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The supposed impossibility of Holy Communion

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Agnus_Dei

New Member
Eliyahu said:
Is DT more worthwhile than the Bible?

Bible clearly prohibits Eating Blood, should we trust DT over Bible?
You Eliyahu are interpreting Scripture through Baptistic traditions of men. DT OTOH is interpreting Scripture through close to 2,000 years of Church Tradition.

Church Tradition is the tool by which the Church has determined correct Christian teaching. Tradition is determined by three things: 1) antiquity (what has been believed from the very beginning); 2) universality (what has been believed by all Christians everywhere); 3) consensus (what has been agreed to be orthodoxy, especially by the Church Councils and great Church Doctors).

Unfortunately Eliyahu, the myopic view of Scripture that you and many Protestants retain, disallows you from testing your interpretation of certain passages against what has been considered (since the inception of the Church) to be the authoritative interpretation of Scripture.

How can Scripture mean something that it never meant? How can we claim that Scripture means something which the apostles and early Church never proclaimed?

That’s the mountain you need to start climbing and regurgitating Jack Chick and these conspiracies theories, shows your lack of understanding or wanting to understand…Jack Chick doesn’t need to think for you…learn to think for yourself. Critical thinking skills are in order here, objectively and honestly research both sides, and in the end you may still reject it, but you’d be smarter for it.

Nobody takes you serious, Jack Chick isn’t an Authoritive in the matter at hand and it turns me off from wanting to respond to you…
-
 

bound

New Member
It is my belief that this thread would be much more constructive if we could restrain 'flooding' and offer a 'point/counterpoint' reply. I get the impression that we have now sunk to offering rhetoric and emotional appeals. That isn't going to win hearts in my humble opinion.

Just my 2 cents. :saint:
 
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Matt Black

Well-Known Member
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Eliyahu said:
Is DT more worthwhile than the Bible?

Bible clearly prohibits Eating Blood, should we trust DT over Bible?
Except that we're not talking DT - v - Bible here; we're talking DT's interpretation of the Bible - v- your interpretation of the Bible.

And I know which one I trust
 

Eliyahu

Active Member
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Matt Black said:
Except that we're not talking DT - v - Bible here; we're talking DT's interpretation of the Bible - v- your interpretation of the Bible.

And I know which one I trust

Do I have to learn the technique of how to distort the Bible teachings?

Do you need any interpretation for obeying this?

Thou shalt not commit adultery!

Thou shalt not kill!

Thou shalt not eat the Blood of whatsoever flesh!

You are starting to confess that you are believing in a strange religion distorting the Bible!
 

Eliyahu

Active Member
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Agnus_Dei said:
You Eliyahu are interpreting Scripture through Baptistic traditions of men. DT OTOH is interpreting Scripture through close to 2,000 years of Church Tradition.

Church Tradition is the tool by which the Church has determined correct Christian teaching. Tradition is determined by three things: 1) antiquity (what has been believed from the very beginning); 2) universality (what has been believed by all Christians everywhere); 3) consensus (what has been agreed to be orthodoxy, especially by the Church Councils and great Church Doctors).

Unfortunately Eliyahu, the myopic view of Scripture that you and many Protestants retain, disallows you from testing your interpretation of certain passages against what has been considered (since the inception of the Church) to be the authoritative interpretation of Scripture.

How can Scripture mean something that it never meant? How can we claim that Scripture means something which the apostles and early Church never proclaimed?

That’s the mountain you need to start climbing and regurgitating Jack Chick and these conspiracies theories, shows your lack of understanding or wanting to understand…Jack Chick doesn’t need to think for you…learn to think for yourself. Critical thinking skills are in order here, objectively and honestly research both sides, and in the end you may still reject it, but you’d be smarter for it.

Nobody takes you serious, Jack Chick isn’t an Authoritive in the matter at hand and it turns me off from wanting to respond to you…
-

OK,
I don't need Jack Chick at all.

Just obey the Bible.

Do we need the 2000 years tradition to interpret the Bible? Then how could the Believers of 2000 years ago interpret the Bible?

2000 years ago, they had only the Old Testament and they followed it as we read 2 Tim 3:15-16 and the Berean people were saved they read the Bible ( Acts 17:11) which was only the Old Testament.

The Old Testament clearly say this:

" No Soul of you shall eat Blood ( Lev 17:12)

Blood is not for Eating but for Offering to God, so that it make the Atonement for the soul. ( Lev 17:11)

Ye shall eat the blood of no manner of flesh ( Lev 17:14)

Do you need any Tradition to interpret this?

