Sam Lowry said:
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
Sam LowryThat's why we have apostolic succession. Gnostics are your problem. said:
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I honestly can't say you've done much better than the Gnostics.
That doesn't surprise me. Fundamentalists and Gnostics have a lot in common.
It doesn't surprise me that that those worse than Gnostics would come to such a bad conclusion.
Regardless... did you give up on my question?
Which question?
You have so many you've dodged. Take your pick.
How about this one?: does the following excerpt mean that the writer believes "I am the door" to be literal?
"Enter by that opening, the way into the house of refuge, through Jesus, who is the door. Not just any door, but the sturdiest of all doors, a door whose hinges do not rust or warp, whose jambs forever remain straight, whose threshold never fails."
Like I said, if the contexts were at all similar, you could draw that conclusion.
So, even if that writer had explicitly written "This statement is figurative"?? That would make the context similar.
And could we get an actual answer to my question? I didn't ask about context. I just asked about that one excerpt.
The answer is that it depends on the context. We both know from previous experience that it's not literal. But if you read it in a complete vacuum, as you are so wont to do, there's no telling what it might mean.
The explicit statment "It is figurative" IS that context. Are you forgetting? It would seem that one (YOU) who is leaving that inconvenient fact out of the equation is the one who is reading things in a vacuum.
You were asking about the "door" passage, remember? As for the "figurative" language, no...it is not its own context.
Right, and the context was that the writer, like Augustine, had written "It is figuratve" regarding Jesus being a door.
You're the one not remembering. Sheesh, this is getting ridiculous. I'M the one having to have the patience here.
I missed that part, but it still leaves all the other statements about "our faith requiring us to believe," etc. Again, Augustine is highlighting the contrast between the carnal or cannibalistic understanding and the true spiritual (not symbolic) meaning. Christ is literally present in the sacrament, though not in the form his disciples saw when they knew him on earth. At the same time, it is a figure or symbol of Jesus the man who walked and talked with them. Both things can be true. And not coincidentally, that happens to be exactly what Catholics believe. I don't know how to make it any clearer.
You missed that part, because you weren't keeping up. You had specifically argued that if the "context was the same", then one might conclude the literal meaning. So I made the context the same by adding that the writer also had said "it is figurative" just like Augustine did.
Regardless - Augustine was doing a whole lot more than just "contrasting the carnal and cannibalistic understanding and the true spiritual understanding". He was explicitly saying it was NOT the former, and it was
entirely the latter. "
You are NOT going to eat this body". There is no room for any exception there. Your whole "he didn't say 'purely figurative' so therefore he possibly believed in a literal meaning too" was a disingenuous, nonsense argument.
Now, regarding the part of your comment I bolded above - Augustine was not saying "It is a figure" to mean that it is the symbol of the man Jesus they walked and talked with. You are being disingenuous here, yet again. He was explicitly saying that "eating Jesus' flesh" was
figurative language, i.e. it was NOT LITERAL.
In your comment, you're also playing the motte-and-bailey game yet again. What does "literally present" mean? Do you mean
physically present? If so, then you still have not shown that this is what Augustine believes. In fact, his quotes I gave show that he does NOT believe this. Otherwise, he would be completely contradicting himself. He would be insisting that "eating Jesus' flesh" wasn't literal and that "You are NOT going to eat this body", but then go on to insist that the bread in the Eucharist is his literal, physical body.... which we are indeed going to eat. "
You are NOT going to eat this body".... except when you DO eat this body"?? At
best, you'd be demonstrating just how flawed Augustine is, which ultimately means he is not reliable and therefore should not be trusted.
I remind you that your Church's view on "Real Presence" includes BOTH a spiritual AND physical presence of Jesus in the Eucharist bread and wine. So if Augustine believed in a spiritual presence, BUT did not believe in a physical presence, then NO, he did NOT believe exactly what Roman Catholics believe. On the contrary, he would have been anathematized.