BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
curtpenn said:
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
curtpenn said:
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
curtpenn said:
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
Coke Bear said:
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
I'd have to read their entire discourse to see the context for these words. You still could be reading into their interpretation, like you are Paul in 1 Corinthians.
Here is a link to:
Didache - last first century
Ignatius - 107 AD
Ireneaus - 190 D (speed tip - Control-F search with Eucharist, pg. 103-105
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
Regardless, most of these quotes are 300 years after Jesus. As I already said, even if we assume they took it literally, the real question is are they right or not. The real question is whether that is actually what Jesus and his apostles taught. Are the early church fathers infallible?
I only supplied from less than 200 years of Church history so that you will see that what we have believe since the beginning.
No, the Church fathers aren't infallible. But the totality of there writing show what they believed and it has been consistently taught since 33 AD.
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
No, of course I'm not infallible in my interpretation. But I'm not just giving you my interpretation. I'm giving you the reasoning, which is consistent with the whole of scripture. I think I've demonstrated how your interpretation is fallible for many reasons, one of them being because if you take Jesus literally, then the Eucharist is an absolute requirement for salvation. And that is definitely not taught by Jesus and his apostles in Scripture.
No you're giving me YOUR fallible interpretation of the the passages with YOUR logic. You are arguing against 2000 years of tradition, the Bible, and the magisterium.
ADDENDUM - I have also provide the logic behind the Catholic position, the koine Greek, the ties to the OT testament with respect to manna in the desert and the Passover meal.
The typology, the Greek, the scriptures, the fathers, and the tradition are squarely on the side on the Real Presence. Your position is based on YOUR fallible interpretation.
The logic you've presented is wrong. You're appealing to tradition, which is wrong. The Koine Greek doesn't support your position like you think it does.
Based on the logic FROM SCRIPTURE, I've shown that your position is wrong. The fact that you can't accept the fact that the literal reading of Jesus' words shows that the Eucharist is absolutely required for salvation shows this.
In typical Tarp Dusting fashion, you haven't SHOWN anything other than your invincible ignorance and overwhelming arrogance. You have nothing but your typical begging the question repeated ad nauseam.
You clearly don't understand the Trinity as you deny Christ's humanity via Mary. Inasmuch as God Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are one per SCRIPTURE, and Christ is fully God and fully man, and Mary imparted her humanity to Jesus, then she is truly the Theotokos. As such, she is worthy of veneration and able to intercede on our behalf, though intercession is by no means limited to Mary.
You also demonstrate a flawed understanding of the Eucharistic Feast/Mass/Communion/Lord's Supper, as believed by most Christians throughout the history of Christ's church and continuing to this day. These beliefs have their origins in first century teaching and are consistent with the teachings re the Last Supper as found in the synoptic gospels. They are also fully consistent with covenantal theology. "Christ our Passover is sacrificed for us; Therefore let us keep the feast." - Book of Common Prayer via I Cor 5:7-8. At the Eucharist, we are participating in the very room of Christ's own sacrificial offering of Himself in the forms of bread and wine. We partake of Him physically and spiritually both in obedience to His command and for our own sanctification as we re-create His once for all and all time sacrifice. How this is so, I am content to leave as a mystery, but accept on faith.
Mere Memorialism has its roots in a reaction contra Rome that is as much political as it is theological. Not hard to trace this movement to Puritans and thence to our nation's founding as well as to the flourishing of evangelical denominations and the modern phenomenon of so called "Bible" churches. No surprise that those of you who embrace the "priesthood of believers" ultimately have nowhere to stand other than upon your own interpretation of Scripture, however flawed that may be. That others may arrive at a different interpretation and claim their own authority as normative is to be expected. Ultimately it's all turtles all the way down for you, as it is for us all. In any event, you remain a tool of Satan as you needlessly attack the body of Christ.
A "tool of Satan" can not work against Satan, because a house divided can not stand. If you can not see that those prayers to Mary are idolatrous and heretical, then it's more likely that YOU are of Satan, not I.
"Do this in remembrance of me."
"A "tool of Satan" can not work against Satan". Exactly my point. You take issue with something that isn't Roman dogma and endlessly denigrate the largest body of believers ever. It's more likely YOU are of Satan.
"This is my body...this is my blood".
For the umpteenth time, it doesn't have to be Roman dogma to be a carried belief and practice of Roman Catholics. And the Marian dogmas are indeed unbiblical, not to mention idolatrous.