I don't need Jack Chick at all !

Why do you try to disobey the Bible?

Would you present your own interpretation on those verses?
 

Agnus_Dei

New Member
Eliyahu said:
OK,
I don't need Jack Chick at all.

Just obey the Bible.

Do we need the 2000 years tradition to interpret the Bible? Then how could the Believers of 2000 years ago interpret the Bible?

2000 years ago, they had only the Old Testament and they followed it as we read 2 Tim 3:15-16 and the Berean people were saved they read the Bible ( Acts 17:11) which was only the Old Testament.

The Old Testament clearly say this:

" No Soul of you shall eat Blood ( Lev 17:12)

Blood is not for Eating but for Offering to God, so that it make the Atonement for the soul. ( Lev 17:11)

Ye shall eat the blood of no manner of flesh ( Lev 17:14)

Do you need any Tradition to interpret this?

I don't need Jack Chick at all !

Why do you try to disobey the Bible?

Would you present your own interpretation on those verses?
I'll answer these questions in the next day or two. I believe a new thread should be started discussing Tradition and interpreting the Bible.
 

Matt Black

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Eliyahu said:
Do I have to learn the technique of how to distort the Bible teachings?

Do you need any interpretation for obeying this?


Thou shalt not eat the Blood of whatsoever flesh!
I take it you're a vegetarian then?
 

Eliyahu

Active Member
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Matt Black said:
Er...where does it say anything about it being human blood?


You know you are in the pinch, when you read this:


Leviticus 17:

10 And whatsoever man there be of the house of Israel, or of the strangers that sojourn among you, that eateth any manner of blood; I will even set my face against that soul that eateth blood, and will cut him off from among his people.

11 For the life of the flesh is in the blood: and I have given it to you upon the altar to make an atonement for your souls: for it is the blood that maketh an atonement for the soul.


12 Therefore I said unto the children of Israel, No soul of you shall eat blood, neither shall any stranger that sojourneth among you eat blood.


13 And whatsoever man there be of the children of Israel, or of the strangers that sojourn among you, which hunteth and catcheth any beast or fowl that may be eaten; he shall even pour out the blood thereof, and cover it with dust.

14 For it is the life of all flesh; the blood of it is for the life thereof: therefore I said unto the children of Israel, Ye shall eat the blood of no manner of flesh: for the life of all flesh is the blood thereof: whosoever eateth it shall be cut off.
 
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Eliyahu

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RCC is quite honest when they confess their belief in :

1) Transubstantiation
because they are confessing that they are cut off from the people of God as they drink the human Blood which was prohibited in Leviticus 17.

2) Purgatory
because they are confessing that they don't go to the heaven but to the Purgatory.
We know that no one can get out of there because RCC claims that Almsgiving and the prayers by their descendants can help them to come out of the Purgatory, but the Bible says nothing but the Blood of Jesus can redeem anyone from the sins, appeasing the wrath of God.
So, we are sure that RCC will remain in the Inferno ( Lake of Fire) forever.

3) Church built upon Peter and Tradition.
because they are confessing that their churches are built upon the human being Peter and the human traditions, not on the Rock of Salvation, Jesus Christ ( 1 Cor 3:11)
So, they are confessing their church is not built upon Jesus Christ, but on the human tradition.

4) Holy Father
RCC is confessing that their holy father is the Pope who dies and get corrupted in the soil.
Our Holy Father is God the Father, who never dies.
We have only on Father, which is God the Father.
Our Holy Father lives forever, RCC holy father dies, dies, dies, and dies.

5) Mother of God
RCC is confessing Mary is Mother of God, then admit that Mary is not the Mother of God the Father.
By these confessions, RCC is confessing their denial that God the Father is God. So, they encounter a serious problem with Trinity.

In these aspects, they are quite honest in confessing,
their ignorance, their unbelief, their disobedience to God.


I am thankful to God for not standing on RC belief!
I am thankful to God for not going to the Purgatory but directly going to the Heaven via Paradise as the Robber at the Cross went.
I am thankful to God for the Blood of Jesus Christ shed at the Cross which paid all the price for my sins.
Thank you Jesus Christ, My Lord, My Savior.
I would remember you Jesus Christ, my Lord, and your sacrifice by taking the Bread and Wine everyweek which reminds me of your painful death and your Blood shed at the Cross.
 
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Eric B

Active Member
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Doubting Thomas said:
Good answer.

As for this response...

