John 6 is not a eucharistic passage. But even if it were, it plainly mitigates against your position. Christ defines what he means by "eating" and "drinking" in v. 35.
John 6:35 Jesus said to them, "I am the bread of life; he who comes to Me will not hunger, and he who believes in Me will never thirst.
As you can clearly see, to "eat" of the bread of life is to come, to believe. Peter confirms that later when, after many had gone away and the rest were questioned about their intention, he responded, "To whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life." There, the "eating" is belief in the "words of eternal life."
You see once again that these "difficult" questions are answered by looking at the text of Scripture.
There is nothing "Lord's Supper" about this passage. That is likely why you never heard a message about this topic from there. You probably had a pastor who spent time in the word studying it, and as a result, preached what the text said.
You still face the issue of the metaphors of Scripture that you don't take this way. You still must remember that Jesus called it "bread" and "wine." If he did, who are you to say he was wrong? Even after he talked of it being his blood, he called it "fruit of the vine." If you were sereious about accepting the words of Jesus, that would be good enough for you to leave the "real presence." BUt you aren't serious about the words of Christ.
John 6:35 Jesus said to them, "I am the bread of life; he who comes to Me will not hunger, and he who believes in Me will never thirst.
As you can clearly see, to "eat" of the bread of life is to come, to believe. Peter confirms that later when, after many had gone away and the rest were questioned about their intention, he responded, "To whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life." There, the "eating" is belief in the "words of eternal life."
You see once again that these "difficult" questions are answered by looking at the text of Scripture.
There is nothing "Lord's Supper" about this passage. That is likely why you never heard a message about this topic from there. You probably had a pastor who spent time in the word studying it, and as a result, preached what the text said.
You still face the issue of the metaphors of Scripture that you don't take this way. You still must remember that Jesus called it "bread" and "wine." If he did, who are you to say he was wrong? Even after he talked of it being his blood, he called it "fruit of the vine." If you were sereious about accepting the words of Jesus, that would be good enough for you to leave the "real presence." BUt you aren't serious about the words of Christ.