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You've worked this thread down a pointless rabbit hole over Mosaic law. My only point is EVEN if it was actual blood, in a cup, Jesus was fulfilled the Mosaic law and declare all thing clean. For this topic, the disciples were "harvesting" i.e. doing work on the Sabbath, which according to Jesus tradition, was doing work. As we discussed, this belief is evidenced today with the strict Eruv wires. Enough with that. Back to the real point is the real presence of Jesus' Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity in the under the appearance of bread and wine.
When we examine the drinking of his blood in John 6, we need to look back to the ratification ceremony on Mt. Sinai in:
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Exodus 24:8 said:
Moses then took the blood, sprinkled it on the people and said, "This is the blood of the covenant that the LORD has made with you in accordance with all these words."
Jesus at the last supper, explicitly eludes to same covenantal language found in Exodus 24 in:
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Matthew 26:27-28 said:
Then he took a cup, and when he had given thanks, he gave it to them, saying, "Drink from it, all of you. 28 This is my blood of the[a] covenant, which is poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins.
The Last Supper is the ratifying ceremony of the New and everlasting Covenant.
Moses used real blood from the victim to seal the ratification of the old covenant. Jesus would have to use real blood, His Blood, in the New and everlasting Covenant.
If it was just a symbol, it would be inferior to the old covenant. This wouldn't happen. The New "types" are always superior.
The same goes with the Passover meal. Jesus says, "This is my body, take and eat." He is the Lamb of God that must be eaten. Once again, if Jesus meant it figuratively or symbolically, this would have made Jesus' sacrifice inferior to the OT, which isn't possible.
You can deny all you want. That's on you. You are trying to argue with nearly 2000 years of consistently held teachings and scriptures going back to the first century.
Please locate the first person (and when) to deny this in history. Anything else is just YOUR fallible opinion on scripture. Why should I trust your opinion over 2000 years of history and scripture?
Since CokeBear has stepped away from the thread, I will answer this post as a stand alone comment, because I think it needs responding to.
1. Jesus had not completely fulfilled all of Mosaic Law at the Last Supper, because he had to do so for his
whole life. If Jesus sinned after the Last Supper before he was crucified, then he would have failed. Therefore, it wasn't until Jesus told His Father "It is finished" and then died on the cross when he completed the fulfillment. Therefore, the disciples were still bound by the Law during the Last Supper, and drinking blood would have been a violation. And Jesus would have sinned if he commanded them to violate the Law.
2. Jesus(God) did not claim "all things clean" until
after his death and resurrection (Acts 10). He did not make all things clean during the Last Supper, when he was still alive.
3. Even if one thinks the disciples "harvested" on the Sabbath, thus breaking the Sabbath law, the point remains that Jesus did not "harvest" with them, and he did not command them to do it. Thus, he did not commit a sin.
4. The covenantal language in the Old Testament, which involved REAL blood, was still fulfilled in Jesus Christ in the literal sense, because Jesus shed his literal blood on the cross. The idea that because real blood was used in OT covenantal ritual then it means it was REAL blood in the Last Supper cup, is a non sequitur. If one has concluded that because the OT covenant ritual involved real blood then it must be Jesus' real blood in the cup, then one must also take the literal stance that drinking Jesus' literal blood is an absolute requirement for salvation - "unless you drink my blood, you have no life within you." But clearly this isn't taught as the gospel in Scripture. Not to mention, it falsifies many proclamations in the bible about how to get saved, because eating Jesus' flesh and drinking his blood are never mentioned.
Imagine for a moment, being told in person, directly BY JESUS HIMSELF, that you are saved. That is the thief on the cross. You'd have a hard time explaining how he got saved, even though he didn't get water bapized or eat and drink Jesus' literal flesh and blood. He was saved merely by a proclamation of his true
faith.