...this is a retreat into circularity and question begging

Memorialist (in this case, Eliyahu): "Jesus can't be talking about drinking His real blood because such would violate the Law"

Advocate for the Biblical Realist view (in this case, Agnus Dei) responds by demonstrating how Christ, the Life and true Lamb of God, fulfilled the OT Law and was thus the One in the light of whom the previous OT prohibition ultimately makes sense, as the prohibition anticipated fulfillment in the One who would give His blood for the life of the world (something the blood of animals is incapable of accomplishing)
God could have instituted a Catholic-Orthodox "real presence" ritual back then, and it would not contradict the Law, because it was not physically flesh and blood. (That aspect of the Law was purely physical or fleshy, and the spiritual aspect of it woild refer to something else, anyway.

bound said:
Hi Matt,

I can't speak for EricB but all that I am saying is that Roman Catholic Scholastic presumption is the foundation of the divisions over this issue. Roman Catholic Scholastic Theology was and is a failed attempt to objectively explain the Real Presence. Rome needs to deal with that and other issues that are at the heart of their modern-day theological back-pedaling. What I find disingenuous is the fact that Rome appears to be attempting to make such dramatic changes in their theology without admitting to their historic errors and the confusion, division and deaths such errors has caused.

It is clear for anyone willing to study the issues objectively that Rome is in the midst of radical corrections in their theology but none appear honest enough to admit it and accept culpability for the thousand years of darkness such miscalculations in reasoning has brought Western Christendom.

What I am saying concerning Orthodoxy is that they avoid intellectual litmus tests concerning the matter which Scholasticism failed to do.

PS: I know this sounds a bit harsh so please pardon me if my post offenses I've just venting a bit this afternoon. God Bless you all.
From my understanding Eastern Orthodoxy rejects the Aristotelian dualism of 'Accidents' and 'Substances' to describe reality as well as many modern scholars and scientists. This rejection is not a refutation of the Real Presence on their part but merely a refutation of the Scholastic Formula made Dogma by Rome. The Mysteries stay Mysteries in the East and their is a continuation of the Patristic practice to avoid such formulas. I believe Baptists can appreciate this stance.
The same with the Trinity. It was Augustine's west that come up with all these representations and explanations, and this only resulted in more problems, and heresy regarding the doctrine.

I can point you to Orthodox Forums (with numerous Priests, Seminarians and laity) which would respectfully beg to differ...
From the Orthodox point-of-view, Scholasticism was the 'break' from Apostolic Tradition which justifies their denial of grace in the Sacraments of the modern Roman Catholic Church.
How does the RCC deny the grace in it? If it is still a sacrament to them, then don't they still see it as a "means of grace"?

You need to recognize a 'distinction' between 'Real Presence' and the 'Roman Dogma of Transubstantiation'... the two are 'not' synonymous...
"...many of the Fathers simply supported the idea of Jesus' real presence in the communion, not that the elements were literally transformed into the actual body and blood of Christ. So the later dogma of transubstantiation cannot be based on any early or unanimous consent of the Fathers which Catholics claim for it." (Roman Catholics and Evangelicals by Geisler/MacKenzie, page 263)
Isn't Justin and Irenaeus' discussions of a "change" brought about by the consecratory prayer the basis of that doctrine? If you pick up a cracker and wine for the ceremony; it doesn't start out as "flesh and blood"; so it has to become such at some point. It seems the difference is largely semantic ("in, under", versus something else; I forgot exactly which).
BTW; if there is no change, and only a "presence" IN; then actually, the Orthodox position is taking the "this is my Body" the same basic way as the "memorialist" position.
In the debates we have had here before, the Orthodox (including DT, and IIRC Matt) while explaining the difference, generally downplayed that difference, in favor of the other differences (filioque; pope, etc, and "Zwinglian memorialism")
Matt Black said:
Thanks to EricB and Bound for confirming your positions; are you aware that they are much closer (particularly in the case of Bound) to the transubstantiation end of the spectrum than the memorialist end? It pretty much describes where I'm at on the issue too.
How is what I said closer to transubstantiation? :confused: I do not believe in any "change" of the elements at all.
Rooselk said:
Doubting Thomas, I'd say that's a pretty good summary. There's talk here about "intellectual suicide" with regard to the Realist position. But to disregard Christ's own words of "this is my body, this is my blood" is intellectually dishonest since all other explanations do not do justice to the plain and natural meaning and understanding of these words.

