BusyTarpDuster2017 said:TinFoilHatPreacherBear said:BigGameBaylorBear said:DallasBear9902 said:Sam Lowry said:TinFoilHatPreacherBear said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:TinFoilHatPreacherBear said:FLBear5630 said:
Leaving room? This has been analyzed for 1000+ years. There are monastic orders, Universities, and museums dedicated to studying Augustine's writings, philosophies and believes. (Not to mention the Vatican, which has his original texts) that have parsed every word, your view is the outlier. So, yeah there is little chance everyone for this long has got it wrong.
But, are you prepared to turn the "could have" on Sola Scriptura? There is far less in any of Christ or Paul's writings saying that a book to be determined 500 years in the future was to be the end all in Christian thought than there is to say Augustine didnt believe in real presence in the eucharist. You prepared to go into the "could have" of Luther?
The real problem with "RC research" is that the Catholic church requires absolute conformity, and real presence plus transubstantiation now, is the only acceptable outcome despite clearly figurative language. Fwiw, I accept Real 'Spiritual' Presence as a reasonable belief, transubstantiation though is a different story historically. So I don't take issue with the general premise that Augustine was likely or close to a real presence believer, but it's not as clear as the RC's portray - again they can allow no doubt because without real presence you cannot have their version of transubstantiation.
Honest, intelligent take. However, it's clear to me that Augustine was nowhere close to the RC view of the Real Presence, which includes transubstantiation. Transubstantiation is derived from and based on the literal interpretation of John chapter 6, "eat my flesh and drink my blood", which Augustine obviously did not believe in. I don't how anyone can think otherwise, given the quotes I've provided above explicitly stating such.
No it's clear he did not believe in the literal take on it, an objective person knows that is clear.
As I said, I believe they have to overstate Augustine because of the step from real presence to transubstantiation is so great, a figurative spiritual significance isn't enough for that chasm.
On the contrary, Augustine's view is fundamentally no different from that of Aquinas. He just lacks the philosophical theory that Aquinas applied to it. Augustine clearly doesn't put the spiritual significance in opposition to the literal. Rather he puts it in addition. This is why those who receive the sacrament unworthily are condemned. They are not in spiritual communion with Christ or the body of believers, yet they are indeed partaking of Christ's flesh.
This is what is so weird to me about this conversation. I don't read Augustine as inconsistent with anything I have been taught in my life in the Church. Yet people who reject Church teaching or who don't even recognize Augustine as an authority on the Eucharist are hell-bent on telling us that they are the ones who truly know what Church teaching and Augustine really mean. It just doesn't make any sense. Many such cases.
I am, in part, thankful for my experience at Baylor because it really opened my eyes to the fact that for many Protestants, even to this day, their faith is materially defined by their opposition to Rome. Don't get me wrong, my Catholic schooling did cover the reformation and explore those issues as a theological and historical topic, but there seems to be an unreciprocated intensity to their focus on us. I also understand a good faith effort to oppose that which you disagree with, but for some, it goes way beyond that.
Similar experience. Grew up in a Catholic household and went to Baylor because I wanted to go to a Christian school. Didn't take long to realize many of my Protestant peers didn't claim us as Christians. I never really thought about the whole Protestant v Catholic/Ortho thing until then. Luckily Baylor has a huge Catholic population since much of the student body is from the West Coast.
Fwiw, my best friend from Baylor is Protestant, he was initially interested in Orthodox but I think he is starting to migrate to Catholicism because there's no Orthodox presence in his home-town.
It wasn't that long ago that most practicing prots didn't see many devout Catholics. Just the general population, with every vice under the sun, and so they don't believe most of the catholic-in-name-only are saved. I don't necessarily think so either. Same for progressive CINO prots, they have willingly exchanged truth for a lie.
And it works both ways. Was in a Wendy's where a catholic lay person verbally attacked a Presby Priest and berated him in line. I watched for a bit and then decided to help the nice guy out and reminded the lady of Romes not so spotless past. And of course, her view is that is irrelevant because RC rules.
Anyway for the most part, Its a little different today because we are able to interact and see devout examples daily through media. So most practicing traditional prots that I know have little doubt that the devout RCs who truly put their faith in Christ will be in heaven along with the devout prots.
Devout Catholics bow and pray before statues of Mary, credit her for their salvation, believe that the mass is a re-presented propiatory sacrifice for sins committed since the last mass (i.e., Jesus' work was NOT finished and his sacrifice was NOT once for all time), believe that salvation is contingent upon their work and merit, and believe in purgatory where they must pay for their sins, expressly denying the finished work of Jesus.
Can you really call all this "putting their faith in Christ"?
This is mostly incorrect, BTW. The mass is not a new sacrifice for sins, nor is purgatory a place of payment for what Christ already purchased. Some other issues have already been addressed.