This is quickly turning into a Shia vs Sunni debate....
"A day without sunshine is like, you know, night." — Steve Martin
Assassin said:
This is quickly turning into a Shia vs Sunni debate....
FLBear5630 said:
And you are the Cowboy?
You are dead out wrong and keep playing gotcha games.
Since you are 100% right on all of these issues and are apparently ennlighted with the truth. You should enjoy heaven and have the best seat. Maybe even be brought in consultation with God on what he really meant. Afterall, you know...
I am actually starting to believe Purgatory can be defined as talking with you. Keep going, this is all time served.
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:
Did I miss something here? Why is Mr. Sola Scriptura hanging on the very word of Augustine all of a sudden?
Is the argument here that Augustine didn't believe in the real presence?
Thank you. Sola scriptura is true, so I'm happy to be called that.
If you haven't gathered that I have proven that Augustine does not believe in the Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence, then you are either in denial or you have zero comprehension.
And how is sola scriptura not true? We know that Scripture is infallible. What other source of authority is infallible?
The pope? Don't make me laugh. Do we even need to debate this?
The College of Cardinals? How can they be, when they select anti-christ popes?
The bishops? Clearly not.
The priests? Do I even need to say anything?
The "magisterium" and church councils? Which magisterium and councils? There's no agreement over which councils are ecumenical, and thus valid, and councils have been accepted, rejected, and then accepted again. Councils have made icon veneration mandatory - when it is completely absent in Scripture and the early church, and even in the early church it was universally condemned. Councils did not agree as to the canon of Scripture. The Council of Trent anathematized the canons of Athanasius, Jerome, and the majority of fathers, theologians, scholars from the time of Jerome up until the time of the Reformation.
So what other source other than Scripture do you hold as infallible? If you can't argue for another, then even YOU have to agree with sola scriptura.
Augustine's views on the real presence are subject to debate, and perhaps not completely on top of Catholic teaching when using selective quotes, but the totality of his teachings make it possible to reconcile his teachings that you quote with the Catholic magisterium in a way that Sam has patiently tried to explain to you.
However, the opposite not true. It is impossible to reconcile your interpretation of some of Augustine's statements with the totality of his teachings.
He calls the Eucharist a sacrament in which one thing is seen but another understood (sacraments are not figurative or symbolic).
Augustine instructs that the Eucharist is to be adored before consuming it, even going so far as to say failure to adore the Eucharist would constitute a sin (if it is symbolic. or figurative, we have bigger problems here).
Augustine teaches that when you hear what is on the altar referred to as "the Body of Christ" the faithful are to respond with "Amen".
Augustine refers to a martyred deacon as one who administered the "sacred" chalice of Christ's blood.
Augustine teaches that failure to remain in spiritual communion with the church while taking the Eucharist serves as testimony against those who partake in the Eucharist.
So, to be clear, are you accepting Augustine as an authority on the topic of the Eucharist or not?
Your selective understanding of the Catechism is equally limited.
Ok, let's go over this again, since you guys are having REAL trouble with this.
Do you, or do you not agree, that the Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence is that the Eucharist bread is the same body as what the disciples saw in front of them in the Last supper (what they see), and that the Eucharist wine is the same blood of Jesus that was shed on the cross?
Yes or no?
I answered your post. So please, answer my question and then I'll answer your question:
Do you recognize Augustine as an authority on the Eucharist?
No, you did NOT answer the question.
If your answer is yes, then Augustine definitively did NOT believe in the Roman Catholic view of Real Presence. Do you honestly not see that??
I do not recognize Augustine as an infallible authority on anything, much less the Eucharist. But your Church's argument is that Augustine believed in your Real Presence view. I showed that he did not.
I didn't ask if you recognize Augustine as an infalible authority on the Eucharist. I asked if you recognize him as an authority on the Eucharist.
I don't understand why it is so hard to answer such a simple question. So, let's try one more time:
Do you recognize a Augustine as an authority on the Eucharist?
This is a simple question. I don't understand why it is so hard for you to answer.
Folks, what does it tell you about BTD and his theology that he is unwilling to answer such a simple question? Will anyone step up to speak for BTD? Is anyone willing to answer such a simple question about Augustine?
If he's not an infallible authority, then does any other authority you're thinking of matter with regard to the point of this debate? We certainly aren't arguing whether Augustine was an authority on the Eucharist for his particular congregation, or for the Roman Catholic Church, are we?
And even if we are, I think I've clearly shown that Augustine did not believe in the RC view on the Real Presence, so if he's an authority for the RC church, why do you not listen to him?
Now answer MY question. You avoided it. It's a very simple question. Will anyone step up for DallasBear, as he won't speak up?
I don't understand why you are avoiding such a simple and straightforward question. I just want you to be honest with us.
I've already got a reply typed out to your other stuff once you answer my straight forward question.
Do you recognize Augustine as an authority on the Eucharist? Yes or no?
I really don't understand what is so hard about such a straight forward question.
Folks what does it tell us that BTD can't be honest with us about such an easy question? Clearly I have won the argument and he is trying to go back to his already defeated positions. [I'll avoid the rest of his nastiness].
Are you so stupid as to see that my answer is that I don't see him as an infallible authority, and therefore not a meaningful authority at all? If you want to qualify what you mean by "authority", then do so.
And NO, you did NOT answer my question. Folks, let me repeat my question for DallasBear since he obviously is trying to avoid it:
Do you, or do you not agree, that the Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence is that the Eucharist bread is the same body as what the disciples saw in front of them in the Last supper (what they see), and that the Eucharist wine is the same blood of Jesus that was shed on the cross?
Yes or no?
Straight up cut and paste of the question above that you neglected to answer, and then went on a tirade about how I don't answer questions, when I clearly did.
C. I promised a serious answer, so here you go:
1. We know that Jesus lost followers over his teaching that they would need to eat his flesh and drink his blood. Seems like an odd thing for Jesus to lose followers over if he wasn't being literal. But reasonable minds can disagree, I suppose.
2. The next question is what do you believe the apostles consumed at The Last Supper after Jesus consecrated the bread and wine? CCC 1376, which you selectively emphasized, has an introductory that establishes what Catholic teaching is saying (again, you should read and comprehend the totality instead of playing your silly gotcha games). CCC 1376: Jesus himself said it was his Body and the covenant was in his blood. [Totality Alert:] Catholic teaching recognizes The Last Supper as the first Mass. Consequently, what 1376 is telling you is that God, through the Holy Spirit, using his priests, consecrates the communion wafers and wine into the same thing that Christ consecrated the bread and wine into at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less. [Totality Alert] What is not seen physically is understood spiritually (Augustine). In whatever form Jesus was present in the consecrated bread and wine at The Last Supper (we believe the substance of his real presence was there) is how he is present in the Mass I attended this morning and any other time Catholics have celebrated the Mass culminating in the Liturgy of the Eucharist. So, do I believe that the apostles consumed his real body in the consecrated bread and wine at The Last Supper? Yes, Jesus said as much. I also believe that is exactly the sacrifice that is offered at the Mass.
So answer for yourself what you believe the apostles consumed at The Last Supper. Your answer to that issue will tell you what you believe you are consuming when you take communion in 2026.
3. As for Augustine,
a. that he calls the communion a sacrament tells you that he does not believe it is symbolic or figurative. I know, you reject the idea of sacraments, but labeling it a sacrament confers that Augustine believes something divine and holy is in the communion. Otherwise there is no universe in which he would call it a sacrament.
b. That he instructs adoration (worship) of the Eucharist because he is worshipping the body of the Jesus, and even suggests it is a sin not to adore it prior to consuming it, screams that he believes there is something holy and divine in the Eucharist. If he truly believes the Eucharist is symbolic and figurative, then he is engaging in something sinister. Note, you accuse of us or worshipping Mary even though we tell you Marian devotions are (i) veneration and (ii) not required by the Church.
Here Augustine is teaching something much deeper than veneration should occur and that it is required. If he believes it is figurative or symbolic, well, I can't wait to hear what label you have for him.
c. Augustine's reference of a martyred deacon as an administrator of the "sacred" chalice of Christ's blood is obviously telling you he sees the Eucharist as divine. To refer to the chalice as sacred could only be done if he believes what the vessel carries is divine.
d. Teaching spiritual damnation for failure to be in communion with the church (lower case "c" just for you, but, obviously we believe it is the "Church" he is referring to) while partaking in communion self-evidently express the divine nature of the Eucharist. I hope you don't need an explanation for that.
There is more from Augustine, but this is enough for now. The original point remains: Sam has patiently tried to harmonize the Augustine quotes you have selectively emphasized with the totality of Augustine's teachings and the Magisterium of the Catholic Church. Perhaps you disagree with Sam, but reasonable minds can get to where Sam is.
What cannot be done is harmonization of your interpretation that Augustine viewed the Eucharist as symbolic and figurative with the totality of Augustine's teachings (let alone the Magisterium). So, either Augustine was sloppy, lazy, insincere or you are misunderstanding him.
Given that you don't even recognize him as a meaningful authority (your words), I'm not sure why you are trying to argue what any of his teachings truly, actually mean other than engaging in some game where you hope to score cheap points by taking things out of their complete context and then pretending you don't understand when people like Sam patiently explain it to you.
Also, FYI, the Catholic Church does not recognize doctors of Church as infallible. Tremendous guides, generally very good on theology, but still susceptible to error.
Look - all I'm asking is if your answer to my question is "yes", or "no". Here it is, yet again:
Do you, or do you not agree, that the Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence is that the Eucharist bread is the same body as what the disciples saw in front of them in the Last supper (what they see), and that the Eucharist wine is the same blood of Jesus that was shed on the cross?
Yes or no? This is a simple question. It means what it's asking. You're a disciple LOOKING at Jesus during the Last Supper. Is the Roman Catholic view that the body you see is the same body that is in the Eucharist, or is it not?
If you think this question is misleading, or invalid, then EXPLAIN., So far, in everything you've written you've not answered the question, nor have you explained why the question is invalid. I want an answer, not a sermon on
I can answer all your items, each one above later, because I want to address the theological argument of the Eucharist after this. I just want to know if the above is an accurate statement about the Roman Catholic view of the Eucharist. Can you at least do that?
You proved yourself incapable of giving a yes or no answer so you have no standing to demand one. My long post above answers your question fairly, sincerely and honestly.
I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less. That is my understanding of Catholic teaching.
Ok, so you're chickening out of the question. Several of your Catholic brethren did the same.
As far your "answer" here - does "same exact consecrated bread and wine" mean that the bread IS the same body that Jesus disciples could see, and is the wine the same blood that was shed on the cross?
You are just trying to bring up already defeated arguments. Your question has been answered. I can't understand it for you.
Umm, no it hasn't. Your "answer" didn't address my question at all.
Why won't you just answer it? In the 15 posts or so that you've made so far, you think you could've spared just one to actually answer the question. I even asked you a follow up to one of your "answers" (which didn't answer the question):
Does "same exact consecrated bread and wine" that you referred to in your answer mean that the bread IS the same body that Jesus disciples could see, and is the wine the same blood that was shed on the cross?
Assassin said:
This is quickly turning into a Shia vs Sunni debate....
DallasBear9902Look - all I'm asking is if your answer to my question is "yes", or "no". Here it is, yet again: said:Quote:Quote:Quote:Quote:Quote:
Do you, or do you not agree, that the Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence is that the Eucharist bread is the same body as what the disciples saw in front of them in the Last supper (what they see), and that the Eucharist wine is the same blood of Jesus that was shed on the cross?
