packermann
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- Nov 30, 2003
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There's also no dogma concerning the interpretation of that specific word appearing in Scripture.... The new, unique, RCC Dogma of Transubstantiation is the imposition of two long-rejected, pagan theories to help understand the word "CHANGE" in the Eucharistic texts. Thing is: the word never once is used.
Neither the word Trinity is used. In fact, our Trinitarian creeds are also very Aristotelian.
For example, Aristotle taught that the body and soul constitute a composite unity. The physical body was like matter to the soul, but it was the soul that constituted the actual form which the body had taken. Further, Aristotle taught that the soul is immortal, and self-moving (i.e. self perpetuating)...he believed the soul was the source of motion itself. Aristotle contributes to the doctrine of Christ as the Pre-Incarnate God, a self-moving, self-perpetuating deity, through whom the worlds were formed or created. Quoting again from the Athanasian Creed:
But the Godhead of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, is all one: the Glory equal, the Majesty co-eternal. Such is the Father, such is the Son: and such is the Holy Ghost. The Father uncreated: the Son uncreated: and the Holy Ghost uncreated...The Father eternal, the Son eternal, and the Holy Ghost eternal...for as the reasonable soul and flesh is one man: so God and Man is one Christ.
Greek Philosophy and the Trinity
So would you then say that the concept of the Trinity is pagan and there for we reject the Trinity? After all, the Athanasian Council took terms from Aristotle to explain the Trinity.
No. You entirely evaded the point. Peter said, "You ARE the Christ, the Son of the living God." He used the EXACT SAME VERB that Jesus and Paul used in the Eucharistic texts: "this is....." When this verb appears in the Eucharistic texts, the RC Denomination (uniquely and dogmaticly since 1551) says the verb means "Has undergone an alchemic transubstantiation leaving behind Aristotelian accidents." And that this happens at the proclaimation of the verb. Okay. So, that means that when Peter proclaimed the exact same verb, Christ underwent an alchemic transubstantiation (CHANGING into the Son of the Living God; "is/are" = undergone alchemic transubstantiation) leaving behind an Aristotelian accident - the ghost APPEARANCE of something that is not "real" (so that Jesus is no longer human, He only has the Aristotelian ACCIDENT of being human, a ghost image). Are you aware of the heresies concerning the Two Natures of Christ?
But Jesus always was Christ. The bread was not always the body of Christ. It is simple logic.
1. The bread before consecration is not the body of Christ.
2. The bread after consecration is the is the body of Christ
If you accept both of these premises, then there had to have been a change a change from not-being-the-body-of-Christ to being-the-body-of-Christ.
Nowhere - including in the Bible, INCLUDING IN REFERENCE TO JESUS, does is/are = undergone an alchemic transubstantiation leaving behind an Aristotelian accident. Is just means is. Are means are. That's the specific word Jesus said and Paul by inspiration penned. Not "changed - having undergone an alchemic transubstantiation leaving behind an Aristotelian Accident." Lutherans accept what Jesus said and Paul penned. Just as we do when Peter says, "You are the Christ."
First, transubstantiation did not come from alchemy. You offered no evidence. The burden of proof is on you to prove it. The burden of proof is not on me to prove that it did not come from alchemy. I cannot prove a negative. So far, you have not presented any evidence that alchemy influenced the Catholic doctrine.
Second, the Bible did use the teaching of Greek philosophers. John 1:1 used the word logos In the beginning was the logos, and the logos was with God, and logos was God.
The Stoics taught that God was dynamic reason (logos), and that God was the active principle which forms matter. The active principle or logos (i.e. God), exists in reality as mind, or consciousness, and dwells within the human body. These characters were like new Age religions today. It would be the same as the metaphysical mumbo-jumbo that says God is the active principle or the life force. Catholic theologians would later use some of the Stoic language to refer to Jesus as, the logos of God, who, as the mind or conscious thought (logos) of Deity, was incarnated into a human body of flesh. This is where the concept of Jesus being God in human form came from.
Greek Philosophy and the Trinity
So does this mean that the Bible got its ideas from pagan philosophy and not from God. Although many atheists would argue this way, I would deny this. Paul talked of being all things to all me. The NT writers would borrow pagan terms and christianise them.