There will always be those who will resist truths they do not understand. That is just the nature of things. And even though this matter of the Real Presence is not an essential doctrine that effects one's salvation, I still prefer to take Christ at his word. After all, it seems to me that if Jesus had intented to convey a memorial meaning he could have just as easily said, "this represents my body, this represents my blood."
He did say "Do this in reMEMbrance of Me". And again, if there is no change in the elements, then eating the bread and wine is not really eating the flesh and blood, which are from what I understand, some separate "spiritual" material eaten with the food.
But "just take it literally" is in this case itself an interpretation of what could be a metaphor. Especially, since the elements are not literally flesh and blood. When you understand that God's "presence" is on the believers, especially when two or three come together, forming the spiritual "Body"; then it becomes clear what the true "spiritual mystery" is (Christ in US), and yes, this is spiritually discerned, and can be misunderstood. The problem is, that catholic fathers did try to explain it (such as the "change" at consecration, etc)., and went too far, and made it into something it wasn't, and THEN had to quell "understanding" when the resulting theory made no sense. The difference between east and west on this, is that the East, once again, drew a line, while the West continued to try to define it.
Thus, the Church has often overdid the concept of "mystery", and used it to get out of tight spots like that, that resulted usually from going beyond scriptural bounds in teaching.
 

bound

New Member
Eric B said:
God could have instituted a Catholic-Orthodox "real presence" ritual back then, and it would not contradict the Law, because it was not physically flesh and blood. (That aspect of the Law was purely physical or fleshy, and the spiritual aspect of it woild refer to something else, anyway.

Validity of Sacraments - requirements

All that has been said so far being granted, it behooves us to ask just what is required for a sacrament to be valid. The Church's answer is usually given under several headings. There must be a proper minister - and where the minister is a priest, he must be validly ordained; the minister must have the proper intention; there must be proper 'form' and 'matter'; the recipient must be capable of receiving the sacrament. If any one of these are faulty or absent, the Sacrament is not effective. Each of these requirements will be considered sequentially.

Note: We don't see 'ritual' anywhere in this... 'Proper Form' is always taken from the concensus of the Biblical description of the Sacrament.



The same with the Trinity. It was Augustine's west that come up with all these representations and explanations, and this only resulted in more problems, and heresy regarding the doctrine.

Dogma is only 'necessary' to put down 'heresy'. Engaging in conjecture is frowned upon by the church historically. That changed with the advent of Scholasticism.

How does the RCC deny the grace in it? If it is still a sacrament to them, then don't they still see it as a "means of grace"?

The RCC don't 'deny' the grace of their own Sacraments. It is the Eastern Orthodox who deny the grace of RCC Sacraments. They are not recognized as 'valid' due to a whole hosts of criticisms which are too long to list here.

Isn't Justin and Irenaeus' discussions of a "change" brought about by the consecratory prayer the basis of that doctrine? If you pick up a cracker and wine for the ceremony; it doesn't start out as "flesh and blood"; so it has to become such at some point. It seems the difference is largely semantic ("in, under", versus something else; I forgot exactly which).

BTW; if there is no change, and only a "presence" IN; then actually, the Orthodox position is taking the "this is my Body" the same basic way as the "memorialist" position.

RCC Dogma argues a substantial change where the Eastern Orthodox posit a Incarnational (i.e. Noetic Sharing or Fulfilling) fulfilling of the nature of the bread and Wine with and in the Divine Nature of which Christ is the means of said sharing or fulfilling. Read 'Saint' Athanasius' works concerning the Incarnation...

In the debates we have had here before, the Orthodox (including DT, and IIRC Matt) while explaining the difference, generally downplayed that difference, in favor of the other differences (filioque; pope, etc, and "Zwinglian memorialism")

Perhaps they are operating by the old Arabic notion that 'the enemy of my enemy is my friend'?
How is what I said closer to transubstantiation? :confused: I do not believe in any "change" of the elements at all.

Well, I believe that there is a change but it is in no way 'physical' or 'substantial' which is why Aristotelian logic is of no real help for us to understand it better.
 

Eric B

Active Member
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Doubting Thomas said:
So which category of "supernaturalism" would the INCARNATION fall into? The latter? For empirically Jesus of Nazareth was a man. However, we believe that He is from eternity GOD, and then became man at a specific point in time. In becoming man, he didn't assume a man who had a separate subsistence in his own right, but He--the Divine PERSON--assumed humanity and made it HIS OWN. Yet, looking at the historical human Jesus of Nazareth (ie if we were to somehow put Him under a microscope) we wouldn't be able to tell that He's any different from any other human being. So while empirically Jesus certainly is a human, the truth is more complex than that--He is the eternal Divine Logos who assumed real humanity in becoming the man Jesus in history without ceasing to be God. This is a profound spiritual truth yet it supernaturally entails an intimate incomprehensible involvement of the Divine with His material creation--physical flesh and blood, etc--without empirically changing the nature of the matter involved (except perhaps at the Resurrection).