Yes or no? This is a simple question. It means what it's asking. You're a disciple LOOKING at Jesus during the Last Supper. Is the Roman Catholic view that the body you see is the same body that is in the Eucharist, or is it not?
If you think this question is misleading, or invalid, then EXPLAIN., So far, in everything you've written you've not answered the question, nor have you explained why the question is invalid. I want an answer, not a sermon on
I can answer all your items, each one above later, because I want to address the theological argument of the Eucharist after this. I just want to know if the above is an accurate statement about the Roman Catholic view of the Eucharist. Can you at least do that?
You proved yourself incapable of giving a yes or no answer so you have no standing to demand one. My long post above answers your question fairly, sincerely and honestly.
I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less. That is my understanding of Catholic teaching.
Ok, so you're chickening out of the question. Several of your Catholic brethren did the same.
As far your "answer" here - does "same exact consecrated bread and wine" mean that the bread IS the same body that Jesus disciples could see, and is the wine the same blood that was shed on the cross?
You are just trying to bring up already defeated arguments. Your question has been answered. I can't understand it for you.
Umm, no it hasn't. Your "answer" didn't address my question at all.
Why won't you just answer it? In the 15 posts or so that you've made so far, you think you could've spared just one to actually answer the question. I even asked you a follow up to one of your "answers" (which didn't answer the question):
Does "same exact consecrated bread and wine" that you referred to in your answer mean that the bread IS the same body that Jesus disciples could see, and is the wine the same blood that was shed on the cross?
The question has been answered multiple times, mostly by Sam. I point you to Augustine: what cannot be understood physically is understood by spiritual faith. I also point you to the Catholic Church that teaches the Eucharist to be one of central mysteries of the faith (also called a sacred mystery) because the real presence of Jesus Christ (body, blood, soul and divinity) is there in the appearance of bread and wine.
We believe the same was true at The Last Supper.
You want a material explanation subject to the laws of nature when it is a metaphysical event not bound by the laws of nature as you and I understand them.
You want reason to explain that which is a spiritual mystery. You ask for the impossible. I would have thought you would have understood it after 15 pages in this thread and countless other threads, but here we are.
DallasBear9902 said:Assassin said:
This is quickly turning into a Shia vs Sunni debate....
Yeah, when someone argues in bad faith sometimes you need to reflect his style back at him in hopes he can be shaken to change.
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902Look - all I'm asking is if your answer to my question is "yes", or "no". Here it is, yet again: said:Quote:Quote:Quote:Quote:Quote:
Do you, or do you not agree, that the Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence is that the Eucharist bread is the same body as what the disciples saw in front of them in the Last supper (what they see), and that the Eucharist wine is the same blood of Jesus that was shed on the cross?
Yes or no? This is a simple question. It means what it's asking. You're a disciple LOOKING at Jesus during the Last Supper. Is the Roman Catholic view that the body you see is the same body that is in the Eucharist, or is it not?
If you think this question is misleading, or invalid, then EXPLAIN., So far, in everything you've written you've not answered the question, nor have you explained why the question is invalid. I want an answer, not a sermon on
I can answer all your items, each one above later, because I want to address the theological argument of the Eucharist after this. I just want to know if the above is an accurate statement about the Roman Catholic view of the Eucharist. Can you at least do that?
You proved yourself incapable of giving a yes or no answer so you have no standing to demand one. My long post above answers your question fairly, sincerely and honestly.
I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less. That is my understanding of Catholic teaching.
Ok, so you're chickening out of the question. Several of your Catholic brethren did the same.
As far your "answer" here - does "same exact consecrated bread and wine" mean that the bread IS the same body that Jesus disciples could see, and is the wine the same blood that was shed on the cross?
You are just trying to bring up already defeated arguments. Your question has been answered. I can't understand it for you.
Umm, no it hasn't. Your "answer" didn't address my question at all.
Why won't you just answer it? In the 15 posts or so that you've made so far, you think you could've spared just one to actually answer the question. I even asked you a follow up to one of your "answers" (which didn't answer the question):
Does "same exact consecrated bread and wine" that you referred to in your answer mean that the bread IS the same body that Jesus disciples could see, and is the wine the same blood that was shed on the cross?
The question has been answered multiple times, mostly by Sam. I point you to Augustine: what cannot be understood physically is understood by spiritual faith. I also point you to the Catholic Church that teaches the Eucharist to be one of central mysteries of the faith (also called a sacred mystery) because the real presence of Jesus Christ (body, blood, soul and divinity) is there in the appearance of bread and wine.
We believe the same was true at The Last Supper.
You want a material explanation subject to the laws of nature when it is a metaphysical event not bound by the laws of nature as you and I understand them.
You want reason to explain that which is a spiritual mystery. You ask for the impossible. I would have thought you would have understood it after 15 pages in this thread and countless other threads, but here we are.
No, Sam expressly avoided answering the question. If you disagree, then point to exactly where he answered the following question:
"Do you, or do you not agree, that the Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence is that the Eucharist bread is the same body as what the disciples saw in front of them in the Last supper (what they see), and that the Eucharist wine is the same blood of Jesus that was shed on the cross? Yes or no?"
Why is this so difficult for you to understand? The question is straightforward and specific, unlike your "authority" question. Can you finally just give me your answer?
FLBear5630 said:
Because it is fun and you provide a target rich environment.
Seriously, because you are told answers over and over that you don't want to accept. We Catholics are supposed to accept your information as accurate and correct, but you do not provide the same courtesy. That is not a good trait. Many on here explain at nauseum why Catholics believe what they believe, but you know more. So, it is not an informational thing, it is a personality thing. Hence, the personal attacks.
You do not agree with the Catholic Church, you and several million others, great. Don't join. Go to whatever group you form or do believe in. More power to you. Nobody is going to make you go to a Catholic Church and do anything.
Got questions, we will answer our understanding and if it is not enough link you to others with better understanding. Learn as much as you like, don't tell us we are wrong and you are right. This isn't Math, nobody really knows what comes next just faith in it is close to what we believe. Best we can do at the end of the day. And us Catholics try to do better...
Get it?
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:FLBear5630 said:
Because it is fun and you provide a target rich environment.
Seriously, because you are told answers over and over that you don't want to accept. We Catholics are supposed to accept your information as accurate and correct, but you do not provide the same courtesy. That is not a good trait. Many on here explain at nauseum why Catholics believe what they believe, but you know more. So, it is not an informational thing, it is a personality thing. Hence, the personal attacks.
You do not agree with the Catholic Church, you and several million others, great. Don't join. Go to whatever group you form or do believe in. More power to you. Nobody is going to make you go to a Catholic Church and do anything.
Got questions, we will answer our understanding and if it is not enough link you to others with better understanding. Learn as much as you like, don't tell us we are wrong and you are right. This isn't Math, nobody really knows what comes next just faith in it is close to what we believe. Best we can do at the end of the day. And us Catholics try to do better...
Get it?
I don't accept your "answers" that you've told me "over and over" because they are NOT answering the question.
So I'm asking a very specific question to focus you onto the peritnent issue. A question that is still unanswered by you.
It's clear that you're avoiding it.
DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902Look - all I'm asking is if your answer to my question is "yes", or "no". Here it is, yet again: said:Quote:Quote:Quote:Quote:Quote:
Do you, or do you not agree, that the Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence is that the Eucharist bread is the same body as what the disciples saw in front of them in the Last supper (what they see), and that the Eucharist wine is the same blood of Jesus that was shed on the cross?
Yes or no? This is a simple question. It means what it's asking. You're a disciple LOOKING at Jesus during the Last Supper. Is the Roman Catholic view that the body you see is the same body that is in the Eucharist, or is it not?
If you think this question is misleading, or invalid, then EXPLAIN., So far, in everything you've written you've not answered the question, nor have you explained why the question is invalid. I want an answer, not a sermon on
I can answer all your items, each one above later, because I want to address the theological argument of the Eucharist after this. I just want to know if the above is an accurate statement about the Roman Catholic view of the Eucharist. Can you at least do that?
You proved yourself incapable of giving a yes or no answer so you have no standing to demand one. My long post above answers your question fairly, sincerely and honestly.
I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less. That is my understanding of Catholic teaching.
Ok, so you're chickening out of the question. Several of your Catholic brethren did the same.
As far your "answer" here - does "same exact consecrated bread and wine" mean that the bread IS the same body that Jesus disciples could see, and is the wine the same blood that was shed on the cross?
You are just trying to bring up already defeated arguments. Your question has been answered. I can't understand it for you.
Umm, no it hasn't. Your "answer" didn't address my question at all.
Why won't you just answer it? In the 15 posts or so that you've made so far, you think you could've spared just one to actually answer the question. I even asked you a follow up to one of your "answers" (which didn't answer the question):
Does "same exact consecrated bread and wine" that you referred to in your answer mean that the bread IS the same body that Jesus disciples could see, and is the wine the same blood that was shed on the cross?
The question has been answered multiple times, mostly by Sam. I point you to Augustine: what cannot be understood physically is understood by spiritual faith. I also point you to the Catholic Church that teaches the Eucharist to be one of central mysteries of the faith (also called a sacred mystery) because the real presence of Jesus Christ (body, blood, soul and divinity) is there in the appearance of bread and wine.
We believe the same was true at The Last Supper.
You want a material explanation subject to the laws of nature when it is a metaphysical event not bound by the laws of nature as you and I understand them.
You want reason to explain that which is a spiritual mystery. You ask for the impossible. I would have thought you would have understood it after 15 pages in this thread and countless other threads, but here we are.
No, Sam expressly avoided answering the question. If you disagree, then point to exactly where he answered the following question:
"Do you, or do you not agree, that the Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence is that the Eucharist bread is the same body as what the disciples saw in front of them in the Last supper (what they see), and that the Eucharist wine is the same blood of Jesus that was shed on the cross? Yes or no?"
Why is this so difficult for you to understand? The question is straightforward and specific, unlike your "authority" question. Can you finally just give me your answer?
So, he has asked: do we believe the consecrated Eucharist is the same body as the Apostles saw in front of them in The Last Supper?
I have said multiple times in this thread that yes!
DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:FLBear5630 said:
Because it is fun and you provide a target rich environment.
Seriously, because you are told answers over and over that you don't want to accept. We Catholics are supposed to accept your information as accurate and correct, but you do not provide the same courtesy. That is not a good trait. Many on here explain at nauseum why Catholics believe what they believe, but you know more. So, it is not an informational thing, it is a personality thing. Hence, the personal attacks.
You do not agree with the Catholic Church, you and several million others, great. Don't join. Go to whatever group you form or do believe in. More power to you. Nobody is going to make you go to a Catholic Church and do anything.
Got questions, we will answer our understanding and if it is not enough link you to others with better understanding. Learn as much as you like, don't tell us we are wrong and you are right. This isn't Math, nobody really knows what comes next just faith in it is close to what we believe. Best we can do at the end of the day. And us Catholics try to do better...
Get it?
I don't accept your "answers" that you've told me "over and over" because they are NOT answering the question.
So I'm asking a very specific question to focus you onto the peritnent issue. A question that is still unanswered by you.
It's clear that you're avoiding it.
Don't accept it. That is your prerogative.
But stop lying and saying it hasn't been answered. It has been answered, you just don't accept the answer.
See folks, he admits the question has been answered. He just refuses to accept the answer because it is not what he wants.
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:FLBear5630 said:
Because it is fun and you provide a target rich environment.
