No, I want to bring the ECFs to correctly interpret the Bible; they are eminently more qualified to do so than you or IEliyahu said:Matt,
Do you want still to bring the ECF's to override the Bible commandments?
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No, I want to bring the ECFs to correctly interpret the Bible; they are eminently more qualified to do so than you or IEliyahu said:Matt,
Do you want still to bring the ECF's to override the Bible commandments?
Er...no; the memorialist position is saying that there is no Presence at all in the bread and wine and that it is simply a remembrance of Christ's death (hence 'memorialist'). You are - correct me if I'm wrong - saying that there is no physical change but that there is a spiritual Presence in communion. That is quite a way along the continuum away from memorialism and seems to me to be close to the kind of receptionism (believers receive Christ spiritually when they eat and drink at communion) espoused by Anglicans and Presbyterians. The Orthodox do believe in a physical change but do not attempt to explain it; they are content to leave it as a mystery.Eric B said: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.
I'm not OrthodoxIn the debates we have had here before, the Orthodox (including DT, and IIRC Matt)
See above. You're closer to the trans end of the continuum with your receptionism than you are the memorialist end, IMO.How is what I said closer to transubstantiation?I do not believe in any "change" of the elements at all.
Matt, based on his last post that I responded, Eric really doesn't seem to support even that. Although he seems to grudgingly admit the possibility of a spiritual presence within the bread and wine, he ultimately seems to find such a position superfluous since the "spirit is already in us. He then defines "convey" (a word I had used) in such a way (Ie in which something merely 'represents' another reality without actually 'making present' the reality) in order to assert that Memorialists believe that baptism and communion "convey" the reality they signify. Perhaps, I should have been more specific in which word I used to describe the idea the physcial object/sign actually making present the reality it signifies, instead of the object being a mere visual aid of a reality already present. Anyway, sorry for speaking for Eric--I'll see if he acknowledges if this assessment of his view is correct.Matt Black said:EricB,
You are - correct me if I'm wrong - saying that there is no physical change but that there is a spiritual Presence in communion.
Matt Black said:No, I want to bring the ECFs to correctly interpret the Bible; they are eminently more qualified to do so than you or I
No, I am not!Matt Black said:Right, so I ask again: are you therefore a vegetarian?
Matt Black said:So you accept that Lev 17 is a red herring? Either that, or your being disobedient to that Scripture. (Incidentally that answers your previous post.)
<Shrug> All meat has blood in it; I eat steak and like it rare. I also eat shellfish and wear mixed-fibre garments. Don't you?Eliyahu said:In OT period, Jews ate the beef, chicken, without problem. How could they eat the meat? Even today Kosher meat has no problem. We definitely drain out the blood from the meat. Don't you?
This is why Kosher meat is better than common meat which contain a lot of blood for the increase of weight because the meats are sold by weight.
What is your point? are you saying that we should ignore the Law and should eat the Blood?
Matt Black said:<Shrug> All meat has blood in it; I eat steak and like it rare. I also eat shellfish and wear mixed-fibre garments. Don't you?
Matt Black said:So you accept that Lev 17 is a red herring? Either that, or your being disobedient to that Scripture. (Incidentally that answers your previous post.)
bound: I've been thinking a little about the Orthodox views of Transubstaination in regard to Catholicism.bound said:Be aware that Orthodoxy also rejects Roman Catholic Form and Practice concerning the Holy Eucharist.
Why the Early Church Fathers, why not Christ's command in John 6 and Paul's statement concerning the participation in both Christ's Body and His Blood?Eliyahu said:Can you show us any ECF who claimed that we may eat Blood despite the commandments in OT?
or any ECF who said Lord Supper means Drinking the Blood of Jesus despite the commandments in OT?
No. I mean a person as opposed to a thing.Doubting Thomas said: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....
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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.
In that sense; I was thinking of "human" persons (and of course; Christ was fully human as well. So the divine-human person would inhabit a body, but not other physical objects.But moving on...
Quote:
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?
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.
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.
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".
The "Glory of the Lord".After you made the claim that God doesn't indwell things, I pointed out some counter-examples from the OT. Then you responded...
Quote:
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?
The point there was, He was not claiming any "change" to the bread; the first staement (my flesh is food) was a spirritual analogy. It was by his flesh being "broken" for us, that we would inherit eternal life, and the actual "bread" represented ("remembrance" ) it. You have turned this simple truth ito a continual process of "receiving Christ" (having His flesh and blood applied to you) every time you eat this meal, which then has some spiritual change applied to it that you can't see, hear, feel or taste. I do not see all of that in those statements at all. Rather than you simply "taking them at what they say", as your side has constantly claimed; it looks like you are adding to them.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.)
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.
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.