Somewhat similarly with the Eucharist, the bread and wine are empirically...well...bread and wine. Not counting stories of possible Eucharistic miracles, if one were to look at the consecreted bread and wine under a microscope one would see...bread and wine. However, there is no a priori reason to suppose that the bread and wine couldn't possibly have another spiritual reality in addition to the empirical one--namely the true participation in the body and blood of Christ by the believer. Of course, the difference in the Incarnation is that it happened once in history and was the Divine Person of the Son of God taking on real empiric humanity (while also remaining Himself divine), while in the Eucharist Christ takes empirical bread and wine and spiritually (not simply 'symbolically') makes it His body and blood (while remaining empirical bread and wine). The point is, the Incarnation itself shows us there is no hard and fast distinction between one 'supernaturalism' which involves 'spiritual' truth and another 'supernaturalism' which involves only matter, since the material miracle of the Virgin conception and birth brought God Himself into intimate connection with matter without causing Himself empirically detected within the matter He assumed.
But again, this embodiment is still in a PERSON; not just an inanimate THING. Since all "persons" inhabit bodies, then this divine person would be no different in that respect. And the flesh in itself is not said to be divine, as it bled and died like anyone else. (though I do remember Catholics here arguing otherwise, with that whole thing about him being supernaturally born without even opening up the birth canal and all that. (forgot the name of that. "[something] parturition", or something?) I forgot where the Orthodox stood on that; but I think I remember even the Lutherans agreeing with it).

Looking at the miracles of the feeding of the 5000 and the changing of the water-into-wine, we can admit that these aren't strictly analogous to presence of Christ's body and blood in the bread and wine of Communion since there is no empirical change detected in the bread or the wine. However, these miracles are helpful to illustrate the power of the One, who is from eternity God but is time empirically man, to communicate (indeed "multiply") Himself to us in the forms of the empirical bread and wine should He so choose. Jesus as God-become-man is certainly able to so involve Himself with the elements of bread and wine that they become in a spiritual (but not empty 'symbolic') way His very Body and Blood, just as He so identifies the bread and wine in the Gospel narratives. Which brings me to the next point...
I would agree with "spiritual presence", but then again, the spiritual presence is in US already, and there is no need to make anything else of it. If it is a spiritual presence IN the bread and wine, then not only is there no change in the elements, but there is no flesh and blood at all (because those are PHYSICAL substances, in contrast with "spirit"), and you might as well just go on and say that the elements themselves are symbols, with the Spirit "entering" us as the food enters us, or something like that.
Hmmm...let's see:

“The cloud covered the Tabernacle of meeting and the glory of the Lord filled the tabernacle. And Moses was not able to enter the tabernacle of meeting because the cloud rested above it and the glory of the Lord filled the tabernacle.” (Exodus 40:34-35)
(The Tabernacle is a physcial "thing", is it not?)

And regarding Solomon's Temple:
"And it came to pass, when the priests came out of the holy place, that the cloud filled the house of the Lord, so that the priests could not continue ministering because of the cloud; for the glory of the LORD filled the house of the LORD. Then Solomon spoke: 'The LORD said He would dwell in the dark cloud. I have surely built You and exalted house, and a place for You to dwell forever.'" (1 Kings 8:10-13)

So, we have a clear Biblical statements that God fills physical inanimate objects such as tabernacles and temples, and that He is actually said to dwell in objects such as clouds and temples. This seems to be the straightforward reading of these passages, unless one asserts despite such realistic language that:
(1)There is no real connection between the cloud and the glory of the Lord
(2)That there is no special presence involved in God's shekinah glory filling the tabernacle or temple.
(3)That the "cloud" is simply a non-physical metaphor for God's glory (despite the fact that this non-physcial entity would somehow physically preclude Mose and the priests from entering the tabernacle and the temple respectively.)