Seriously, because you are told answers over and over that you don't want to accept. We Catholics are supposed to accept your information as accurate and correct, but you do not provide the same courtesy. That is not a good trait. Many on here explain at nauseum why Catholics believe what they believe, but you know more. So, it is not an informational thing, it is a personality thing. Hence, the personal attacks.
You do not agree with the Catholic Church, you and several million others, great. Don't join. Go to whatever group you form or do believe in. More power to you. Nobody is going to make you go to a Catholic Church and do anything.
Got questions, we will answer our understanding and if it is not enough link you to others with better understanding. Learn as much as you like, don't tell us we are wrong and you are right. This isn't Math, nobody really knows what comes next just faith in it is close to what we believe. Best we can do at the end of the day. And us Catholics try to do better...
Get it?
I don't accept your "answers" that you've told me "over and over" because they are NOT answering the question.
So I'm asking a very specific question to focus you onto the peritnent issue. A question that is still unanswered by you.
It's clear that you're avoiding it.
Don't accept it. That is your prerogative.
But stop lying and saying it hasn't been answered. It has been answered, you just don't accept the answer.
See folks, he admits the question has been answered. He just refuses to accept the answer because it is not what he wants.
It isn't "lying" because as I've clearly explained, you answering my question thusly:
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
.... clearly does NOT answer whether you are saying the bread is the same body as what the disciples were seeing, and the same blood as was shed on the cross.
If you can't see this, then there's nothing I can do to help you.
DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:FLBear5630 said:
Because it is fun and you provide a target rich environment.
Seriously, because you are told answers over and over that you don't want to accept. We Catholics are supposed to accept your information as accurate and correct, but you do not provide the same courtesy. That is not a good trait. Many on here explain at nauseum why Catholics believe what they believe, but you know more. So, it is not an informational thing, it is a personality thing. Hence, the personal attacks.
You do not agree with the Catholic Church, you and several million others, great. Don't join. Go to whatever group you form or do believe in. More power to you. Nobody is going to make you go to a Catholic Church and do anything.
Got questions, we will answer our understanding and if it is not enough link you to others with better understanding. Learn as much as you like, don't tell us we are wrong and you are right. This isn't Math, nobody really knows what comes next just faith in it is close to what we believe. Best we can do at the end of the day. And us Catholics try to do better...
Get it?
I don't accept your "answers" that you've told me "over and over" because they are NOT answering the question.
So I'm asking a very specific question to focus you onto the peritnent issue. A question that is still unanswered by you.
It's clear that you're avoiding it.
Don't accept it. That is your prerogative.
But stop lying and saying it hasn't been answered. It has been answered, you just don't accept the answer.
See folks, he admits the question has been answered. He just refuses to accept the answer because it is not what he wants.
It isn't "lying" because as I've clearly explained, you answering my question thusly:
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
.... clearly does NOT answer whether you are saying the bread is the same body as what the disciples were seeing, and the same blood as was shed on the cross.
If you can't see this, then there's nothing I can do to help you.
Again, you are asking for a material explanation for a metaphysical event. A sacred mystery of the faith.
CCC 1381. You quoted Augustine as saying that what could not be seen physically is understood spiritually. Your question cannot be answered by the senses but is answered by faith. A faith you don't share. Which is fine, it is your right and prerogative.
You are doing that thing where you don't want to take in the totality of what the Church teaches but instead want to play gotcha games with excerpts devoid of context. You will not receive a natural explanation for a metaphysical mystery of faith. That is fine by me. I've also told you that you don't need to believe in Our Lady of Guadalupe or St. Juan Diego's tilma. Metaphysical event.
But stop pretending like you haven't been given good faith explanations and answers to your questions simply because you refuse to accept them or, worse, because it fails to fall into some trap you think you have set.
You are unable to explain precisely, in terms that reconcile with the material world, how Jesus became incarnate of the Blessed Virgin. It is a sacred mystery that is a matter of faith. Your inability to explain it in no way undermines your belief in it or disproves it. Same thing here.
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:FLBear5630 said:
Because it is fun and you provide a target rich environment.
Seriously, because you are told answers over and over that you don't want to accept. We Catholics are supposed to accept your information as accurate and correct, but you do not provide the same courtesy. That is not a good trait. Many on here explain at nauseum why Catholics believe what they believe, but you know more. So, it is not an informational thing, it is a personality thing. Hence, the personal attacks.
You do not agree with the Catholic Church, you and several million others, great. Don't join. Go to whatever group you form or do believe in. More power to you. Nobody is going to make you go to a Catholic Church and do anything.
Got questions, we will answer our understanding and if it is not enough link you to others with better understanding. Learn as much as you like, don't tell us we are wrong and you are right. This isn't Math, nobody really knows what comes next just faith in it is close to what we believe. Best we can do at the end of the day. And us Catholics try to do better...
Get it?
I don't accept your "answers" that you've told me "over and over" because they are NOT answering the question.
So I'm asking a very specific question to focus you onto the peritnent issue. A question that is still unanswered by you.
It's clear that you're avoiding it.
Don't accept it. That is your prerogative.
But stop lying and saying it hasn't been answered. It has been answered, you just don't accept the answer.
See folks, he admits the question has been answered. He just refuses to accept the answer because it is not what he wants.
It isn't "lying" because as I've clearly explained, you answering my question thusly:
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
.... clearly does NOT answer whether you are saying the bread is the same body as what the disciples were seeing, and the same blood as was shed on the cross.
If you can't see this, then there's nothing I can do to help you.
Again, you are asking for a material explanation for a metaphysical event. A sacred mystery of the faith.
CCC 1381. You quoted Augustine as saying that what could not be seen physically is understood spiritually. Your question cannot be answered by the senses but is answered by faith. A faith you don't share. Which is fine, it is your right and prerogative.
You are doing that thing where you don't want to take in the totality of what the Church teaches but instead want to play gotcha games with excerpts devoid of context. You will not receive a natural explanation for a metaphysical mystery of faith. That is fine by me. I've also told you that you don't need to believe in Our Lady of Guadalupe or St. Juan Diego's tilma. Metaphysical event.
But stop pretending like you haven't been given good faith explanations and answers to your questions simply because you refuse to accept them or, worse, because it fails to fall into some trap you think you have set.
You are unable to explain precisely, in terms that reconcile with the material world, how Jesus became incarnate of the Blessed Virgin. It is a sacred mystery that is a matter of faith. Your inability to explain it in no way undermines your belief in it or disproves it. Same thing here.
All I was asking was whether you agreed or did not agree with the statement I provided. Nothing more, nothing less.
The reason I didn't accept your "answers" was because they didn't answer the question. I challenged your to point out where Sam answered the question, and you failed. I challenged you to provided exactly where YOU answered the question, and you failed. if you can't understand that your "answer"
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
... does NOT answer the question, then you have a comprehension. problem. I just don't know what else to say. You either get this or you don't. And if you have a problem with comprehension like that, I think this discussion with you ain't gonna be too productive. But I'll try anyway.
FLBear5630 said:
Avoiding what? Augustine believed in the real presence. Source Augustinian Order he founded.
Here is an article on it.
https://chnetwork.org/2010/03/16/st-augustines-belief-in-the-real-presence/
Pretty straight forward. Done.
You disagree, imagine that! Noted.
Next....
DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:FLBear5630 said:
Because it is fun and you provide a target rich environment.
Seriously, because you are told answers over and over that you don't want to accept. We Catholics are supposed to accept your information as accurate and correct, but you do not provide the same courtesy. That is not a good trait. Many on here explain at nauseum why Catholics believe what they believe, but you know more. So, it is not an informational thing, it is a personality thing. Hence, the personal attacks.
You do not agree with the Catholic Church, you and several million others, great. Don't join. Go to whatever group you form or do believe in. More power to you. Nobody is going to make you go to a Catholic Church and do anything.
Got questions, we will answer our understanding and if it is not enough link you to others with better understanding. Learn as much as you like, don't tell us we are wrong and you are right. This isn't Math, nobody really knows what comes next just faith in it is close to what we believe. Best we can do at the end of the day. And us Catholics try to do better...
Get it?
I don't accept your "answers" that you've told me "over and over" because they are NOT answering the question.
So I'm asking a very specific question to focus you onto the peritnent issue. A question that is still unanswered by you.
It's clear that you're avoiding it.
Don't accept it. That is your prerogative.
But stop lying and saying it hasn't been answered. It has been answered, you just don't accept the answer.
See folks, he admits the question has been answered. He just refuses to accept the answer because it is not what he wants.
It isn't "lying" because as I've clearly explained, you answering my question thusly:
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
.... clearly does NOT answer whether you are saying the bread is the same body as what the disciples were seeing, and the same blood as was shed on the cross.
If you can't see this, then there's nothing I can do to help you.
Again, you are asking for a material explanation for a metaphysical event. A sacred mystery of the faith.
CCC 1381. You quoted Augustine as saying that what could not be seen physically is understood spiritually. Your question cannot be answered by the senses but is answered by faith. A faith you don't share. Which is fine, it is your right and prerogative.
You are doing that thing where you don't want to take in the totality of what the Church teaches but instead want to play gotcha games with excerpts devoid of context. You will not receive a natural explanation for a metaphysical mystery of faith. That is fine by me. I've also told you that you don't need to believe in Our Lady of Guadalupe or St. Juan Diego's tilma. Metaphysical event.
But stop pretending like you haven't been given good faith explanations and answers to your questions simply because you refuse to accept them or, worse, because it fails to fall into some trap you think you have set.
You are unable to explain precisely, in terms that reconcile with the material world, how Jesus became incarnate of the Blessed Virgin. It is a sacred mystery that is a matter of faith. Your inability to explain it in no way undermines your belief in it or disproves it. Same thing here.
All I was asking was whether you agreed or did not agree with the statement I provided. Nothing more, nothing less.
The reason I didn't accept your "answers" was because they didn't answer the question. I challenged your to point out where Sam answered the question, and you failed. I challenged you to provided exactly where YOU answered the question, and you failed. if you can't understand that your "answer"
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
... does NOT answer the question, then you have a comprehension. problem. I just don't know what else to say. You either get this or you don't. And if you have a problem with comprehension like that, I think this discussion with you ain't gonna be too productive. But I'll try anyway.
Is there some law of the universe of which am I unaware of that states your questions must be answered precisely in the manner you want so as to direct the conversation in precisely in the direction you want it to go? Can you please provide a citation?
The questions have been answered. You don't accept the answers because you find them unsatisfactory for whatever reason. You admit as much yourself. Fine, all within your prerogative.
More important, you have taken offense to me posting your style. Perhaps a lesson in there for someone exercising some self-reflection….
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:FLBear5630 said:
Because it is fun and you provide a target rich environment.
Seriously, because you are told answers over and over that you don't want to accept. We Catholics are supposed to accept your information as accurate and correct, but you do not provide the same courtesy. That is not a good trait. Many on here explain at nauseum why Catholics believe what they believe, but you know more. So, it is not an informational thing, it is a personality thing. Hence, the personal attacks.
You do not agree with the Catholic Church, you and several million others, great. Don't join. Go to whatever group you form or do believe in. More power to you. Nobody is going to make you go to a Catholic Church and do anything.
Got questions, we will answer our understanding and if it is not enough link you to others with better understanding. Learn as much as you like, don't tell us we are wrong and you are right. This isn't Math, nobody really knows what comes next just faith in it is close to what we believe. Best we can do at the end of the day. And us Catholics try to do better...
Get it?
I don't accept your "answers" that you've told me "over and over" because they are NOT answering the question.
So I'm asking a very specific question to focus you onto the peritnent issue. A question that is still unanswered by you.
