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Montalban
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It seems some wish to think that the history of the church jumps from c.33 to c.1500Protestants, most of them are ignorant of Christian history
It seems some wish to think that the history of the church jumps from c.33 to c.1500Protestants, most of them are ignorant of Christian history
I wonder why they want to deny history?Indeed, because there was a doctrine of the Eucharist!
It was one of the charges pagans used in saying Christianity was a ‘strange’ religion.
Many Protestants here want to deny history (confusing it with ‘tradition’) but this evidence from the pagans shows what Christians were doing - albeit through pagan eyes
It is strange.I wonder why they want to deny history?
If Jesus is present in the Eucharist, every instance that the Eucharist is mentioned in the Bible is a reference to “eating His flesh and drinking His blood.” Since you have rejected the Real Presence/ transubstatiation, then there is no way of proving to you that anyone in the Bible ate His flesh or drank His blood. That’s like someone asking “Show me an example of Divine Revelation”, but they have already rejected the Bible as being inspired.We have no biblical record of anyone eating Christ’s flesh, and drinking His blood; so what was said by the Lord in John 6 must not be taken literally.
The icing on the Cake is the very verse where they decide to turn the ir back on him… look at it’s number!Amen! Very well said!!!![]()
I agree with you mike and let me just say, that your posts are utterly brilliant, I’m thinking of copying and printing it out to keep it on file. You are a very smart user!If Jesus is present in the Eucharist, every instance that the Eucharist is mentioned in the Bible is a reference to “eating His flesh and drinking His blood.” Since you have rejected the Real Presence/ transubstatiation, then there is no way of proving to you that anyone in the Bible ate His flesh or drank His blood. That’s like someone asking “Show me an example of Divine Revelation”, but they have already rejected the Bible as being inspired.
God Bless,
Michael
”If.” But, He’s not.If Jesus is present in the Eucharist, every instance that the Eucharist is mentioned in the Bible is a reference to “eating His flesh and drinking His blood.”
Your argument, though utterly brilliant to Catholics, is specious, Mike, as it wrongly equatesSince you have rejected the Real Presence/ transubstatiation, then there is no way of proving to you that anyone in the Bible ate His flesh or drank His blood. That’s like someone asking “Show me an example of Divine Revelation”, but they have already rejected the Bible as being inspired.
Isa Almisry [/quote said:The problem with the door example (and the others) is that we don’t have an example of anyone claiming on the basis of the text that Jesus was a bunch of planks with a door knob. We do have, cited above, early records of those who knew the apostles and their disciples who believed that John 6 meant real Body, etc. And Saint paul in Corinthians specifically says “is it not the Body…?” and not a metaphor. Most people don’t die from metaphors.
Where then, is the record of this “literal truth?”No. What I’m pointing to is the fact Jesus is asked if he’s serious and he says yes his body is real food.
It’s not a metaphor, indeed. It’s a literal truth.
Seems to me you misunderstand that passage, but, since you’ve offered no explanation of it, how can I know what you understand by it?And Paul later says if you want a communal meal, stay home, 1 Corinthians 11:17 ff
How? Where is this stated?He did, because the bread and wine become his body and blood
But Paul calls the bread, bread, and he calls the cup, the cup in v27.That’s why Paul says it’s not just bread - if you’re hungry, stay at home!
fellowChristian said:“The devil knows that, according to the promise of Jesus Christ, they who receive Holy Communion worthily will not fall into his power, but will obtain eternal life, and on this account he either tempts men to disbelieve the mystery, or he suggests every sort of pretext to keep them from receiving it. But he himself believes it and trembles. Would to God that all men had so strong a faith!”
by Fr. Michael Muller
No; I understand it; if you read from v17, and really consider Paul’s chastisement of the Corinthians, you might see what body is not being “rightly” judged, or discerned—it’s notThen you ignore Paul’s gospel
1 Corinthians 11:17 ff
This is because they were ‘drinking blood’ and ‘eating flesh’.
You not only read your tradition into scripture, but into the words of Octavius as well.OCTAVIUS The Christian: That story is probably based on reports that we share together a meal of the body and blood of Christ. That we do. But it is not human flesh we eat. It is bread and wine we consecrate to commemorate our Lord’s death.
He’s not directly questioned, He overhears their grumbling—you’re reading your tradition intoThere you have Jesus saying His body is real food. He’s questioned on this. He insists it’s real.
Here is a list of all of the verses in Paul’s epistles that reference a sacrifice:● Romans 12:1Paul says that it’s a real sacrafice - not just a communal meal
The problem with the door example (and the others) is that we don’t have an example of anyone claiming on the basis of the text that Jesus was a bunch of planks with a door knob. We do have, cited above, early records of those who knew the apostles and their disciples who believed that John 6 meant real Body, etc. And Saint paul in Corinthians specifically says “is it not the Body…?” and not a metaphor. Most people don’t die from metaphors.
I’m sorry, different translation perhaps I Corinthians 10:16.Paul doesn’t ask, “is it not the body?” anywhere;
Actually you got me there. When Christ says, “Take, Eat, This is My Body,” it doesn’t record that the Apostles actually ate. I just infered it from their later actions. Acts 20:7. The disciples knew Him in the breaking of the Bread, from that first Paschal Sunday on till today. Luke 24:35.also, no record exists of anyone eating Jesus; in fact, we watch Him move from John 6 to His ascension in Acts 1—uneaten.
I read St. John account in Revelation on worship in heaven. Altar, candles, lampstands (actually he sees these while in the Lord on earth), incense, etc. seems a good enough model for me.Christ’s sacrifice on the cross abrogated the ritual worship of the law; why do you continue in ritual worship?
