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ExCatholicGuy
Guest
Which is exactly what I’m trying to do.Excellent.
Well, it’s part of the commandment of God to try to love Him entirely with our MIND.
Which is exactly what I’m trying to do.Excellent.
Well, it’s part of the commandment of God to try to love Him entirely with our MIND.
I give you a heartyWhich is exactly what I’m trying to do.
As SteveVH said " this is what the enemy wants you to believe", you should read C.S. Lewis book The Screwtape Letters.I don’t “decide”. I just try to figure it out. And that effort does include listening to the great wisdom contained in scripture and church teachings.
If only this forum were more Catholic in the way you have described! But you see how easy it is to get kicked off. Kinda waiting for the other shoe to drop, or, to be talked to, wouldn’t that be a novel idea? But nobody talks. Ah well.And that is exactly what I love about the Catholic Church. It is not afraid of reason or philosophy or metaphysics. It accepts truth wherever truth is found, recognizing whatever truth can be found in all religions and all philosophies. We believe it, as you say, “because its true”.
Great post.![]()
Do you believe there is any such thing as sin, in the sense of an offense against God (who is Love?)God exists - that’s the most I can be sure of through reason.
I don’t believe we need a path to salvation because I don’t believe we are inherently doomed.
There’s certainly tremendous wisdom in the Bible, and in that sense it’s inspired by God. God does speak to us, but His voice is subtle - it’s not a set of doctrines and dogmas pronounced over the centuries by councils of old men.
But if it WAS bread and now is NO-LONGER bread, then how do you refer to the process between those two periods? A non-transformation? If a transformation is not implied in that explanation, then there is no such thing as an implication.Lutherans don’t think Christ is some sort of bread-man.
As I understand it, we think “this is his body.” And that’s it. Jesus told us, and that’s all we need to accept the mystery.
What we bring to the alter is bread, and what we receive is Jesus, and while there is a specific time when it is no-longer bread - we don’t think of it going through a transformation process.
Just a small point, but I believe an important one. The bread and wine are not transformed, if they were we would call the process “Transformation” instead of “Transubstantiation”. The form (appearance) remains the same; bread and wine. The substance is what has changed.But if it WAS bread and now is NO-LONGER bread, then how do you refer to the process between those two periods? A non-transformation? If a transformation is not implied in that explanation, then there is no such thing as an implication.
It was a caterpillar, but now it is a butterfly, yet no transformation took place.
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Awesome question - the Lutherans answer is “a mystery.”But if it WAS bread and now is NO-LONGER bread, then how do you refer to the process between those two periods? A non-transformation? If a transformation is not implied in that explanation, then there is no such thing as an implication.
It was a caterpillar, but now it is a butterfly, yet no transformation took place.
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This is a quote of augustine’s words which I took from someone else’s post, the same one that you are referencing:The doctrine of transsubstantiation does not merely name what is experience or believed but it gives a very specific metaphysical explanation for the experience or belief which excludes other explanations. It presumes a distinction between accidents and substances, something which is found nowhere in St. Augustine’s thought or to my knowledge any of early church fathers.
It is ahistorical to project a medieval European synthesis of Aristotelian philosophy and Christian theology back on the early church fathers.
If the bread is no longer bread but now is the body of Christ then by definition, it is a transformation. Some mysteries are relative and are solved by looking at a dictionaryAwesome question - the Lutherans answer is “a mystery.”
It makes me realize that God is out of time - in that we humans sometimes have trouble grasping how something could be something else without a transformation that takes place over time.
In a small way we can see it in out own scientific observations - photons are both waves and particles, and yet they don’t transform from one to the other.
Yes thanks for clarifying. I believe though the context makes this clear in that we are arguing for the change of substances from bread to flesh which makes the word transform appropriate: to change into another substance; transmute.Just a small point, but I believe an important one. The bread and wine are not transformed, if they were we would call the process “Transformation” instead of “Transubstantiation”. The form (appearance) remains the same; bread and wine. The substance is what has changed.