It's clear that you're avoiding it.
Don't accept it. That is your prerogative.
But stop lying and saying it hasn't been answered. It has been answered, you just don't accept the answer.
See folks, he admits the question has been answered. He just refuses to accept the answer because it is not what he wants.
It isn't "lying" because as I've clearly explained, you answering my question thusly:
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
.... clearly does NOT answer whether you are saying the bread is the same body as what the disciples were seeing, and the same blood as was shed on the cross.
If you can't see this, then there's nothing I can do to help you.
Again, you are asking for a material explanation for a metaphysical event. A sacred mystery of the faith.
CCC 1381. You quoted Augustine as saying that what could not be seen physically is understood spiritually. Your question cannot be answered by the senses but is answered by faith. A faith you don't share. Which is fine, it is your right and prerogative.
You are doing that thing where you don't want to take in the totality of what the Church teaches but instead want to play gotcha games with excerpts devoid of context. You will not receive a natural explanation for a metaphysical mystery of faith. That is fine by me. I've also told you that you don't need to believe in Our Lady of Guadalupe or St. Juan Diego's tilma. Metaphysical event.
But stop pretending like you haven't been given good faith explanations and answers to your questions simply because you refuse to accept them or, worse, because it fails to fall into some trap you think you have set.
You are unable to explain precisely, in terms that reconcile with the material world, how Jesus became incarnate of the Blessed Virgin. It is a sacred mystery that is a matter of faith. Your inability to explain it in no way undermines your belief in it or disproves it. Same thing here.
All I was asking was whether you agreed or did not agree with the statement I provided. Nothing more, nothing less.
The reason I didn't accept your "answers" was because they didn't answer the question. I challenged your to point out where Sam answered the question, and you failed. I challenged you to provided exactly where YOU answered the question, and you failed. if you can't understand that your "answer"
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
... does NOT answer the question, then you have a comprehension. problem. I just don't know what else to say. You either get this or you don't. And if you have a problem with comprehension like that, I think this discussion with you ain't gonna be too productive. But I'll try anyway.
Is there some law of the universe of which am I unaware of that states your questions must be answered precisely in the manner you want so as to direct the conversation in precisely in the direction you want it to go? Can you please provide a citation?
The questions have been answered. You don't accept the answers because you find them unsatisfactory for whatever reason. You admit as much yourself. Fine, all within your prerogative.
More important, you have taken offense to me posting your style. Perhaps a lesson in there for someone exercising some self-reflection….
So, here's why I asked that question.
You: The Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence is that the bread IS the same body the disciples see, and the wine IS the same blood that was sacrificed on the cross. (You affirmed this)
Augustine: "Understand what I have said spiritually. You are NOT going to eat this body which you see. Nor are you going to drink the blood which those who crucify me are going to shed."
Therefore, Augustine did NOT believe in the Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence.
Point proven.
Thank you.
FLBear5630 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:FLBear5630 said:
Because it is fun and you provide a target rich environment.
Seriously, because you are told answers over and over that you don't want to accept. We Catholics are supposed to accept your information as accurate and correct, but you do not provide the same courtesy. That is not a good trait. Many on here explain at nauseum why Catholics believe what they believe, but you know more. So, it is not an informational thing, it is a personality thing. Hence, the personal attacks.
You do not agree with the Catholic Church, you and several million others, great. Don't join. Go to whatever group you form or do believe in. More power to you. Nobody is going to make you go to a Catholic Church and do anything.
Got questions, we will answer our understanding and if it is not enough link you to others with better understanding. Learn as much as you like, don't tell us we are wrong and you are right. This isn't Math, nobody really knows what comes next just faith in it is close to what we believe. Best we can do at the end of the day. And us Catholics try to do better...
Get it?
I don't accept your "answers" that you've told me "over and over" because they are NOT answering the question.
So I'm asking a very specific question to focus you onto the peritnent issue. A question that is still unanswered by you.
It's clear that you're avoiding it.
Don't accept it. That is your prerogative.
But stop lying and saying it hasn't been answered. It has been answered, you just don't accept the answer.
See folks, he admits the question has been answered. He just refuses to accept the answer because it is not what he wants.
It isn't "lying" because as I've clearly explained, you answering my question thusly:
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
.... clearly does NOT answer whether you are saying the bread is the same body as what the disciples were seeing, and the same blood as was shed on the cross.
If you can't see this, then there's nothing I can do to help you.
Again, you are asking for a material explanation for a metaphysical event. A sacred mystery of the faith.
CCC 1381. You quoted Augustine as saying that what could not be seen physically is understood spiritually. Your question cannot be answered by the senses but is answered by faith. A faith you don't share. Which is fine, it is your right and prerogative.
You are doing that thing where you don't want to take in the totality of what the Church teaches but instead want to play gotcha games with excerpts devoid of context. You will not receive a natural explanation for a metaphysical mystery of faith. That is fine by me. I've also told you that you don't need to believe in Our Lady of Guadalupe or St. Juan Diego's tilma. Metaphysical event.
But stop pretending like you haven't been given good faith explanations and answers to your questions simply because you refuse to accept them or, worse, because it fails to fall into some trap you think you have set.
You are unable to explain precisely, in terms that reconcile with the material world, how Jesus became incarnate of the Blessed Virgin. It is a sacred mystery that is a matter of faith. Your inability to explain it in no way undermines your belief in it or disproves it. Same thing here.
All I was asking was whether you agreed or did not agree with the statement I provided. Nothing more, nothing less.
The reason I didn't accept your "answers" was because they didn't answer the question. I challenged your to point out where Sam answered the question, and you failed. I challenged you to provided exactly where YOU answered the question, and you failed. if you can't understand that your "answer"
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
... does NOT answer the question, then you have a comprehension. problem. I just don't know what else to say. You either get this or you don't. And if you have a problem with comprehension like that, I think this discussion with you ain't gonna be too productive. But I'll try anyway.
Is there some law of the universe of which am I unaware of that states your questions must be answered precisely in the manner you want so as to direct the conversation in precisely in the direction you want it to go? Can you please provide a citation?
The questions have been answered. You don't accept the answers because you find them unsatisfactory for whatever reason. You admit as much yourself. Fine, all within your prerogative.
More important, you have taken offense to me posting your style. Perhaps a lesson in there for someone exercising some self-reflection….
So, here's why I asked that question.
You: The Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence is that the bread IS the same body the disciples see, and the wine IS the same blood that was sacrificed on the cross. (You affirmed this)
Augustine: "Understand what I have said spiritually. You are NOT going to eat this body which you see. Nor are you going to drink the blood which those who crucify me are going to shed."
Therefore, Augustine did NOT believe in the Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence.
Point proven.
Thank you.
Please provide full quote or source. One sentence does not make a theological arguement.
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:FLBear5630 said:
Because it is fun and you provide a target rich environment.
Seriously, because you are told answers over and over that you don't want to accept. We Catholics are supposed to accept your information as accurate and correct, but you do not provide the same courtesy. That is not a good trait. Many on here explain at nauseum why Catholics believe what they believe, but you know more. So, it is not an informational thing, it is a personality thing. Hence, the personal attacks.
You do not agree with the Catholic Church, you and several million others, great. Don't join. Go to whatever group you form or do believe in. More power to you. Nobody is going to make you go to a Catholic Church and do anything.
Got questions, we will answer our understanding and if it is not enough link you to others with better understanding. Learn as much as you like, don't tell us we are wrong and you are right. This isn't Math, nobody really knows what comes next just faith in it is close to what we believe. Best we can do at the end of the day. And us Catholics try to do better...
Get it?
I don't accept your "answers" that you've told me "over and over" because they are NOT answering the question.
So I'm asking a very specific question to focus you onto the peritnent issue. A question that is still unanswered by you.
It's clear that you're avoiding it.
Don't accept it. That is your prerogative.
But stop lying and saying it hasn't been answered. It has been answered, you just don't accept the answer.
See folks, he admits the question has been answered. He just refuses to accept the answer because it is not what he wants.
It isn't "lying" because as I've clearly explained, you answering my question thusly:
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
.... clearly does NOT answer whether you are saying the bread is the same body as what the disciples were seeing, and the same blood as was shed on the cross.
If you can't see this, then there's nothing I can do to help you.
Again, you are asking for a material explanation for a metaphysical event. A sacred mystery of the faith.
CCC 1381. You quoted Augustine as saying that what could not be seen physically is understood spiritually. Your question cannot be answered by the senses but is answered by faith. A faith you don't share. Which is fine, it is your right and prerogative.
You are doing that thing where you don't want to take in the totality of what the Church teaches but instead want to play gotcha games with excerpts devoid of context. You will not receive a natural explanation for a metaphysical mystery of faith. That is fine by me. I've also told you that you don't need to believe in Our Lady of Guadalupe or St. Juan Diego's tilma. Metaphysical event.
But stop pretending like you haven't been given good faith explanations and answers to your questions simply because you refuse to accept them or, worse, because it fails to fall into some trap you think you have set.
You are unable to explain precisely, in terms that reconcile with the material world, how Jesus became incarnate of the Blessed Virgin. It is a sacred mystery that is a matter of faith. Your inability to explain it in no way undermines your belief in it or disproves it. Same thing here.
All I was asking was whether you agreed or did not agree with the statement I provided. Nothing more, nothing less.
The reason I didn't accept your "answers" was because they didn't answer the question. I challenged your to point out where Sam answered the question, and you failed. I challenged you to provided exactly where YOU answered the question, and you failed. if you can't understand that your "answer"
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
... does NOT answer the question, then you have a comprehension. problem. I just don't know what else to say. You either get this or you don't. And if you have a problem with comprehension like that, I think this discussion with you ain't gonna be too productive. But I'll try anyway.
Is there some law of the universe of which am I unaware of that states your questions must be answered precisely in the manner you want so as to direct the conversation in precisely in the direction you want it to go? Can you please provide a citation?
The questions have been answered. You don't accept the answers because you find them unsatisfactory for whatever reason. You admit as much yourself. Fine, all within your prerogative.
More important, you have taken offense to me posting your style. Perhaps a lesson in there for someone exercising some self-reflection….
So, here's why I asked that question.
You: The Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence is that the bread IS the same body the disciples see, and the wine IS the same blood that was sacrificed on the cross. (You affirmed this)
Augustine: "Understand what I have said spiritually. You are NOT going to eat this body which you see. Nor are you going to drink the blood which those who crucify me are going to shed."
Therefore, Augustine did NOT believe in the Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence.
Point proven.
Thank you.
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:FLBear5630 said:
Because it is fun and you provide a target rich environment.
Seriously, because you are told answers over and over that you don't want to accept. We Catholics are supposed to accept your information as accurate and correct, but you do not provide the same courtesy. That is not a good trait. Many on here explain at nauseum why Catholics believe what they believe, but you know more. So, it is not an informational thing, it is a personality thing. Hence, the personal attacks.
You do not agree with the Catholic Church, you and several million others, great. Don't join. Go to whatever group you form or do believe in. More power to you. Nobody is going to make you go to a Catholic Church and do anything.
Got questions, we will answer our understanding and if it is not enough link you to others with better understanding. Learn as much as you like, don't tell us we are wrong and you are right. This isn't Math, nobody really knows what comes next just faith in it is close to what we believe. Best we can do at the end of the day. And us Catholics try to do better...
Get it?
I don't accept your "answers" that you've told me "over and over" because they are NOT answering the question.
So I'm asking a very specific question to focus you onto the peritnent issue. A question that is still unanswered by you.
