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Just curious. Were you pro or anti real presence at the start of this evaluation?
Sorry, I keep forgetting to reply to this. I was anti real presence but had not given it a tremendous amount of thought. I had pretty much always simply dismissed it as ridiculous, since I see no solid evidence for it in scripture. After looking at the early Christian writings, I can see why people believe it. I don't see the unanimous agreement that you do, but it is obvious some believed in it.
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People who dive into philosophy by picking and choosing from quotes on google search websites should take some care. There is a massive difference between cherry picking a quote out of context and reading all of what they wrote.
You could not be more right on this. After this post, I will probably bow out of the quote discussion. You provided the context of the Clement quote for me. Do you have another source that you would recommend from the early Christians, preferably from Tertullian if possible since he is one whose quotes seem pretty figurative to me. I'd like to see if I really am misunderstanding him.
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So, question -- then what did Tertullian disagree with Marcion? Marcion said it was just bread, that he must have given bread for us. Tertullian is teaching that he didn't give bread for us.
From what I could find on Marcion, he believed Christ lacked a body and existed more as a phantom. As such he would have stated Christ was merely pretending that the bread was His body. Tertullian's point was very clear though. He stated the bread could not possibly be a
figure of something that did not actuallly exist. His argument with Marcion was regarding whether or not Christ had an actual body. This does nothing to support the real presence in the bread.
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Second quote -- Tertullian saying that someone received the Lord's Body means that he didn't believe it was the Lord's Body?
Let's go to Christ's words: Take, eat, this is my body. If I were to hand you a piece of bread that looked like bread, felt like bread, smelled like bread, and tasted like bread and told you it was my body, you would conclude I was either crazy or speaking figuratively. With Christ, there is obviously a third option, since He actually possesses the power to transform the substance. Adding a third viable option, however, does not negate the validity of the second option. You have to look at the context to determine whether he means literally or figuratively. I believe the context provided by scripture supports the figurative. If Christ Himself used this language figuratively, I have no reason to suspect the early Christians would not have done the same.
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There is a union of physical and spiritual here. What is the amazing mystery of bread and wine that's just a remembrance? Only symbolic?
The Greek word for mystery, musterion, is used 27 times in the New Testament. The vast majority of the time it is used to describe God's will or plan regarding the salvation of man or of some specific aspect of that salvation. The mystery is what the bread and wine represent and what is being proclaimed when they are consumed. Whether or not the bread is symbolic or literal detracts zero from the mystery.
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Later he says "since flesh is moistened with blood, and blood is figuratively termed wine, we are bidden to know that, as bread, crumbled into a mixture of wine and water, seizes on the wine and leaves the watery portion, so also the flesh of Christ, the bread of heaven absorbs the blood; that is, those among men who are heavenly, nourishing them up to immortality, and leaving only to destruction the lusts of the flesh."
This is why I believe it is dangerous to give the early Christians anywhere close to the same consideration one gives scripture. This is absolute nonsense. Water and wine would mix into solution and soak into the bread as a solution. There would be no separating or "seizing" on the wine, unless you are advocating God miraculously separates the two, a teaching which would have zero scriptural support. Clement's analogy here is based on a ridiculous false premise.
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Again, I don't think you're understanding the use of type and symbol here. Those words are probably tupos and symbolum. Tupos is like a model, an image, a pattern a figure; and symbolum means that which implies the other. The type symbol of the bread implies anti-type of the spiritual reality of the mystery. And I would agree also that it's not the bread that we eat unworthily, but the Body. Does that make sense?
I'm fairly familiar with types and anti-types, as the Bible is replete with them (e.g. flood/baptism in 1 Pet 3). Most often the objects of comparison involve one from the Old Testament and one from the New Testament. The Passover lamb and Christ would be an anti-type/type. The Passover meal and the Eucharist would be an anti-type/type. I'm not particularly certain I understand the anti-type/type you are saying Origen is referring to.
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St Cyril
"For thus we come to bear Christ in us, because His Body and Blood are distributed through our members; thus it is that, according to the blessed Peter, we become partakers of the divine nature."
How can a symbol be distributed through our members? Is a symbol the divine nature?
As I said in my comments regarding this quote, I don't think Cyril is right in applying Peter's words to the Eucharist. I think Peter explains his own words, and it doesn't involve this at all. Regarding how Christ is distributed through our members, this is getting into territory I believe it is difficult for us to understand. Scripture talks about all persons of the Trinity dwelling in us, and this is something that I admittedly find difficult to understand. Thankfully, though I continue to try and understand more, I don't think God expects me to understand all the ins and outs.
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For point 4, it's not flesh. It's bread. But it is the body and blood of Christ.
Now I'm confused. Such a big deal has been made about Christ saying his
flesh really is food, but you don't believe it is flesh???