happens supernaturally, re: consecration, if there is no valid ordination, in apostolic succession , of the minister, in the first place.lanman87:![]()
Baptist definitely have a symbolic view of the eucharist, I went to a baptist church for a year and though they had a memorial view, they had closed communion only to members of the church.I agree, I’ve been in plenty of “Protestant” services where the Pastor calls the bread the body of Christ. Even in Baptist churches that hold a strictly memorial view call the bread the body of Christ. Just saying the Eucharist of the body and blood of Christ doesn’t necessarily mean transubstantiation. It is common language regardless of the specific view of how the bread is the body of Christ.
In order to support transubstantiation any ECF would have to say three specific things:
- Only the priest can consecrate the bread and wine
- When the priest consecrates the bread and wine it turns into the literal (not figurative or symbolic) body and blood of Christ.
- The bread and wine ceases to be bread and wine as it is 100% the body/blood of Christ.
Yes, for transubstantiation, 1/2 are the big differentiating factors. Most evangelical churches don’t have 1, high churches generally have consecration for their Eucharistic service. The closest protestant eucharistic service that came close to the belief of transubstantiation I been was in a high-church/broad-church anglican. For 2, during the consecration, the bread and wine may be to us to the body and blood of Christ.
However, in the catholic church, during the consecration, the bread and wine may become the body and blood of Christ.
There was a minor difference in the eucharistic liturgy but it was ~85% similar. The anglican church leaves room for belief in transubstantiation or the spiritual presence of Christ in the eucharist.