It's clear that you're avoiding it.
Don't accept it. That is your prerogative.
But stop lying and saying it hasn't been answered. It has been answered, you just don't accept the answer.
See folks, he admits the question has been answered. He just refuses to accept the answer because it is not what he wants.
It isn't "lying" because as I've clearly explained, you answering my question thusly:
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
.... clearly does NOT answer whether you are saying the bread is the same body as what the disciples were seeing, and the same blood as was shed on the cross.
If you can't see this, then there's nothing I can do to help you.
Again, you are asking for a material explanation for a metaphysical event. A sacred mystery of the faith.
CCC 1381. You quoted Augustine as saying that what could not be seen physically is understood spiritually. Your question cannot be answered by the senses but is answered by faith. A faith you don't share. Which is fine, it is your right and prerogative.
You are doing that thing where you don't want to take in the totality of what the Church teaches but instead want to play gotcha games with excerpts devoid of context. You will not receive a natural explanation for a metaphysical mystery of faith. That is fine by me. I've also told you that you don't need to believe in Our Lady of Guadalupe or St. Juan Diego's tilma. Metaphysical event.
But stop pretending like you haven't been given good faith explanations and answers to your questions simply because you refuse to accept them or, worse, because it fails to fall into some trap you think you have set.
You are unable to explain precisely, in terms that reconcile with the material world, how Jesus became incarnate of the Blessed Virgin. It is a sacred mystery that is a matter of faith. Your inability to explain it in no way undermines your belief in it or disproves it. Same thing here.
All I was asking was whether you agreed or did not agree with the statement I provided. Nothing more, nothing less.
The reason I didn't accept your "answers" was because they didn't answer the question. I challenged your to point out where Sam answered the question, and you failed. I challenged you to provided exactly where YOU answered the question, and you failed. if you can't understand that your "answer"
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
... does NOT answer the question, then you have a comprehension. problem. I just don't know what else to say. You either get this or you don't. And if you have a problem with comprehension like that, I think this discussion with you ain't gonna be too productive. But I'll try anyway.
Is there some law of the universe of which am I unaware of that states your questions must be answered precisely in the manner you want so as to direct the conversation in precisely in the direction you want it to go? Can you please provide a citation?
The questions have been answered. You don't accept the answers because you find them unsatisfactory for whatever reason. You admit as much yourself. Fine, all within your prerogative.
More important, you have taken offense to me posting your style. Perhaps a lesson in there for someone exercising some self-reflection….
So, here's why I asked that question.
You: The Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence is that the bread IS the same body the disciples see, and the wine IS the same blood that was sacrificed on the cross. (You affirmed this)
Augustine: "Understand what I have said spiritually. You are NOT going to eat this body which you see. Nor are you going to drink the blood which those who crucify me are going to shed."
Therefore, Augustine did NOT believe in the Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence.
Point proven.
Thank you.
Sam Lowry said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:FLBear5630 said:
Because it is fun and you provide a target rich environment.
Seriously, because you are told answers over and over that you don't want to accept. We Catholics are supposed to accept your information as accurate and correct, but you do not provide the same courtesy. That is not a good trait. Many on here explain at nauseum why Catholics believe what they believe, but you know more. So, it is not an informational thing, it is a personality thing. Hence, the personal attacks.
You do not agree with the Catholic Church, you and several million others, great. Don't join. Go to whatever group you form or do believe in. More power to you. Nobody is going to make you go to a Catholic Church and do anything.
Got questions, we will answer our understanding and if it is not enough link you to others with better understanding. Learn as much as you like, don't tell us we are wrong and you are right. This isn't Math, nobody really knows what comes next just faith in it is close to what we believe. Best we can do at the end of the day. And us Catholics try to do better...
Get it?
I don't accept your "answers" that you've told me "over and over" because they are NOT answering the question.
So I'm asking a very specific question to focus you onto the peritnent issue. A question that is still unanswered by you.
It's clear that you're avoiding it.
Don't accept it. That is your prerogative.
But stop lying and saying it hasn't been answered. It has been answered, you just don't accept the answer.
See folks, he admits the question has been answered. He just refuses to accept the answer because it is not what he wants.
It isn't "lying" because as I've clearly explained, you answering my question thusly:
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
.... clearly does NOT answer whether you are saying the bread is the same body as what the disciples were seeing, and the same blood as was shed on the cross.
If you can't see this, then there's nothing I can do to help you.
Again, you are asking for a material explanation for a metaphysical event. A sacred mystery of the faith.
CCC 1381. You quoted Augustine as saying that what could not be seen physically is understood spiritually. Your question cannot be answered by the senses but is answered by faith. A faith you don't share. Which is fine, it is your right and prerogative.
You are doing that thing where you don't want to take in the totality of what the Church teaches but instead want to play gotcha games with excerpts devoid of context. You will not receive a natural explanation for a metaphysical mystery of faith. That is fine by me. I've also told you that you don't need to believe in Our Lady of Guadalupe or St. Juan Diego's tilma. Metaphysical event.
But stop pretending like you haven't been given good faith explanations and answers to your questions simply because you refuse to accept them or, worse, because it fails to fall into some trap you think you have set.
You are unable to explain precisely, in terms that reconcile with the material world, how Jesus became incarnate of the Blessed Virgin. It is a sacred mystery that is a matter of faith. Your inability to explain it in no way undermines your belief in it or disproves it. Same thing here.
All I was asking was whether you agreed or did not agree with the statement I provided. Nothing more, nothing less.
The reason I didn't accept your "answers" was because they didn't answer the question. I challenged your to point out where Sam answered the question, and you failed. I challenged you to provided exactly where YOU answered the question, and you failed. if you can't understand that your "answer"
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
... does NOT answer the question, then you have a comprehension. problem. I just don't know what else to say. You either get this or you don't. And if you have a problem with comprehension like that, I think this discussion with you ain't gonna be too productive. But I'll try anyway.
Is there some law of the universe of which am I unaware of that states your questions must be answered precisely in the manner you want so as to direct the conversation in precisely in the direction you want it to go? Can you please provide a citation?
The questions have been answered. You don't accept the answers because you find them unsatisfactory for whatever reason. You admit as much yourself. Fine, all within your prerogative.
More important, you have taken offense to me posting your style. Perhaps a lesson in there for someone exercising some self-reflection….
So, here's why I asked that question.
You: The Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence is that the bread IS the same body the disciples see, and the wine IS the same blood that was sacrificed on the cross. (You affirmed this)
Augustine: "Understand what I have said spiritually. You are NOT going to eat this body which you see. Nor are you going to drink the blood which those who crucify me are going to shed."
Therefore, Augustine did NOT believe in the Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence.
Point proven.
Thank you.
Brother, we all know why you asked the question. Here's why you didn't catch the answer. There's a difference between the mortal body crucified on the cross and the risen body in heaven, yet they are the same body.
based on scripture, yes, they are the same bodySam Lowry said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:FLBear5630 said:
Because it is fun and you provide a target rich environment.
Seriously, because you are told answers over and over that you don't want to accept. We Catholics are supposed to accept your information as accurate and correct, but you do not provide the same courtesy. That is not a good trait. Many on here explain at nauseum why Catholics believe what they believe, but you know more. So, it is not an informational thing, it is a personality thing. Hence, the personal attacks.
You do not agree with the Catholic Church, you and several million others, great. Don't join. Go to whatever group you form or do believe in. More power to you. Nobody is going to make you go to a Catholic Church and do anything.
Got questions, we will answer our understanding and if it is not enough link you to others with better understanding. Learn as much as you like, don't tell us we are wrong and you are right. This isn't Math, nobody really knows what comes next just faith in it is close to what we believe. Best we can do at the end of the day. And us Catholics try to do better...
Get it?
I don't accept your "answers" that you've told me "over and over" because they are NOT answering the question.
So I'm asking a very specific question to focus you onto the peritnent issue. A question that is still unanswered by you.
It's clear that you're avoiding it.
Don't accept it. That is your prerogative.
But stop lying and saying it hasn't been answered. It has been answered, you just don't accept the answer.
See folks, he admits the question has been answered. He just refuses to accept the answer because it is not what he wants.
It isn't "lying" because as I've clearly explained, you answering my question thusly:
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
.... clearly does NOT answer whether you are saying the bread is the same body as what the disciples were seeing, and the same blood as was shed on the cross.
If you can't see this, then there's nothing I can do to help you.
Again, you are asking for a material explanation for a metaphysical event. A sacred mystery of the faith.
CCC 1381. You quoted Augustine as saying that what could not be seen physically is understood spiritually. Your question cannot be answered by the senses but is answered by faith. A faith you don't share. Which is fine, it is your right and prerogative.
You are doing that thing where you don't want to take in the totality of what the Church teaches but instead want to play gotcha games with excerpts devoid of context. You will not receive a natural explanation for a metaphysical mystery of faith. That is fine by me. I've also told you that you don't need to believe in Our Lady of Guadalupe or St. Juan Diego's tilma. Metaphysical event.
But stop pretending like you haven't been given good faith explanations and answers to your questions simply because you refuse to accept them or, worse, because it fails to fall into some trap you think you have set.
You are unable to explain precisely, in terms that reconcile with the material world, how Jesus became incarnate of the Blessed Virgin. It is a sacred mystery that is a matter of faith. Your inability to explain it in no way undermines your belief in it or disproves it. Same thing here.
All I was asking was whether you agreed or did not agree with the statement I provided. Nothing more, nothing less.
The reason I didn't accept your "answers" was because they didn't answer the question. I challenged your to point out where Sam answered the question, and you failed. I challenged you to provided exactly where YOU answered the question, and you failed. if you can't understand that your "answer"
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
... does NOT answer the question, then you have a comprehension. problem. I just don't know what else to say. You either get this or you don't. And if you have a problem with comprehension like that, I think this discussion with you ain't gonna be too productive. But I'll try anyway.
Is there some law of the universe of which am I unaware of that states your questions must be answered precisely in the manner you want so as to direct the conversation in precisely in the direction you want it to go? Can you please provide a citation?
The questions have been answered. You don't accept the answers because you find them unsatisfactory for whatever reason. You admit as much yourself. Fine, all within your prerogative.
More important, you have taken offense to me posting your style. Perhaps a lesson in there for someone exercising some self-reflection….
So, here's why I asked that question.
You: The Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence is that the bread IS the same body the disciples see, and the wine IS the same blood that was sacrificed on the cross. (You affirmed this)
Augustine: "Understand what I have said spiritually. You are NOT going to eat this body which you see. Nor are you going to drink the blood which those who crucify me are going to shed."
Therefore, Augustine did NOT believe in the Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence.
Point proven.
Thank you.
There's a difference between the mortal body crucified on the cross and the risen body in heaven, yet they are the same body.
DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:FLBear5630 said:
Because it is fun and you provide a target rich environment.
Seriously, because you are told answers over and over that you don't want to accept. We Catholics are supposed to accept your information as accurate and correct, but you do not provide the same courtesy. That is not a good trait. Many on here explain at nauseum why Catholics believe what they believe, but you know more. So, it is not an informational thing, it is a personality thing. Hence, the personal attacks.
You do not agree with the Catholic Church, you and several million others, great. Don't join. Go to whatever group you form or do believe in. More power to you. Nobody is going to make you go to a Catholic Church and do anything.
Got questions, we will answer our understanding and if it is not enough link you to others with better understanding. Learn as much as you like, don't tell us we are wrong and you are right. This isn't Math, nobody really knows what comes next just faith in it is close to what we believe. Best we can do at the end of the day. And us Catholics try to do better...