In every culture and each period in history, we Christians need to learn how to communicate the gospel in term that the people in that place and time could understand. So when the apostles preached to the Jews, they communicated the gospel in ways they could understand. When the apostles preached to the Gentiles, they communicated the gospel in ways they could understand, which they packaged the gospel in pagan concepts. But this does not mean that they compromised Gods truth to their pagan culture.
In the same way, the Church throughout the ages would communicate the gospel to people who could understand it at that time. The people in the Middle Ages were into Aristotle, so they communicated the Eucharist in term they could understand. But if this does not communicate to you, that is fine. You are not obligated to use transubstantiation. My wife would have no idea what transubstantiation means, and most Catholic would not know what is meant by this. That is fine, as long as they believe that the Eucharist is the body and blood of Christ.
So I have no objections to you not using the term. If you would rather not use the term, that is fine. But what I object to is calling the Church pagan because it tries to communicate the gospel in terms that pagans could understand.
You yourself did the same thing by using your computer analogy. Did I object to your computer argument on the ground that the word computer is not in the Bible? No, of course not! I understand that we need to communicate ancient truths in our modern times. Just because you used a modern invention to illustrate a point does make you a modernist. And just because the Catholic Church, and even the New Testament writers, use pagan concepts to explain Gods truth does not mean they are pagan.
Your analogy breaks down because Jesus was always the Christ. Are you saying that the bread is always Christ? If that is the case, then we should never eat bread again except within the sacrament. PANERA BREAD and SUBWAY would go out of business!Nor did Peter say, "You have CHANGED into the Christ, the Son of the Living God." He said, "You ARE...." Same verb used here.... The verb NOWHERE- on the Bible, in reference to Christ or anything or anyone else, means, "Has undergone an alchemic transubstantiation leaving behind an Aristotelian Accident."
Yes. Going to the bathroom after receiving the Sacrament has some HUGE implications for Catholics, and could easily be seen as sacrilege. I know. The RCC LOVES to explore such issues. We don't.
The Catholic Church teaches that the bread only remains the body of Christ as long as it still retains the appearance of bread. The Church can say this, because believe that it has an infallible magisterium.
The problem I am having is that the Lutherans say one thing but their actions show they do not really believe it. You say the Real presence is in the Sacrament. OK. But why do you not treat the sacrament as if it is so? The only ones whose actions match their beliefs are the Catholics. They kneel in front of the Eucharist when they enter the Church. They place the Lord of the host in a beautiful tabernacle in a prominent place in the chapel. At my Opus Dei meeting, the priest asks for permission from the Lord in the Eucharist to preach a sermon in His presence. We have 24-hour Eucharistic adorations where people come in around the clock to keep our Lord company. We have processions whereby the priest leads the way holding high the Eucharist. Is not this the way we would treat our Lord Jesus if He was to be bodily among us. If Jesus was to knock on the door of your church, would you not kneel at His feet and adore Him? Would you not give him the best place to sit in your church? Would you not come and visit him and keep Him company throughout the night? And yet, even though you say that the Real Presence is in the host, your church would not think twice in throwing him out with the rest of the garbage. And you do care if they do! You are not sure if He is still present, but you do not care if He is. You just dont go there!
I am relieved for your sake that your Eucharist is not a valid Eucharist. If it was, I cannot see how God would not be gravely offended at how you treat him. You treat it as mere bread because I think deep down you know it is just bread. And I thank God for your sake it is just mere bread. I mean no offense by this.
No offense taken. As I said before, the Catholic Church would prefer to shut up. But throughout history, the Church has not had that luxury. It has to deal with heresy. The Church has only officially defined doctrine when it was threatened by heresy. As you pointed out, consubstantiation was first taught with the Catholic Church but it was a heresy, which was condemned by the Church. The Church also had to explicitly define what is the truth transubstantiation.NO offense intended at all, but I often remember a comment made by a Greek Orthodox friend of my back in college. She said, "The biggest problem with the Roman Catholic Church is that it has never learned how to shut up." I wouldn't put it quite like that, but I think there is some validity in the comment.
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Imagine if the Church did it the way you want - Consubstantiation is the wrong way to think of the Eucharist. But we will not tell you the right way to think of the Eucharist. We just do not know. It is a mystery. Somehow I do not think that would work. People need to know not only what not to think, but what to think. Imagine if Arianism was condemned but the Nicene creed was not formulated.
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