It's you who sounds Nestorian now; rather than me sounding "modalist" (the opposite). Whatever The Holy Spirit is in; Christ is in, and the Father (John 14). They are separate, but nevertheless, "one substance". You seem to be making three separate spiritual "substances" now, with only one of them inhabiting the bread, and another inhabiting us.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")
Not that He can't; just that that does not seem to be the way He did; it's only people's deduction based on their reading it into scriptural metaphors.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.
One might suggest that it was the departure of the Catholic Church from the 'Apostolic Deposit of Faith' which allowed the acceptance of intellectual conjecture as a valid method to explore the Mysteries that led to the likes of Berengar or Zwingli in the first place.Agnus_Dei said:bound: I've been thinking a little about the Orthodox views of Transubstaination in regard to Catholicism.
Could it be said that Catholicism was forced to respond to the growing popular 'symbolic' views of Berengar or Zwingli and therefore it was Catholicism felt it was necessary to use whatever philosophical catergories and systems that were available at that time to combat this 'symbolic' view?
But even if we were to put aside this issue there still exists the departure from 'Form' (i.e. Communion under two species) which again is a sign that the Catholic Church may have departed from 'Apostolic Tradition' as the Orthodox claim.And since Orthodox never had to respond to these views, they weren't forced to dogmatize the Eucharistic identification.
I believe Patristics have 'sanctified' only one philosophical language in which to express the Mysteries (platonism) and the use of Aristotle would still be deemed a departure.We see the same thing occurring in the fourth century, when the Fathers had to use these same philosophical languages to combat Arianism.
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That comes from the double talk (sorry to put it that bluntly) from your side. It's like there is a change; there isn't a[n empirical] change. So what is it, then? You're eating regular bread and wine, yet you believe you are receiving God's spiritual presence somehow. We believe God's Spirit already inhabits us. So I guess...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"
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 said: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.
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?
So I guess the difference here might really be more along the lines of the OSAS debate. We believe we receive God's Spirit and are saved and made apart of Christ's body once; upon receiving Him into our hearts, with baptism and Communion as remembrances marking or showing forth the change. You apparently believe we receive some sort of "dose" of the Spirit and salvation, first when we are baptized; and then afterwards at Communion; and this wears off, or whatever, so we have to keep receiving it (as well as doing other good works) in order to finally make it to Heaven in the end. Then, it really is a whole other topic.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...)
And that's spiritual language. The physical elements used represent it, not impart it.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)
In your view, the impartation of the life is connected solely with something we DO, with salvation ever hanging int he balance if the dosage wears off, or whatever.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.
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?)
The reality is the reality; the water and communion represent (show) it. I guess we are looking at "convey" differently. I take convey as "show the reality", and you take it as "impart the reality".Matt, based on his last post that I responded, Eric really doesn't seem to support even that. Although he seems to grudgingly admit the possibility of a spiritual presence within the bread and wine, he ultimately seems to find such a position superfluous since the "spirit is already in us. He then defines "convey" (a word I had used) in such a way (Ie in which something merely 'represents' another reality without actually 'making present' the reality) in order to assert that Memorialists believe that baptism and communion "convey" the reality they signify. Perhaps, I should have been more specific in which word I used to describe the idea the physcial object/sign actually making present the reality it signifies, instead of the object being a mere visual aid of a reality already present. Anyway, sorry for speaking for Eric--I'll see if he acknowledges if this assessment of his view is correct.
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....
Again, as I mentioned above, what I was trying to address was the fact that you are claiming the bread and wine Is the body, but since it doesn't change, it is really a "spiritual presence". This "presence" does not match neither the Incarnation, nor the glory cloud and other Theophanies used to try to illustrate it. I hate to say it, but this is just an abstraction, and the type of argument Paul tells us to ignore; being fruitless.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.
Matt Black said:EricB, just to pick up on a couple of your points: Er...no; the memorialist position is saying that there is no Presence at all in the bread and wine and that it is simply a remembrance of Christ's death (hence 'memorialist'). You are - correct me if I'm wrong - saying that there is no physical change but that there is a spiritual Presence in communion. That is quite a way along the continuum away from memorialism and seems to me to be close to the kind of receptionism (believers receive Christ spiritually when they eat and drink at communion) espoused by Anglicans and Presbyterians.
I believe there is a spiritual presence in the Communion, if you understand that "the Communion" is US, the people having actual "communion". It's not inanimate objects that have or are "the communion". They are just used for it, representing Christ's flesh and blood.You're closer to the trans end of the continuum with your receptionism than you are the memorialist end, IMO.
What they are doing here, is going back and forth between saying it is not a change, but it is Christ's actual flesh and blood, but it's really a "spiritua; presence" comparable to the Theophanies and the Incarnation.The Orthodox do believe in a physical change but do not attempt to explain it; they are content to leave it as a mystery.
Oh, but you've always argued pretty much just like DT. I see you're listed as "Baptist (Baptist Union of Great Britain)", so I thought you might be another convert [COUGHdefectorCOUGH]:laugh: like him and others.I'm not Orthodox