Get it?
I don't accept your "answers" that you've told me "over and over" because they are NOT answering the question.
So I'm asking a very specific question to focus you onto the peritnent issue. A question that is still unanswered by you.
It's clear that you're avoiding it.
Don't accept it. That is your prerogative.
But stop lying and saying it hasn't been answered. It has been answered, you just don't accept the answer.
See folks, he admits the question has been answered. He just refuses to accept the answer because it is not what he wants.
It isn't "lying" because as I've clearly explained, you answering my question thusly:
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
.... clearly does NOT answer whether you are saying the bread is the same body as what the disciples were seeing, and the same blood as was shed on the cross.
If you can't see this, then there's nothing I can do to help you.
Again, you are asking for a material explanation for a metaphysical event. A sacred mystery of the faith.
CCC 1381. You quoted Augustine as saying that what could not be seen physically is understood spiritually. Your question cannot be answered by the senses but is answered by faith. A faith you don't share. Which is fine, it is your right and prerogative.
You are doing that thing where you don't want to take in the totality of what the Church teaches but instead want to play gotcha games with excerpts devoid of context. You will not receive a natural explanation for a metaphysical mystery of faith. That is fine by me. I've also told you that you don't need to believe in Our Lady of Guadalupe or St. Juan Diego's tilma. Metaphysical event.
But stop pretending like you haven't been given good faith explanations and answers to your questions simply because you refuse to accept them or, worse, because it fails to fall into some trap you think you have set.
You are unable to explain precisely, in terms that reconcile with the material world, how Jesus became incarnate of the Blessed Virgin. It is a sacred mystery that is a matter of faith. Your inability to explain it in no way undermines your belief in it or disproves it. Same thing here.
All I was asking was whether you agreed or did not agree with the statement I provided. Nothing more, nothing less.
The reason I didn't accept your "answers" was because they didn't answer the question. I challenged your to point out where Sam answered the question, and you failed. I challenged you to provided exactly where YOU answered the question, and you failed. if you can't understand that your "answer"
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
... does NOT answer the question, then you have a comprehension. problem. I just don't know what else to say. You either get this or you don't. And if you have a problem with comprehension like that, I think this discussion with you ain't gonna be too productive. But I'll try anyway.
Is there some law of the universe of which am I unaware of that states your questions must be answered precisely in the manner you want so as to direct the conversation in precisely in the direction you want it to go? Can you please provide a citation?
The questions have been answered. You don't accept the answers because you find them unsatisfactory for whatever reason. You admit as much yourself. Fine, all within your prerogative.
More important, you have taken offense to me posting your style. Perhaps a lesson in there for someone exercising some self-reflection….
So, here's why I asked that question.
You: The Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence is that the bread IS the same body the disciples see, and the wine IS the same blood that was sacrificed on the cross. (You affirmed this)
Augustine: "Understand what I have said spiritually. You are NOT going to eat this body which you see. Nor are you going to drink the blood which those who crucify me are going to shed."
Therefore, Augustine did NOT believe in the Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence.
Point proven.
Thank you.
Let me paraphrase you: "I don't believe this Doctor of your Church is any kind of authority on the topic, I don't believe what he believes or what you believe, but let me tell you exactly what it means. Check mate, Roman Catholics."
You are taking that quote out of context. You have been provided numerous other quotes from Augustine that present a much more nuanced view that can be harmonized with what Sam is representing to be Catholic teaching. A man of good will would engage that instead of trying to tell others what they really believe.
4th and Inches said:Sam Lowry said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:FLBear5630 said:
Because it is fun and you provide a target rich environment.
Seriously, because you are told answers over and over that you don't want to accept. We Catholics are supposed to accept your information as accurate and correct, but you do not provide the same courtesy. That is not a good trait. Many on here explain at nauseum why Catholics believe what they believe, but you know more. So, it is not an informational thing, it is a personality thing. Hence, the personal attacks.
You do not agree with the Catholic Church, you and several million others, great. Don't join. Go to whatever group you form or do believe in. More power to you. Nobody is going to make you go to a Catholic Church and do anything.
Got questions, we will answer our understanding and if it is not enough link you to others with better understanding. Learn as much as you like, don't tell us we are wrong and you are right. This isn't Math, nobody really knows what comes next just faith in it is close to what we believe. Best we can do at the end of the day. And us Catholics try to do better...
Get it?
I don't accept your "answers" that you've told me "over and over" because they are NOT answering the question.
So I'm asking a very specific question to focus you onto the peritnent issue. A question that is still unanswered by you.
It's clear that you're avoiding it.
Don't accept it. That is your prerogative.
But stop lying and saying it hasn't been answered. It has been answered, you just don't accept the answer.
See folks, he admits the question has been answered. He just refuses to accept the answer because it is not what he wants.
It isn't "lying" because as I've clearly explained, you answering my question thusly:
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
.... clearly does NOT answer whether you are saying the bread is the same body as what the disciples were seeing, and the same blood as was shed on the cross.
If you can't see this, then there's nothing I can do to help you.
Again, you are asking for a material explanation for a metaphysical event. A sacred mystery of the faith.
CCC 1381. You quoted Augustine as saying that what could not be seen physically is understood spiritually. Your question cannot be answered by the senses but is answered by faith. A faith you don't share. Which is fine, it is your right and prerogative.
You are doing that thing where you don't want to take in the totality of what the Church teaches but instead want to play gotcha games with excerpts devoid of context. You will not receive a natural explanation for a metaphysical mystery of faith. That is fine by me. I've also told you that you don't need to believe in Our Lady of Guadalupe or St. Juan Diego's tilma. Metaphysical event.
But stop pretending like you haven't been given good faith explanations and answers to your questions simply because you refuse to accept them or, worse, because it fails to fall into some trap you think you have set.
You are unable to explain precisely, in terms that reconcile with the material world, how Jesus became incarnate of the Blessed Virgin. It is a sacred mystery that is a matter of faith. Your inability to explain it in no way undermines your belief in it or disproves it. Same thing here.
All I was asking was whether you agreed or did not agree with the statement I provided. Nothing more, nothing less.
The reason I didn't accept your "answers" was because they didn't answer the question. I challenged your to point out where Sam answered the question, and you failed. I challenged you to provided exactly where YOU answered the question, and you failed. if you can't understand that your "answer"
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
... does NOT answer the question, then you have a comprehension. problem. I just don't know what else to say. You either get this or you don't. And if you have a problem with comprehension like that, I think this discussion with you ain't gonna be too productive. But I'll try anyway.
Is there some law of the universe of which am I unaware of that states your questions must be answered precisely in the manner you want so as to direct the conversation in precisely in the direction you want it to go? Can you please provide a citation?
The questions have been answered. You don't accept the answers because you find them unsatisfactory for whatever reason. You admit as much yourself. Fine, all within your prerogative.
More important, you have taken offense to me posting your style. Perhaps a lesson in there for someone exercising some self-reflection….
So, here's why I asked that question.
You: The Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence is that the bread IS the same body the disciples see, and the wine IS the same blood that was sacrificed on the cross. (You affirmed this)
Augustine: "Understand what I have said spiritually. You are NOT going to eat this body which you see. Nor are you going to drink the blood which those who crucify me are going to shed."
Therefore, Augustine did NOT believe in the Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence.
Point proven.
Thank you.
There's a difference between the mortal body crucified on the cross and the risen body in heaven, yet they are the same body.
based on scripture, yes, they are the same body
DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:FLBear5630 said:
Because it is fun and you provide a target rich environment.
Seriously, because you are told answers over and over that you don't want to accept. We Catholics are supposed to accept your information as accurate and correct, but you do not provide the same courtesy. That is not a good trait. Many on here explain at nauseum why Catholics believe what they believe, but you know more. So, it is not an informational thing, it is a personality thing. Hence, the personal attacks.
You do not agree with the Catholic Church, you and several million others, great. Don't join. Go to whatever group you form or do believe in. More power to you. Nobody is going to make you go to a Catholic Church and do anything.
Got questions, we will answer our understanding and if it is not enough link you to others with better understanding. Learn as much as you like, don't tell us we are wrong and you are right. This isn't Math, nobody really knows what comes next just faith in it is close to what we believe. Best we can do at the end of the day. And us Catholics try to do better...
Get it?
I don't accept your "answers" that you've told me "over and over" because they are NOT answering the question.
So I'm asking a very specific question to focus you onto the peritnent issue. A question that is still unanswered by you.
It's clear that you're avoiding it.
Don't accept it. That is your prerogative.
But stop lying and saying it hasn't been answered. It has been answered, you just don't accept the answer.
See folks, he admits the question has been answered. He just refuses to accept the answer because it is not what he wants.
It isn't "lying" because as I've clearly explained, you answering my question thusly:
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
.... clearly does NOT answer whether you are saying the bread is the same body as what the disciples were seeing, and the same blood as was shed on the cross.
If you can't see this, then there's nothing I can do to help you.
Again, you are asking for a material explanation for a metaphysical event. A sacred mystery of the faith.
CCC 1381. You quoted Augustine as saying that what could not be seen physically is understood spiritually. Your question cannot be answered by the senses but is answered by faith. A faith you don't share. Which is fine, it is your right and prerogative.
You are doing that thing where you don't want to take in the totality of what the Church teaches but instead want to play gotcha games with excerpts devoid of context. You will not receive a natural explanation for a metaphysical mystery of faith. That is fine by me. I've also told you that you don't need to believe in Our Lady of Guadalupe or St. Juan Diego's tilma. Metaphysical event.
But stop pretending like you haven't been given good faith explanations and answers to your questions simply because you refuse to accept them or, worse, because it fails to fall into some trap you think you have set.
You are unable to explain precisely, in terms that reconcile with the material world, how Jesus became incarnate of the Blessed Virgin. It is a sacred mystery that is a matter of faith. Your inability to explain it in no way undermines your belief in it or disproves it. Same thing here.
All I was asking was whether you agreed or did not agree with the statement I provided. Nothing more, nothing less.
The reason I didn't accept your "answers" was because they didn't answer the question. I challenged your to point out where Sam answered the question, and you failed. I challenged you to provided exactly where YOU answered the question, and you failed. if you can't understand that your "answer"
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
... does NOT answer the question, then you have a comprehension. problem. I just don't know what else to say. You either get this or you don't. And if you have a problem with comprehension like that, I think this discussion with you ain't gonna be too productive. But I'll try anyway.
Is there some law of the universe of which am I unaware of that states your questions must be answered precisely in the manner you want so as to direct the conversation in precisely in the direction you want it to go? Can you please provide a citation?
The questions have been answered. You don't accept the answers because you find them unsatisfactory for whatever reason. You admit as much yourself. Fine, all within your prerogative.
More important, you have taken offense to me posting your style. Perhaps a lesson in there for someone exercising some self-reflection….
So, here's why I asked that question.
You: The Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence is that the bread IS the same body the disciples see, and the wine IS the same blood that was sacrificed on the cross. (You affirmed this)
Augustine: "Understand what I have said spiritually. You are NOT going to eat this body which you see. Nor are you going to drink the blood which those who crucify me are going to shed."
Therefore, Augustine did NOT believe in the Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence.
Point proven.
Thank you.
Let me paraphrase you: "I don't believe this Doctor of your Church is any kind of authority on the topic, I don't believe what he believes or what you believe, but let me tell you exactly what it means. Check mate, Roman Catholics."
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:FLBear5630 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:FLBear5630 said:
Because it is fun and you provide a target rich environment.
