New Example --> Your pastor holds up a cracker and juice and says, "This bread and wine is a symbol of our God. Pass it around and treat it with the highest respect. You may even consume it." How is this not idolatry?
Walpole,
Three brief things.
[1] I don't think that you really want an answer. I think you are using the above question to prove that Protestants are flawed or wrong or hypocritical. I don't say that judgingly. I've employed the same questioning technique to do the same thing and I've seen people on every message board I've ever been on do the same thing. People don't always want answers to their questions. They makes statements and prove points and show others at fault. C'est la vie, Walpole. Just saying that to show you have been given good answers and rejected them with no critical reasoning.
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[2] Your second question changes the
whole scope of what you are talking about in your first question. I told you that we as Protestants don't treat the Lord's Supper in the manner that you've stated. You said you
didn't care what we did. That told me all I needed to know about your quest here. You came here to "tell us" what we believe and then when we correct you, you stand hip-deep in your error of us and refuse to listen. The contents of the first question is valid. There are some Catholic people who adore, revere, and venerate to the point of kissing and treating as holy mere physical objects. That IS idolatry. The classic definition. And there are probably some Protestant people who do the same things with their objects of religion in their homes. Maybe not kissing them, but putting them in places of "honor".
For Protestants, what we consume just a piece of bread and a plastic cup of grape juice from the grocery store. It's going the way of all things consumed the way that Jesus described it in the Bible when talking about what makes us defiled or not. That cracker and grape juice is no more the body and blood of Christ than a pencil is. It goes in our mouths and comes out of the body as waste - as Jesus said in Matthew 15. We do not respect, venerate, adore, hold as holy, or revere the cracker and the grape juice. You claim that we do venerate it. Your claim is wrong. We are remembering Christ, his death, and his sacrifice for our sins and reflecting on our own sin and repenting of it. We aren't concentrating on that cracker/juice. We focus on Christ who is NOT in the cracker and NOT in the juice.
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[3] If you REALLY want an answer as to whether or not the Lord's Supper is idolatry or not, you are going to have to seek the Lord, Himself on this matter. Do you really believe Jesus Christ would institute idolatry? It sound like you do as you claim not to understand why it is NOT idolatry.
Jesus Christ had this meal with his disciples before he died to give instructions on how to repeat this AS A MEMORIAL after he was gone. As I told you in my first post on the first page. The Old Testament of FULL of the people forgetting and forgetting and forgetting. And God commanding them to eat the Passover meal to NEVER forget.
When you forget what God and Jesus Christ has done for you - you fall prey to the devil.
THAT'S WHAT THE LORD'S SUPPER IS ABOUT. Just like what the Passover meal was and is about. It's about keeping Christ in the forefront of one's mind and to do that corporately with other Christians.
Go to God with this burden you have. And if it is really NOT a burden and you are only trying to make us look like idolaters - I can't help you with that and neither can anyone else here.