I understand what you are trying to say, but it is still rather incorrect. When speaking about such important matters that HAVE been defined by the Church, we should use the correct language, and “transubstantiation” is the right word, not “transformation.” As was said before, “transformation” means a change in form, whereas “transubstantiation” is a change in the substance, but the accidents remain.Yes thanks for clarifying. I believe though the context makes this clear in that we are arguing for the change of substances from bread to flesh which makes the word transform appropriate: to change into another substance; transmute.
dictionary.reference.com/browse/transform?s=t
If you mean a transformation that is complete and unknowable, then I would agree.If the bread is no longer bread but now is the body of Christ then by definition, it is a transformation.
Well let’s look at it like this: you agree that there is a change. You don’t believe that the change happened in the accidents. So where would that leave this change to occur? Where does it cease to be bread?If you mean a transformation that is complete and unknowable, then I would agree.
If you mean a transformation as a time dependent process that is measurable, given my limited understanding of Lutheran theology, I wouldn’t agree.
When we are using philosophical language such as “transformation” and “transubstantiation” it is important that we use the correct terms because otherwise we will be speaking past each other. You mean one thing by the word “transformation” and a Lutheran means something else. The term “transubstantiation” did not exist before the Church defined the process using this term. It only applies to the Eucharist and nothing else. Transformation was already a common term and carried with it a certain meaning that could apply to many things that change.Yes thanks for clarifying. I believe though the context makes this clear in that we are arguing for the change of substances from bread to flesh which makes the word transform appropriate: to change into another substance; transmute.
dictionary.reference.com/browse/transform?s=t
I agree with your explanation.When we are using philosophical language such as “transformation” and “transubstantiation” it is important that we use the correct terms because otherwise we will be speaking past each other. You mean one thing by the word “transformation” and a Lutheran means something else. The term “transubstantiation” did not exist before the Church defined the process using this term. It only applies to the Eucharist and nothing else. Transformation was already a common term and carried with it a certain meaning that could apply to many things that change.
If one has ever been to the petrified forest you will see a great example of “transformation”. Wood has been changed (replaced, really) to minerals. What use to be a log is now a rock in the shape of a log. With the Eucharist the “form” does not change at all. It is still in the form of bread and wine (looks like it, tastes like it, smells like it) yet has substantially changed into the body, blood, soul and divinity of Jesus. The Church thought it important enough to distinguish the difference and we are obligated to speak in the language the Church has defined in order to more accurately convey the truth of our beliefs.
There are four or five major views of the Eucharist, and think it should not be an issue in which Christians should divide over. After-all, nobody can prove their view over another. The elements do not change before your eyes, do they?I want this thread to be a free for all when it comes to Transubstantiation. If your denomination is against this then please explain why. If your denomination agrees with transubstantiation then please go into more detail as how it is like or dislike that of the Catholic belief.
I do ask that you give evidence in support or not. Thanks and have fun!
Sure, if we are just basing our evidence on what you see with your eyes. But as catholics we base our evidence on scripture and on tradition.There are four or five major views of the Eucharist, and think it should not be an issue in which Christians should divide over. After-all, nobody can prove their view over another. The elements do not change before your eyes, do they?
christianityinview.com/eucharist.html
I think they have pretty much taken the position that it is a mystery and they leave it at that. The Catholic Church was challenged and really had no choice but to define the process. The Lutherans have never been put into that postition.I agree with your explanation.
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No doubt. I assumed that they at least understood a change of substance since they know that there certainly is not a change of appearance.
You mean one thing by the word “transformation” and a Lutheran means something else.
It would seem to me that what the Lutheran’s on this board understand by “transform” is simply ‘change into A from B’ . But perhaps I am missing something. What do lutherans undersand by the word “transform” if not ‘change into A from B’? And if they do not mean it as ‘change’ then why would they be using that word in this conversation since nobody is arguing for ‘transformation’, i.e., change of appearance??
CU,There are four or five major views of the Eucharist, and think it should not be an issue in which Christians should divide over. After-all, nobody can prove their view over another. The elements do not change before your eyes, do they?
christianityinview.com/eucharist.html
This is what keeps you from uniting…you yourself will admit this…There are four or five major views of the Eucharist, and think it should not be an issue in which Christians should divide over.