Seriously, because you are told answers over and over that you don't want to accept. We Catholics are supposed to accept your information as accurate and correct, but you do not provide the same courtesy. That is not a good trait. Many on here explain at nauseum why Catholics believe what they believe, but you know more. So, it is not an informational thing, it is a personality thing. Hence, the personal attacks.
You do not agree with the Catholic Church, you and several million others, great. Don't join. Go to whatever group you form or do believe in. More power to you. Nobody is going to make you go to a Catholic Church and do anything.
Got questions, we will answer our understanding and if it is not enough link you to others with better understanding. Learn as much as you like, don't tell us we are wrong and you are right. This isn't Math, nobody really knows what comes next just faith in it is close to what we believe. Best we can do at the end of the day. And us Catholics try to do better...
Get it?
I don't accept your "answers" that you've told me "over and over" because they are NOT answering the question.
So I'm asking a very specific question to focus you onto the peritnent issue. A question that is still unanswered by you.
It's clear that you're avoiding it.
Don't accept it. That is your prerogative.
But stop lying and saying it hasn't been answered. It has been answered, you just don't accept the answer.
See folks, he admits the question has been answered. He just refuses to accept the answer because it is not what he wants.
It isn't "lying" because as I've clearly explained, you answering my question thusly:
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
.... clearly does NOT answer whether you are saying the bread is the same body as what the disciples were seeing, and the same blood as was shed on the cross.
If you can't see this, then there's nothing I can do to help you.
Again, you are asking for a material explanation for a metaphysical event. A sacred mystery of the faith.
CCC 1381. You quoted Augustine as saying that what could not be seen physically is understood spiritually. Your question cannot be answered by the senses but is answered by faith. A faith you don't share. Which is fine, it is your right and prerogative.
You are doing that thing where you don't want to take in the totality of what the Church teaches but instead want to play gotcha games with excerpts devoid of context. You will not receive a natural explanation for a metaphysical mystery of faith. That is fine by me. I've also told you that you don't need to believe in Our Lady of Guadalupe or St. Juan Diego's tilma. Metaphysical event.
But stop pretending like you haven't been given good faith explanations and answers to your questions simply because you refuse to accept them or, worse, because it fails to fall into some trap you think you have set.
You are unable to explain precisely, in terms that reconcile with the material world, how Jesus became incarnate of the Blessed Virgin. It is a sacred mystery that is a matter of faith. Your inability to explain it in no way undermines your belief in it or disproves it. Same thing here.
All I was asking was whether you agreed or did not agree with the statement I provided. Nothing more, nothing less.
The reason I didn't accept your "answers" was because they didn't answer the question. I challenged your to point out where Sam answered the question, and you failed. I challenged you to provided exactly where YOU answered the question, and you failed. if you can't understand that your "answer"
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
... does NOT answer the question, then you have a comprehension. problem. I just don't know what else to say. You either get this or you don't. And if you have a problem with comprehension like that, I think this discussion with you ain't gonna be too productive. But I'll try anyway.
Is there some law of the universe of which am I unaware of that states your questions must be answered precisely in the manner you want so as to direct the conversation in precisely in the direction you want it to go? Can you please provide a citation?
The questions have been answered. You don't accept the answers because you find them unsatisfactory for whatever reason. You admit as much yourself. Fine, all within your prerogative.
More important, you have taken offense to me posting your style. Perhaps a lesson in there for someone exercising some self-reflection….
So, here's why I asked that question.
You: The Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence is that the bread IS the same body the disciples see, and the wine IS the same blood that was sacrificed on the cross. (You affirmed this)
Augustine: "Understand what I have said spiritually. You are NOT going to eat this body which you see. Nor are you going to drink the blood which those who crucify me are going to shed."
Therefore, Augustine did NOT believe in the Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence.
Point proven.
Thank you.
Please provide full quote or source. One sentence does not make a theological arguement.
You've literally been given the whole quote at least times or more already. Just goes to show you aren't reading anything, you're just reacting.
it wasnt? The glorified body had the pierced hands and side.. scripture states these things when Jesus is talking to Thomas and there was no body left in the tombBusyTarpDuster2017 said:4th and Inches said:Sam Lowry said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:FLBear5630 said:
Because it is fun and you provide a target rich environment.
Seriously, because you are told answers over and over that you don't want to accept. We Catholics are supposed to accept your information as accurate and correct, but you do not provide the same courtesy. That is not a good trait. Many on here explain at nauseum why Catholics believe what they believe, but you know more. So, it is not an informational thing, it is a personality thing. Hence, the personal attacks.
You do not agree with the Catholic Church, you and several million others, great. Don't join. Go to whatever group you form or do believe in. More power to you. Nobody is going to make you go to a Catholic Church and do anything.
Got questions, we will answer our understanding and if it is not enough link you to others with better understanding. Learn as much as you like, don't tell us we are wrong and you are right. This isn't Math, nobody really knows what comes next just faith in it is close to what we believe. Best we can do at the end of the day. And us Catholics try to do better...
Get it?
I don't accept your "answers" that you've told me "over and over" because they are NOT answering the question.
So I'm asking a very specific question to focus you onto the peritnent issue. A question that is still unanswered by you.
It's clear that you're avoiding it.
Don't accept it. That is your prerogative.
But stop lying and saying it hasn't been answered. It has been answered, you just don't accept the answer.
See folks, he admits the question has been answered. He just refuses to accept the answer because it is not what he wants.
It isn't "lying" because as I've clearly explained, you answering my question thusly:
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
.... clearly does NOT answer whether you are saying the bread is the same body as what the disciples were seeing, and the same blood as was shed on the cross.
If you can't see this, then there's nothing I can do to help you.
Again, you are asking for a material explanation for a metaphysical event. A sacred mystery of the faith.
CCC 1381. You quoted Augustine as saying that what could not be seen physically is understood spiritually. Your question cannot be answered by the senses but is answered by faith. A faith you don't share. Which is fine, it is your right and prerogative.
You are doing that thing where you don't want to take in the totality of what the Church teaches but instead want to play gotcha games with excerpts devoid of context. You will not receive a natural explanation for a metaphysical mystery of faith. That is fine by me. I've also told you that you don't need to believe in Our Lady of Guadalupe or St. Juan Diego's tilma. Metaphysical event.
But stop pretending like you haven't been given good faith explanations and answers to your questions simply because you refuse to accept them or, worse, because it fails to fall into some trap you think you have set.
You are unable to explain precisely, in terms that reconcile with the material world, how Jesus became incarnate of the Blessed Virgin. It is a sacred mystery that is a matter of faith. Your inability to explain it in no way undermines your belief in it or disproves it. Same thing here.
All I was asking was whether you agreed or did not agree with the statement I provided. Nothing more, nothing less.
The reason I didn't accept your "answers" was because they didn't answer the question. I challenged your to point out where Sam answered the question, and you failed. I challenged you to provided exactly where YOU answered the question, and you failed. if you can't understand that your "answer"
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
... does NOT answer the question, then you have a comprehension. problem. I just don't know what else to say. You either get this or you don't. And if you have a problem with comprehension like that, I think this discussion with you ain't gonna be too productive. But I'll try anyway.
Is there some law of the universe of which am I unaware of that states your questions must be answered precisely in the manner you want so as to direct the conversation in precisely in the direction you want it to go? Can you please provide a citation?
The questions have been answered. You don't accept the answers because you find them unsatisfactory for whatever reason. You admit as much yourself. Fine, all within your prerogative.
More important, you have taken offense to me posting your style. Perhaps a lesson in there for someone exercising some self-reflection….
So, here's why I asked that question.
You: The Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence is that the bread IS the same body the disciples see, and the wine IS the same blood that was sacrificed on the cross. (You affirmed this)
Augustine: "Understand what I have said spiritually. You are NOT going to eat this body which you see. Nor are you going to drink the blood which those who crucify me are going to shed."
Therefore, Augustine did NOT believe in the Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence.
Point proven.
Thank you.
There's a difference between the mortal body crucified on the cross and the risen body in heaven, yet they are the same body.
based on scripture, yes, they are the same body
Not the same body in the sense that it wasn't Jesus' resurrected, glorified body that hung on the cross.
FLBear5630 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:FLBear5630 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:FLBear5630 said:
Because it is fun and you provide a target rich environment.
Seriously, because you are told answers over and over that you don't want to accept. We Catholics are supposed to accept your information as accurate and correct, but you do not provide the same courtesy. That is not a good trait. Many on here explain at nauseum why Catholics believe what they believe, but you know more. So, it is not an informational thing, it is a personality thing. Hence, the personal attacks.
You do not agree with the Catholic Church, you and several million others, great. Don't join. Go to whatever group you form or do believe in. More power to you. Nobody is going to make you go to a Catholic Church and do anything.
Got questions, we will answer our understanding and if it is not enough link you to others with better understanding. Learn as much as you like, don't tell us we are wrong and you are right. This isn't Math, nobody really knows what comes next just faith in it is close to what we believe. Best we can do at the end of the day. And us Catholics try to do better...
Get it?
I don't accept your "answers" that you've told me "over and over" because they are NOT answering the question.
So I'm asking a very specific question to focus you onto the peritnent issue. A question that is still unanswered by you.
It's clear that you're avoiding it.
Don't accept it. That is your prerogative.
But stop lying and saying it hasn't been answered. It has been answered, you just don't accept the answer.
See folks, he admits the question has been answered. He just refuses to accept the answer because it is not what he wants.
It isn't "lying" because as I've clearly explained, you answering my question thusly:
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
.... clearly does NOT answer whether you are saying the bread is the same body as what the disciples were seeing, and the same blood as was shed on the cross.
If you can't see this, then there's nothing I can do to help you.
Again, you are asking for a material explanation for a metaphysical event. A sacred mystery of the faith.
CCC 1381. You quoted Augustine as saying that what could not be seen physically is understood spiritually. Your question cannot be answered by the senses but is answered by faith. A faith you don't share. Which is fine, it is your right and prerogative.
You are doing that thing where you don't want to take in the totality of what the Church teaches but instead want to play gotcha games with excerpts devoid of context. You will not receive a natural explanation for a metaphysical mystery of faith. That is fine by me. I've also told you that you don't need to believe in Our Lady of Guadalupe or St. Juan Diego's tilma. Metaphysical event.
But stop pretending like you haven't been given good faith explanations and answers to your questions simply because you refuse to accept them or, worse, because it fails to fall into some trap you think you have set.
You are unable to explain precisely, in terms that reconcile with the material world, how Jesus became incarnate of the Blessed Virgin. It is a sacred mystery that is a matter of faith. Your inability to explain it in no way undermines your belief in it or disproves it. Same thing here.
All I was asking was whether you agreed or did not agree with the statement I provided. Nothing more, nothing less.
The reason I didn't accept your "answers" was because they didn't answer the question. I challenged your to point out where Sam answered the question, and you failed. I challenged you to provided exactly where YOU answered the question, and you failed. if you can't understand that your "answer"
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
... does NOT answer the question, then you have a comprehension. problem. I just don't know what else to say. You either get this or you don't. And if you have a problem with comprehension like that, I think this discussion with you ain't gonna be too productive. But I'll try anyway.
Is there some law of the universe of which am I unaware of that states your questions must be answered precisely in the manner you want so as to direct the conversation in precisely in the direction you want it to go? Can you please provide a citation?
The questions have been answered. You don't accept the answers because you find them unsatisfactory for whatever reason. You admit as much yourself. Fine, all within your prerogative.
More important, you have taken offense to me posting your style. Perhaps a lesson in there for someone exercising some self-reflection….
