SolomonVII
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- Sep 4, 2003
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I am not sure if this is 100% correct. The Eucharist is His glorified body. His body at the last supper and on the cross were not glorified.
.....
Please don't think that I am brushing you off with my describing your perspective as interesting.Hmm, interesting perspective.
But I don't think that Jesus had two bodies. I think that he had only one.
I do think that there is an interesting historical discussion about some aspects of that perspective that has taken place over whether the Eucharist consists of unleavened or leavened bread.
I left out the part where you saw me as describing the Mass as magical time travel. That part was uninteresting to me, but there is a great discussion to be had of which form of Bread, Risen, or unleavened, best describes the partaking of the Body and Blood of Christ.
Eastern and Western rites have different perspectives on this, but I don't think that either perspective has yet been pronounced heretical by the other.
Leavened Bread vs. Unleavened - Questions & Answers
Leavened vs. Unleavened Bread
If our ordinary experience of time is experienced as a flow of unique moments progressing and yet both concretely separated from past memory and future potential, our ordinary experience of our bodies as separate and unique from all others is at least as difficult for our minds to overcome.You are right, He has only one...
And we are members of that One...
So do you believe Paul?
Col. 1:24
Who now rejoice in my sufferings for you,
and fill up that which is behind of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh
for his Body's sake, which is the Church:
His Body is much more than just Carl, Julie and Fred
who happen agree in their own interpretation of the Bible...
Arsenios
Experience of time and body in the ordinary sense is necessary aspect of survival in our world. To experience the world through all humans simultaneously, to experience their joys and anxieties and pain as if through one body and as our own experience would be an extraordinary experience, like seeing the face of God.
It is something that would make life as we know it impossible.
There are a few people who have talked about their Near Death experiences as living their lives through the perspective of the others whose lives they have touched, as seeing their life as others have experienced it. For some psychopaths, who had left behind only a trail of destruction and pain, to then experience themselves through others as the pain that they unleashed on the world, was a hellish, and life changing experience.
There is terribleness to Oneness for those of us who sin, when we become the ones that we have wronged during our lives lived separately.
One Body is not how we perceive our body in the here and now, but I think that the ancient Jewish perspective is that all of humanity was contained in Adam and therefore all were present in the Garden at the Fall. We are all the first Adam in that sense, but to die in Christ as the first Adam is to resurrect in Christ as the Second.
It is a pragmatic matter that we experience ourselves as separate from one another, but the deeper reality is that we are all one in Christ. Once we grasp that truth, even intellectually, we can understand why Jesus would describe the one body union of man and woman in the bonds of Sacred Matrimony as being redundant in heaven. Our bonds in the one body of Christ, which is the Church, are much deeper and more profoundly intimate than even the marriage between a man and a woman here on earth ever could be.
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