So if one concedes that, yes, God can (and did) have a special presence in specific locales (temples/tabernacles) by dwelling in physical non-human objects (clouds) while remaining omnipresent, there is no logical reason that Christ cannot in a sense do likewise with other physcial non-human objects (bread/wine)--unless one wants to beg the question.
And in those cases, God had some sort of visible manifestation inhabit a physical object. But then the physical item itself was not then said to "become" God's body, but rather; God continued to say that man had never seen any real "form" of God (Deuteronomy 4:12, 15-16). And there was still some empirical difference in the object: the light and sound from the cloud or mountaintop, the bush not burning up; priests getting struck down for entering the holiest of holies in the Temple wrong, etc.
I don't believe anyone has demonstrated (without special pleading) that God cannot use physical objects (even "food") to convey spiritual benefits, given the fact that it's all HIS creation--physical matter and spirit--and He can do what He wants to with it. The fact is that God has already brought spiritual benefits through the use of physical means by bringing spiritual (and, at the Eschaton, physical) salvation to mankind through the physical Incarnation, physical Death (on a physical cross with physical nails, shedding physical blood), and physical Resurrection of His Son. Lest, one think that after Christ's Ascension that God now only deals with us spiritually, we need to remember that ultimately we're going to continue to be physical-spiritual entities (with real physically resurrected bodies like Christ's) and not become a bunch of disembodied spirits (which would be the hope and dream of gnostics). That being the case, there is no a priori reason that Christ can't spiritually convey the benefits of His physcial/spiritual Atonement through the physical means of bread, wine, and water to His people.
So-called "Memorialism" could agree with a "spiritual benefit" being "conveyed" through bread, wine and water. In that case, the elements have no change, or power in thelselves, but are being used to "convey" something else; which in its definitions (To transport; to carry; to take from one place to another.
To communicate; to make known. (law) To transfer legal rights (to).) is compatible with symbolism. (i.e. You can transport an actual item, or "make it known" through a representation of it).
The difference would be in he belief that the "benefit of atonement" being conveyed through these things is not salvation itself (in which case, not matter how much you do them, you are not finally saved). The benefit of atonement is in Him dwelling us; imparting his Life spiritually through us (by which we are saved, and not the works of our hands), and baptism and communion are representations of that reality that "convey" its truth.
So once some a priori philosophical/theological objections are dealt with as above, one can then turn to the texts themselves and see if grammatically and in context the Scripture writers do in fact teach a real connection/identification between the bread and wine with the actual body and blood of Christ--with the former not being empty metaphors, but truly making present the thing signified. I believe the case has been well made by many people for this real connection through out the posts on this thread.
Again, since your "supernatural" concept matches up with no other supernatural event in the Bible, yet we are taught about the Church being Christ's body, and Him dwelling in us, there would be no reason to read anything else into that, except a desire to read mysticism into the Bible, as was present in the postapostolic period.
 

Doubting Thomas

Active Member
Okay, so I describe the Incarnation in my last post as an example of a "supernaturalism" which is basically the convergance of one of your "types" of "supernaturalsim" (ie the virgin birth) with the other "type" (the spiritual truth of the Incarnation)--types which you implied in the earlier post shouldn't be confused. I made this point to show there's no necessary reason to make a hard and fast distinction between these two "types" in order to keep them from being "confused" (as a prelude into my discussion of the Eucharist). However, to the part of the post in which I describe how in the Incarnation the Divine Person (the Son) assumes humanity (rather than a separately subsiting man) and thus becomes empirically a historical man, you respond....

But again, this embodiment is still in a PERSON
Which is somewhat ambiguous. I would hope you aren't that suggesting that the Divine Word became embodied in another subsisting PERSON. If you are, you are Nestorian. But moving on...

Since all "persons" inhabit bodies, then this divine person would be no different in that respect.
Except that not all "persons" necessarily inhabit 'bodies'. From eternity the Three Divine Persons--God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Ghost--did not inhabit bodies, nor is it some how logically necessary that they do so now. I've already made reference to the fact that Solomon said of God:
"The LORD said He would dwell in the dark cloud. I have surely built for you an exalted house. And a place for You to dwell forever". (1 Kings 8:12-13)
So if the Divine Person can inhabit non-human "inanimate" objects, why can't He in others? It's HIS creation--he can do what He wants to with it, right?

And the flesh in itself is not said to be divine, as it bled and died like anyone else.
But the flesh belongs to the Divine Person. It's HIS and no other person's. (But I'm not really sure what this has to do with the topic at hand, except to say that the same Divine Person whose human flesh was given on the cross ("for the life of world") had said that this same flesh is food indeed and His blood drink indeed, and that at the Last Supper He declared that the bread was His body and the wine was His blood.)