So, here's why I asked that question.
You: The Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence is that the bread IS the same body the disciples see, and the wine IS the same blood that was sacrificed on the cross. (You affirmed this)
Augustine: "Understand what I have said spiritually. You are NOT going to eat this body which you see. Nor are you going to drink the blood which those who crucify me are going to shed."
Therefore, Augustine did NOT believe in the Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence.
Point proven.
Thank you.
Please provide full quote or source. One sentence does not make a theological arguement.
You've literally been given the whole quote at least times or more already. Just goes to show you aren't reading anything, you're just reacting.
You won't give it because you know you are playing games.
"Understand what I have said spiritually. You are not to eat this body which you see, nor to drink that blood which they who crucify me will pour out. I have commended to you a certain sacrament; spiritually understood, it will quicken you. Though it is needful that it be visibly celebrated, it must be spiritually understood."
The original text was intended for those that took John 6 literally, eating human flesh. As said, numerous times.
Augustine explained the Sacrament. Clearly, you fall into the category of not understanding the Sacrament. Augustine's quote is consistent with what Sam and a host of Catholics have explained to you numerous times. You are playing games. We do not disrespect your religion like this. Your behavior is disrespectful and malicious, definitely not Christian. Maybe you should go back to the beginning and ask yourself why you do this and whose glory are you serving.
Your next move will be to come back with a question for us or article written by some Parish Priest and ask "Do you agree"...
4th and Inches said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:4th and Inches said:Sam Lowry said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:FLBear5630 said:
Because it is fun and you provide a target rich environment.
Seriously, because you are told answers over and over that you don't want to accept. We Catholics are supposed to accept your information as accurate and correct, but you do not provide the same courtesy. That is not a good trait. Many on here explain at nauseum why Catholics believe what they believe, but you know more. So, it is not an informational thing, it is a personality thing. Hence, the personal attacks.
You do not agree with the Catholic Church, you and several million others, great. Don't join. Go to whatever group you form or do believe in. More power to you. Nobody is going to make you go to a Catholic Church and do anything.
Got questions, we will answer our understanding and if it is not enough link you to others with better understanding. Learn as much as you like, don't tell us we are wrong and you are right. This isn't Math, nobody really knows what comes next just faith in it is close to what we believe. Best we can do at the end of the day. And us Catholics try to do better...
Get it?
I don't accept your "answers" that you've told me "over and over" because they are NOT answering the question.
So I'm asking a very specific question to focus you onto the peritnent issue. A question that is still unanswered by you.
It's clear that you're avoiding it.
Don't accept it. That is your prerogative.
But stop lying and saying it hasn't been answered. It has been answered, you just don't accept the answer.
See folks, he admits the question has been answered. He just refuses to accept the answer because it is not what he wants.
It isn't "lying" because as I've clearly explained, you answering my question thusly:
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
.... clearly does NOT answer whether you are saying the bread is the same body as what the disciples were seeing, and the same blood as was shed on the cross.
If you can't see this, then there's nothing I can do to help you.
Again, you are asking for a material explanation for a metaphysical event. A sacred mystery of the faith.
CCC 1381. You quoted Augustine as saying that what could not be seen physically is understood spiritually. Your question cannot be answered by the senses but is answered by faith. A faith you don't share. Which is fine, it is your right and prerogative.
You are doing that thing where you don't want to take in the totality of what the Church teaches but instead want to play gotcha games with excerpts devoid of context. You will not receive a natural explanation for a metaphysical mystery of faith. That is fine by me. I've also told you that you don't need to believe in Our Lady of Guadalupe or St. Juan Diego's tilma. Metaphysical event.
But stop pretending like you haven't been given good faith explanations and answers to your questions simply because you refuse to accept them or, worse, because it fails to fall into some trap you think you have set.
You are unable to explain precisely, in terms that reconcile with the material world, how Jesus became incarnate of the Blessed Virgin. It is a sacred mystery that is a matter of faith. Your inability to explain it in no way undermines your belief in it or disproves it. Same thing here.
All I was asking was whether you agreed or did not agree with the statement I provided. Nothing more, nothing less.
The reason I didn't accept your "answers" was because they didn't answer the question. I challenged your to point out where Sam answered the question, and you failed. I challenged you to provided exactly where YOU answered the question, and you failed. if you can't understand that your "answer"
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
... does NOT answer the question, then you have a comprehension. problem. I just don't know what else to say. You either get this or you don't. And if you have a problem with comprehension like that, I think this discussion with you ain't gonna be too productive. But I'll try anyway.
Is there some law of the universe of which am I unaware of that states your questions must be answered precisely in the manner you want so as to direct the conversation in precisely in the direction you want it to go? Can you please provide a citation?
The questions have been answered. You don't accept the answers because you find them unsatisfactory for whatever reason. You admit as much yourself. Fine, all within your prerogative.
More important, you have taken offense to me posting your style. Perhaps a lesson in there for someone exercising some self-reflection….
So, here's why I asked that question.
You: The Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence is that the bread IS the same body the disciples see, and the wine IS the same blood that was sacrificed on the cross. (You affirmed this)
Augustine: "Understand what I have said spiritually. You are NOT going to eat this body which you see. Nor are you going to drink the blood which those who crucify me are going to shed."
Therefore, Augustine did NOT believe in the Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence.
Point proven.
Thank you.
There's a difference between the mortal body crucified on the cross and the risen body in heaven, yet they are the same body.
based on scripture, yes, they are the same body
Not the same body in the sense that it wasn't Jesus' resurrected, glorified body that hung on the cross.
it wasnt? The glorified body had the pierced hands and side.. scripture states these things when Jesus is talking to Thomas and there was no body left in the tomb
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:DallasBear9902 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:FLBear5630 said:
Because it is fun and you provide a target rich environment.
Seriously, because you are told answers over and over that you don't want to accept. We Catholics are supposed to accept your information as accurate and correct, but you do not provide the same courtesy. That is not a good trait. Many on here explain at nauseum why Catholics believe what they believe, but you know more. So, it is not an informational thing, it is a personality thing. Hence, the personal attacks.
You do not agree with the Catholic Church, you and several million others, great. Don't join. Go to whatever group you form or do believe in. More power to you. Nobody is going to make you go to a Catholic Church and do anything.
Got questions, we will answer our understanding and if it is not enough link you to others with better understanding. Learn as much as you like, don't tell us we are wrong and you are right. This isn't Math, nobody really knows what comes next just faith in it is close to what we believe. Best we can do at the end of the day. And us Catholics try to do better...
Get it?
I don't accept your "answers" that you've told me "over and over" because they are NOT answering the question.
So I'm asking a very specific question to focus you onto the peritnent issue. A question that is still unanswered by you.
It's clear that you're avoiding it.
Don't accept it. That is your prerogative.
But stop lying and saying it hasn't been answered. It has been answered, you just don't accept the answer.
See folks, he admits the question has been answered. He just refuses to accept the answer because it is not what he wants.
It isn't "lying" because as I've clearly explained, you answering my question thusly:
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
.... clearly does NOT answer whether you are saying the bread is the same body as what the disciples were seeing, and the same blood as was shed on the cross.
If you can't see this, then there's nothing I can do to help you.
Again, you are asking for a material explanation for a metaphysical event. A sacred mystery of the faith.
CCC 1381. You quoted Augustine as saying that what could not be seen physically is understood spiritually. Your question cannot be answered by the senses but is answered by faith. A faith you don't share. Which is fine, it is your right and prerogative.
You are doing that thing where you don't want to take in the totality of what the Church teaches but instead want to play gotcha games with excerpts devoid of context. You will not receive a natural explanation for a metaphysical mystery of faith. That is fine by me. I've also told you that you don't need to believe in Our Lady of Guadalupe or St. Juan Diego's tilma. Metaphysical event.
But stop pretending like you haven't been given good faith explanations and answers to your questions simply because you refuse to accept them or, worse, because it fails to fall into some trap you think you have set.
You are unable to explain precisely, in terms that reconcile with the material world, how Jesus became incarnate of the Blessed Virgin. It is a sacred mystery that is a matter of faith. Your inability to explain it in no way undermines your belief in it or disproves it. Same thing here.
All I was asking was whether you agreed or did not agree with the statement I provided. Nothing more, nothing less.
The reason I didn't accept your "answers" was because they didn't answer the question. I challenged your to point out where Sam answered the question, and you failed. I challenged you to provided exactly where YOU answered the question, and you failed. if you can't understand that your "answer"
"I believe the Liturgy of Eucharist culminates in the same exact consecrated bread and wine as occurred at The Last Supper. Nothing more and nothing less"
... does NOT answer the question, then you have a comprehension. problem. I just don't know what else to say. You either get this or you don't. And if you have a problem with comprehension like that, I think this discussion with you ain't gonna be too productive. But I'll try anyway.
Is there some law of the universe of which am I unaware of that states your questions must be answered precisely in the manner you want so as to direct the conversation in precisely in the direction you want it to go? Can you please provide a citation?
The questions have been answered. You don't accept the answers because you find them unsatisfactory for whatever reason. You admit as much yourself. Fine, all within your prerogative.
More important, you have taken offense to me posting your style. Perhaps a lesson in there for someone exercising some self-reflection….
So, here's why I asked that question.
You: The Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence is that the bread IS the same body the disciples see, and the wine IS the same blood that was sacrificed on the cross. (You affirmed this)
Augustine: "Understand what I have said spiritually. You are NOT going to eat this body which you see. Nor are you going to drink the blood which those who crucify me are going to shed."
Therefore, Augustine did NOT believe in the Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence.
Point proven.
Thank you.
Let me paraphrase you: "I don't believe this Doctor of your Church is any kind of authority on the topic, I don't believe what he believes or what you believe, but let me tell you exactly what it means. Check mate, Roman Catholics."
You are taking that quote out of context. You have been provided numerous other quotes from Augustine that present a much more nuanced view that can be harmonized with what Sam is representing to be Catholic teaching. A man of good will would engage that instead of trying to tell others what they really believe.
That quote is not out of context. The "context" argument is a pathetic attempt to dishonestly weasle out of what's clearly being said. Augustine disagrees with your church, therefore "it's out of context!"
I'd love to hear your explanation how it's out of context, though. Here's the whole quote (again), in context:
"What seemed difficult to them was his saying, "Unless a man eat my flesh, he will not have eternal life." They understood it foolishly. They thought in a carnal way and supposed that the Lord was going to cut off some pieces of this body and give the pieces to them. And they said, "This is a hard saying." They were the ones who were hard, not the saying. For the twelve disciples remained with him, and when the others left, they pointed out to him that those who had been scandalized by what he had said had left. But he instructed them and said to them, "It is the spirit which gives life. The flesh profits nothing. The words which I have spoken to you are spirit and life." Understand what I have said spiritually. You are not going to eat this body which you see. Nor are you going to drink the blood which those who crucify me are going to shed. I have given you a sacrament. Understood spiritually, it will give you life. Although it must be celebrated visibly yet it should be understood invisibly."
- Augustine, Translated by J.E. Tweed. From Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, First Series, Vol. 8. Edited by Philip Schaff. (Buffalo, NY: Christian Literature Publishing Co., 1888.)
How can this quote be taken to mean anything but that Augustine did not believe that the eating of Jesus' flesh and drinking of his blood was going to be in the literal, physical sense? He clearly says it is a SPIRITUAL eating. The sacrament he is referring to is the Eucharist, and it is to be celebrated visibly, but "understood spiritually". This is clearly NOT the Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence.