- Joined
- Jun 12, 2015
- Messages
- 13,927
- Gender
- Male
- Religious Affiliation
- Lutheran
- Political Affiliation
- Conservative
- Marital Status
- Married
- Acceptance of the Trinity & Nicene Creed
- Yes
I choose not to accept the is as literal flesh and blood
Okay.... That's your political "right."
But you've stressed that we are to go by what Jesus said and Paul penned. And obviously, that's exactly what all Christians did for 1500 years until Zwingli came along and invented his "not so" view, his "can't be so" insistence - and then invented this new theory: "It's metaphor." Yes, of course, YOU can appoint one (YOU) to CHOOSE to not fully accept what what Jesus said and Paul penned.... YOU can appoint one (YOU) to CHOOSE to disagree with all Christians for over 15 centuries and agree with the man Zwingli who invented the "isn't so" view in the 16th Century. I'm not disallowing your "political right" here. I'm simply noting what it is: You have chosen to NOT fully accept the words of Scripture, of Jesus, of Paul.... while insisting all should do what you "choose" not to it.
because the context makes it obvious that it should not be taken literally
I wonder..... IF it's "obvious" why did not one person for 1500+ years notice that until one individual, Zwingli, came along when it's "obvious?? Weird.
Nearly half of the NT is from the pen of St. Paul. And of course, that includes the main Eucharistic text we're discussing. Perhaps you could go through Paul's writings and show us all the many places where what he writes is not true, not to be taken fully, where he uses metaphor? Is that Romans chapter 8? Where are the examples that prove Paul often didn't mean what he penned, the many times he uses metaphor? Why you (yourself) CHOOSE to pick out a sentence from his writings and individually insist, "AH - all Christians have been wrong for 15 centuries, no Christian noticed this before, but OBVIOUSLY here again, yet again, Paul is using metaphor and doesn't want us to fully accept what he pens!!!" Where is your evidence for this in the writings of St. Paul?
Once again, you forego Sola Scriptura
Sola Scriptura is NOT "I appoint ME myself to determine when God meant what He says in Scripture and when He doesn't."
you rely upon faulty tradition as your source for belief
I think just accepting the words Jesus said and Paul penned in not faulty.
The view you are promoting is purely a gentile denominational tradition - it comes from Zwingli in the 16th Century. And he invented the view NOT because he appointed himself alone to "read" the letters of St. Paul as "not to be accepted" and "metaphor" but because he denied the inseparable two natures of Christ (his Christology was heretical) and thus viewed that what Jesus said and Paul penned "cannot be true." CANNOT. Thus, since it CANNOT be true - it must be seen as not what was said. Today, many parrot his view - even if they don't parrot his heretical concept of Christology: their issue is "CANNOT BE TRUE" and thus insist that all of a sudden, in a way so uncharacteristic of Paul, one word is "metaphor" but not the words around it... this he does NOT because he has any evidence that Pauls letters don't mean what they state but because he found what Jesus said and Paul penned to be impossible, his WRONG view of physics and his heretical views of Christology. This is the tradition you have CHOSEN to accept and promote. And you have offered exactly what Zwingli did to support it: nothing, just what you appoint yourself alone to do: choose to not accept it, choose to pick one word and appoint self to declare "Jesus and Paul didn't mean that!"
Thank you.
- Josiah
.