I would agree with "spiritual presence", but then again, the spiritual presence is in US already,
Except now you seem to be digressing into modalism, or at least confusing the Persons of the Trinity. It's Christ whose Body and Blood is present in the bread and wine. The Holy Spirit did not become Incarnate (though He played a "role" in the Incarnation) Himself, so His presense in the Church is not exactly the same as Christ's special presence in the Eucharist (though of course, the Son and the Holy Spirit can't ultimately be separated). Also, at Christ's baptism, when the Incarnate Son came out of the water, the Holy Spirit descended as a dove. In other words, They were both present in unique ways at Christ's Baptism, so there's no a priori reason to assume They could not be both present in unique ways in the Church.

and there is no need to make anything else of it.
Not unless you assume that there can't possibly be two "types" (or modes) of Divine presence exisiting simultaneously, one of the Son (in the Eucharist) and the other of the Holy Spirit. But we already know from Scripture that God is omnipresent and yet can be said also to dwell (somehow 'locally') in the cloud/tabernacle/temple. And if God can so be present simulataneously in more than one of different senses in the OT examples, He certainly can be present in different ways simultaneously so in the NT.

If it is a spiritual presence IN the bread and wine, then not only is there no change in the elements, but there is no flesh and blood at all (because those are PHYSICAL substances, in contrast with "spirit"),
But that doesn't necessarily follow, unless you want to tell Christ our God that He can't possibly communicate His flesh and blood to us in the empirical forms of bread and wine.

and you might as well just go on and say that the elements themselves are symbols
That may be your assertion, but it doesn't logically follow. Saying that "there's a special spiritual presence of Christ's Body and Blood in the bread and wine" can't be logically reduced to the proposition that "there's no special spiritual presence of Christ's Body and Blood in the bread and wine" (if that's what you mean by the word 'symbol'). That's like saying, "Well if A is true, you might as well just go on and say A is not true"

...with the Spirit "entering" us as the food enters us, or something like that.
Again, I'm beginning to think you have the Persons of the Trinity confused. It's Christ who "enters" us in the bread and the wine. (The Spirit, as you say, is "already in us")

After you made the claim that God doesn't indwell things, I pointed out some counter-examples from the OT. Then you responded...
And in those cases, God had some sort of visible manifestation inhabit a physical object.
So what was the 'visible manifestation' that inhabited the dark cloud? Solomon said in the verse cited above that God dwelt in the "dark cloud". So what was the 'visible' manifestation that inhabited the dark physical cloud?

But then the physical item itself was not then said to "become" God's body, but rather;
I don't believe I ever claimed that the cloud, temple, of tabernacle "became" God's 'body'. I just pointed out that the Scriptures asserted that God at one time or another dwelt in those things.

God continued to say that man had never seen any real "form" of God (Deuteronomy 4:12, 15-16).
And? In the NT, Christ is declared to be the express image of God, and He was seen physically and handled. And if He declares the bread and wine to be His body and blood, I believe Him.

And there was still some empirical difference in the object: the light and sound from the cloud or mountaintop, the bush not burning up; priests getting struck down for entering the holiest of holies in the Temple wrong, etc.
So I guess you're backing off your earlier claim that God can't or doesn't indwell "things". Now you seem to be retreating into an unproven assumption that if there's no "empirical difference in the object" then God can't possibly be supernaturally present in it. God was supernaturally present (in a unique way) in Christ, yet for most of Christ's life (the many years He wasn't performing any miracles) there was apparently no empirical difference between He and other men (ie under a microscope, one wouldn't be able to tell He was God Incarnate). And when Christ did start performing miracles people didn't instantly conclude that God dwelled in Him. Similarly, there's no empirical difference between the Scriptures and other books that would compell us to say that the words of the former are "God-breathed" in contradistinction to the latter (eg. empirical lightening bolts don't jump off the pages when we read them) So there's no a priori reason to rule out God becoming supernaturally involved with His creation, in different ways, without being "empirically detected".

So-called "Memorialism" could agree with a "spiritual benefit" being "conveyed" through bread, wine and water. In that case, the elements have no change, or power in thelselves, but are being used to "convey" something else; which in its definitions (To transport; to carry; to take from one place to another.
To communicate; to make known. (law) To transfer legal rights (to).) is compatible with symbolism. (i.e. You can transport an actual item, or "make it known" through a representation of it).
If one believes that spiritual benefits are actually conveyed through bread, wine, and water, then that one is by definition not a "memorialist", but a "sacramentalist". But you don't really believe that spiritual benefits are actually conveyed through the bread, wine, and water themselves (as will be pointed out below...)
 

