The Catholic Church did not say “This is my body.” Jesus said “This is my body.” The words are right there in your Bible. You just refuse to believe them. God bless you too.
Of course He did my dear friend. That is NOT in question at all.
The question is.....Do you believe that He meant YOU should eat his literal flesh and drink His literal blood.
That is what you say you believe. That is the Catholic doctrine of transubstantiation.
That is a Catholic doctrine, NOT a Bible doctrine.
Radbertus first made up this doctrine in the 9th century. Radbertus was a French monk who taught the bread and wine are not merely symbolic of Christ’s body and blood but are parts of the actual human body that housed the Son of God while on earth. Despite there being no biblical foundation for his claim, Radbertus declared that, upon consecration by a priest, the elements become “nothing but Christ’s flesh and blood”.
YOU as a Catholic support this by a
literal view of Matthew 26:26-29........
"Take eat; this is my body. For this is my blood of the new testament which is shed for many for the remission of sins."
The Protestant understanding is that the bread and wine are symbols and it is the view I believe because it is rooted in the Word of God and not a man.
Consider these reasons why the bread and wine were
symbols of Christ's body and blood, to be partaken in for remembrance purposes only, and that there was
no material conversion of the bread to the body, nor of the wine to the blood of Christ.
1.
Jesus, after saying "this is my blood" in Matthew 26:28 also said "I will not drink henceforth of this
FRUIT OF THIS VINE" in Matthew 26:29, showing that the
grape juice was
STILL WINE and had not been changed to blood.
2.
Jesus
often referred to Himself in symbols, yet why equate Him with the symbol in these Scriptures?
John 10:7 "I am the door." Did Jesus mean He was literally wooden? No.
John 14:6 "I am the way." Did Jesus mean He was literally a road? No.
John 15:5 "I am the vine." Did Jesus mean He was literally a tree? No.
John 8:12 "I am the light." Did Jesus mean He was literally a torch or a sun? No.
John 6:48 "I am the bread of life." Did Jesus mean He was literally a loaf of dough? No.
Now please PeaceB, notice the words of Jesus in John 6:63 where He states clearly that Jesus was
speaking spiritually, not literally: "
The words that I speak unto you, THEY ARE SPIRIT and they are life."
Luke 22:19 states clearly that the Lord's supper is for
remembrance purposes:........
"This do in
remembrance of me."
If you will take the time to look it up you will see that this is a metaphor, where one thing is said to be another thing because of it's similarity. You see, A metaphor is a figurative use of terms without indicating their figurative nature, for example, he shall eat his words.
3.
The bread and wine did not become Christ's body and blood because:
A. Christ was still present with them. Christ would have had 2 bodies, one which died on the cross and one which did not.
B. To drink blood was forbidden in Acts 15:20, 29 "We write unto them, that they abstain from pollutions of idols, and from fornication, and from things strangled, and from BLOOD."
In Deuteronomy 12:16, "Only ye shall
not eat the
blood."
4.
The tense of the Greek verbs "EAT" in John 6:50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 56, 57, 58 is in the
AORIST tense showing a
ONCE-FOR-ALL, point action, that is NOT CONTINUAL. The Biblical Lord's supper is to be a repeated event, and therefore has no saving merit.
Do you realize why YOU are so adamant on believing the body and blood is literal??????
It is because Roman Catholics are commanded to believe in transubstantiation because it was stated at the Council of Trent (11 October 1551) that this doctrine was essential for salvation. They pronounced curses on anyone who would deny it.
Paul the Apostle, in contrast, pronounced a double curse on anyone who preached a gospel different from the all sufficiency of Christ's death, burial and resurrection to save us from our sins. Therefore in Galatians 1:6-9 Paul puts a double curse on this "other gospel" of transubstantiation for salvation.
5.
Before Christ ascended to heaven, He promised to come to us during the Church Age,
NOT in the sacrifice of the MASS, but by the
Holy Spirit (John 14:16-18 as Comforter):............
"He shall give you another Comforter ... even the Spirit of truth ... I will not leave you comfortless:
I WILL COME TO YOU."
Note: Christ will return to earth a second time visibly in glory. This is what is meant by 1 Corinthians 11:26..........
"For as often as ye eat this bread, and drink this cup, ye do show the Lord's death
TILL HE COME."
Note: This means that Christ does
not come literally and visibly as the
wafer in the
mass, but to the air as in 1 Thessalonians 4:16-17.
6.
At the Council of Constance in 1415 it was agreed to withhold the cup from the congregation lest the wine be spilt. However this contradicts 1 Corinthians 11:25-29 where
ALL Corinthian believers drank of the wine: .....................
"Whosoever shall eat this bread and
drink this cup unworthily." (v.27)
Drinking the cup is mentioned
six times in five verses.
Transubstantiation is not a mystery, but an absurdity; not a difficulty but a contradiction.
So then, how do we then do we eat His flesh and drink His blood?
Answer : THROUGH THE WORD OF GOD.
John 6:63. "The words that I speak unto you, they are spirit, and they are life."
John 1:14. "And the
Word was made
flesh."
John 5:24. "He that heareth My
Word and believeth on Him that sent Me, has everlasting life."
The scribes who knew Jeremiah 31:31-34..........
"I will put my
law in their inward parts".
Jeremiah 15:16..........
"Thy
words were found and
I DID EAT THEM; and thy word was unto me the joy and rejoicing of mine heart", understood the idea of receiving God's Word into one's inner being.
Peter got the
message, while others planned to desert Jesus:
"Thou hast the
WORDS of eternal life." (John 6:68)
"Being
born again ... by the
WORD of God." (1 Peter 1:23-25) Peter knew that Jesus was speaking about the
WORD of God, and not about literal flesh and blood.
Question:
If this doctrine of transubstantiation only arose in the 9th century, and if it is so necessary to Roman Catholic salvation, what happened to those who lived before the 9th century not believing this doctrine? Did they all go to hell?
Question:
What about the thief on the cross who repented and never took the wafer? Did he go to hell?