And the problem is, if you reject the mass, why do you care about what happened on Calvary? I Corinthians 11:26. Why were they worshipping in Corinth?Christ told the woman at the well that the hour is coming when true worshippers will worship God in Spirit, and in truth, because God is Spirit, and that those are the worshippers God sought for Himself—the ritual worship of God ended almost two thousand years ago at Calvary; sacramentalism, and the mass are ritual worship.
Johne 6:56 he who eats My Flesh and drinks My Blood abides in Me, and I in him.”If.” But, He’s not.
Your argument, though utterly brilliant to Catholics, is specious, Mike, as it wrongly equates
rejection of real presence, and transubstantiation—two different things—with a rejection
of God’s revelation.
There is a way of proving it to me, Mike—prove it from the Revelation that you infer I reject.
You claim that people in the bible ate Christ’s flesh, and drank His blood; the bible states that they ate bread, and drank wine in remembrance of His real sacrifice on the cross—what are you committed to with transubstantiation?
You might believe in the Real Presence…but you don’t have Christ there - His Real Presence, whole and entire - since you do not have a valid Eucharist - no apostolic succession, no valide Eucharist.I’ve said this a thousand times. You are lumping all Protestants together. We celebrate the Eucharist EVERY Sunday. We believe in the Real Presence. The Eucharist is the CENTER of our worship. The whole point of you instigation here is for you to take cheap shots at ALL Protestant churches and say that NONE of them have the real Eucharist. Well, I believe you are wrong and Scripture would support that you are also wrong. Jesus established a church of all believers, you included, but not you alone.
Just to take one point: 1 Corinthians 10:18 "Are not those who eat of the sacrifices partakers of the altar? 20 Rather the things that the Gentiles sacrifice they sacrifice to demons and not to God and I do not want you to have communion with demonsNo; I understand it; if you read from v17, and really consider Paul’s chastisement of the Corinthians, you might see what body is not being “rightly” judged, or discerned—it’s not
the eucharist.
You not only read your tradition into scripture, but into the words of Octavius as well.
He’s not directly questioned, He overhears their grumbling—you’re reading your tradition into
the text.
You don’t take what Jesus says in Jn 6 literally either; instead, you believe the confabulation of the doctrine of real presence, or transubstantiation in which the bread and wine allegedly become the flesh and blood; that’s not taking John 6 literally, is it.
Here is a list of all of the verses in Paul’s epistles that reference a sacrifice:● Romans 12:1
● 1 Corinthians 10:18
● 1 Corinthians 10:20
● Ephesians 5:2
● Philippians 2:17
● Philippians 4:18None of those verses references the eucharist—none, nada, zilch, zip—you are committed
to tradition.
Btw of all the above verses the sacrifice of Calvary is mentioned only once. I guess St. Paul didn’t find it that important.No; I understand it; if you read from v17, and really consider Paul’s chastisement of the Corinthians, you might see what body is not being “rightly” judged, or discerned—it’s not
the eucharist.
You not only read your tradition into scripture, but into the words of Octavius as well.
He’s not directly questioned, He overhears their grumbling—you’re reading your tradition into
the text.
You don’t take what Jesus says in Jn 6 literally either; instead, you believe the confabulation of the doctrine of real presence, or transubstantiation in which the bread and wine allegedly become the flesh and blood; that’s not taking John 6 literally, is it.
Here is a list of all of the verses in Paul’s epistles that reference a sacrifice:● Romans 12:1
● 1 Corinthians 10:18
● 1 Corinthians 10:20
● Ephesians 5:2
● Philippians 2:17
● Philippians 4:18None of those verses references the eucharist—none, nada, zilch, zip—you are committed
to tradition.
Because he says in verse 10:16 that it is the communion of the Body of Christ and the communion of the Blood of Christ. (note not “a” but “the”).Where then, is the record of this “literal truth?”
Seems to me you misunderstand that passage, but, since you’ve offered no explanation of it, how can I know what you understand by it?
How? Where is this stated?
At the wedding feast in Cana, the water became wine; when He calmed the storm, the wind and the sea became calm; where is it stated in scripture, anywhere, that anything became His body, and His blood?
But Paul calls the bread, bread, and he calls the cup, the cup in v27.
whats everybodies take on these comments?Donny, you are confusing two different events.
Your question: ”Unless you eat my FLESH and drink my BLOOD you have no life in you,” does not pertain to the eucharist/Christ’s Passover/the Lord’s supper, but to belief in Christ—read John 6 in context.
Catholics in the know, are always quick to point out that when Jesus talks about belief in Himself, He is not talking about a one-time event, but in continuous belief—24 hours a day, 7 days a week—as the Greek present tense indicates.
The same is true of John 6:54—it is about belief, and it is in the present tense (continuous action); in order to be consistent with the Catholic teaching of this verse as the literal eating of the Lord’s flesh, and blood, Catholics should be consuming the eucharist 24 hours a day, 7 days a week until they die; are you doing that?
If not, why not? :ehh:
When you read the account of the true Lord’s Supper, which again, is not found in John 6,
Christ gives no command as to how often that Supper is to be celebrated; He merely says “do this in remembrance of Me.”
Even Paul in 1 Cor 11 says of the eucharist, ”as often as you do this”—no specified frequency is given.
Well, it would seem to me that my sect is certainly closer to the truth of this than your sect.
If your sect were consistent with their literal belief of what John is teaching in John 6:54, they would be consuming the eucharist 24 hours a day, 7 days a week without stopping; since they are not doing this, they are inconsistent in what they maintain concerning that verse.![]()