Doubting Thomas

Active Member
I then discussed how if God can use physical means to bring about the (objective) Atonement, He can also use physical means to (subjectively) apply the benefits of the Atonement to individual lives, since it's ALL God's creation (matter and spirit), and He can do what He wants to with it. You responded with this..
EricB: The difference would be in he belief that the "benefit of atonement" being conveyed through these things is not salvation itself
So being in Christ is not salvation itself? Or are you objecting to God using the objects of HIS material creation to communicate the Life (including the Merits) of Christ to believers? If the latter, on what are you basing your objection if you don't disagree in principle that God can do whatever He wants with His creation?

(in which case, not matter how much you do them, you are not finally saved).
Well, no one is "finally saved" unless he endure to the end and until he stands at the Judgement seat of Christ. (But that's a whole other topic...)

The benefit of atonement is in Him dwelling us;
Indeed, and God can use physical objects as a means to this end.
"He who eats My flesh and drinks My blood abides in Me, and I in Him" (John 6:56)
"For as many of you as were baptized into Christ, have put on Christ" (Gal 3:27)
(etc)

imparting his Life spiritually through us (by which we are saved, and not the works of our hands),
That's a non-sequitur. God imparting His life through us through bread, water, and wine is not being saved "by the works of our hands". Neither I nor you can impart life through bread, wine, or water, but God certainly can.

and baptism and communion are representations of that reality that "convey" its truth.
Yet, you are thus removing baptism and communion from the reality they convey. In other words, in your view baptism and communion don't actually convey the reality at all. They are separate from another "(that) reality that 'convey' its truth", however that's supposed to be interpreted. In other words instead of the water conveying the reality of the new birth, you say the reality of the new birth itself is conveying...itself? (isn't that a tautology?)

Again, since your "supernatural" concept matches up with no other supernatural event in the Bible,
So, by that logic we should reject the "supernatual" concept of the Incarnation since it matches up with no other supernatural event in the Bible. As far as I can tell, there is only one instance of a Hypostatic Union between God-Man alluded to in the Scriptures--it is unique. There is nothing else like it, so I guess we need to come up with another explanation since the concept of the Incarnation (Hypostatic Union) is not valid by your criteria for "supernatural concepts....

yet we are taught about the Church being Christ's body, and Him dwelling in us, there would be no reason to read anything else into that,
Except that Christ also teaches that the BREAD--the bread that He literally broke at the Last Supper--is His body. It's not a matter of either the Church or the Bread being Christ's body. The Scriptures affirm BOTH.
 

Gerhard Ebersoehn

Active Member
Site Supporter
Eliyahoo,

We may have our differences, but in this contovercy I admire your honesty and courage. I haven't had the time to follow the debate well enough to add my own comments, but would wish you encouragement to fight the good fight against antichrist in living persons residing on this very thread.
 

Gerhard Ebersoehn

Active Member
Site Supporter
Eric B, nice hear from you again, too!

What the RCs don't understand -- and what few Protestants understand -- is that Jesus 'OFFERED' His 'blood', IN HIS LIFE, having offered it (His 'blood') being the RISEN, the living "First-Sheaf-Wave-Offering-before-the-LORD", HIS VERY LIFE!

The life of animals -- that could NOT forgive or atone for sins -- was 'offered before the Lord', IN THEIR BLOOD. On the contrary, the blood of Christ -- that only forgives or atones for sins -- is being (or was being) 'offered', in His LIFE. Therefore the RCC makes of Jesus' offering, that of an animal's - and thus, of an idol's, worthless and abominable "before the LORD"!
 

Matt Black

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Eliyahu said:
You know you are in the pinch, when you read this:


Leviticus 17:

10 And whatsoever man there be of the house of Israel, or of the strangers that sojourn among you, that eateth any manner of blood; I will even set my face against that soul that eateth blood, and will cut him off from among his people.

11 For the life of the flesh is in the blood: and I have given it to you upon the altar to make an atonement for your souls: for it is the blood that maketh an atonement for the soul.


12 Therefore I said unto the children of Israel, No soul of you shall eat blood, neither shall any stranger that sojourneth among you eat blood.


13 And whatsoever man there be of the children of Israel, or of the strangers that sojourn among you, which hunteth and catcheth any beast or fowl that may be eaten; he shall even pour out the blood thereof, and cover it with dust.

14 For it is the life of all flesh; the blood of it is for the life thereof: therefore I said unto the children of Israel, Ye shall eat the blood of no manner of flesh: for the life of all flesh is the blood thereof: whosoever eateth it shall be cut off.
Right, so I ask again: are you therefore a vegetarian?
 
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