If Jesus was saying that the bread was literally his body, then his body was sacrificed during the Last Supper, and then again on the cross. Hebrews says his body was sacrificed "ONCE for all". And if the bread was literally his body, then according to his literal words, if you eat that bread, you have eternal life. If that were the case, then why didn't Jesus just make all the bread given during the feeding of the 5000 and 7000 his body, so that all those people could eat it and get eternal life, regardless of whether or not they believed in him? If fact, wouldn't it have easier for Jesus to make every bread on the globe his body, that way people will unknowingly eat his body and be saved, and that way he could save everyone in the world even if they don't have faith in him? Wouldn't that have been magnitudes easier than having to go the cross and suffer intensely and die, only to still lose people to hell because they don't believe in him?
Marian veneration is not "unbiblical". For the umpteenth time, Marian practices of whatever sort are not mutually exclusive with salvation nor do they preclude it. It is adiaphora to the core.
I see a lot of your typical "if" statements tortuously strung together as always. No surprise there. There is no conflict between Jesus saying the bread and wine are his body and blood and Hebrews "ONCE for all" once one has a proper understanding of the Eucharistic Feast. I suggest you study harder and try to learn something rather than continue with your juridical excess. Embrace the mystery. It will do you good, as it is intended to do.
Marian "veneration" that promotes the belief that she was sinless, that she was assumed bodily into heaven, and that she was perpetually a virgin are not biblical. Neither is Marian "veneration" that includes praying to her for intercession. Or "devotions"/prayers that call her sovereign, intercessor between sinners and God, the glory of heaven, Co-Mediatrix, or that we should entrust our soul and salvation into her hands.
Those "if" statements are called inductive reasoning. If we assume that your belief that the bread is literally Jesus' flesh, then what logically follows would fail, or be contrary to Scripture. The more logically and scripturally sound belief is that the meaning is figurative. If you'r'e not familiar with basic logic, then that's a fault on you, not me.
If the Last Supper bread was actually Jesus' body, his body was being offered as a sacrifice for the disciples to eat. How does a "proper understanding" of the Eucharist make this consistent with Hebrews 7:27 - "He has no need, like those high priests, to offer sacrifices daily, first for his own sins and then for those of the people, since he did this once for all when he offered up himself." and Hebrews 10:10 "And by that will, we have been made holy through the sacrifice of the body of Jesus Christ once for all."?
Not only that, how would this be consistent with the law of Torah, which forbade the eating of blood? Or whether Judas was saved or not, since he ate the bread? Or how all the times where how one gets saved is mentioned, the requirement of eating his literal flesh is never mentioned? Or how the thief on the cross got saved without partaking in the Eucharist? Just to name a few - I could go on.
I suggest you try harder and try to rightly divide the Word of God.
I suggest you try harder to make correct assertions in your attempts at what you pass off as "inductive reasoning".
" If we assume that your belief that the bread is literally Jesus' flesh, then what logically follows would fail, or be contrary to Scripture."
No, it doesn't. That's just your opinion.
"If Jesus was saying that the bread was literally his body, then his body was sacrificed during the Last Supper, and then again on the cross."
This "if" followed by your "then" is an incorrect conclusion. His offering at the last supper of His body is not the same thing as what happened on the cross. His death on the cross was the propitiating event.
"And if the bread was literally his body, then according to his literal words, if you eat that bread, you have eternal life."
Jesus did not say if you eat my body you will have eternal life, so this assertion is wrong from its beginning. Again, you are confused about the Eucharist. Study more.
"If that were the case, then why didn't Jesus just make all the bread given during the feeding of the 5000 and 7000 his body, so that all those people could eat it and get eternal life, regardless of whether or not they believed in him? If fact, wouldn't it have easier for Jesus to make every bread on the globe his body, that way people will unknowingly eat his body and be saved, and that way he could save everyone in the world even if they don't have faith in him? Wouldn't that have been magnitudes easier than having to go the cross and suffer intensely and die, only to still lose people to hell because they don't believe in him?"
= silly word salad following another faulty "if".
As an Anglican, I am indifferent to Mary's perpetual virginity, bodily assumption, and sinlessness. That said, you cannot "prove" from Holy Scripture that she is not able to intercede on our behalf. Further, as the Mother of God it should be expected that she is due respect and adoration, and could be considered the glory of heaven or queen of heaven if we choose to use that sort of imagery. Of course, it sounds odd to our ears now that there are few kings or queens, but for most of recorded history such usage would make perfect sense.
"Not only that, how would this be consistent with the law of Torah, which forbade the eating of blood?" Irrelevant since Christ and His sacrifice represent a New Covenant that fulfills and replaces the old.
"Or whether Judas was saved or not, since he ate the bread? Or how all the times where how one gets saved is mentioned, the requirement of eating his literal flesh is never mentioned? Or how the thief on the cross got saved without partaking in the Eucharist? "
Mere partaking of the elements is not salvific. Again, study the works of Jewell, Hooker, Andrewes, Cranmer, et al, and help yourself out. Sola Scriptura is a myth. We all bring our own interpretations. If you deny this, then you are deluded or a liar.