Free Republic
Browse · Search
Religion
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Born Fundamentalist, Born Again Catholic – Conversion Story of David B. Currie
ch network ^ | David B. Currie

Posted on 05/10/2013 10:47:38 AM PDT by NYer

Born Fundamentalist, Born Again Catholic

By David B. Currie

The day President John F. Kennedy was shot is one of my most vivid childhood memories. I was in sixth grade playing on the playground when the rumors started. Just before the dismissal bell at the end of the day, the principal made the announcement over the PA system: JFK had been assassinated.

School was dismissed in eerie silence. Tears welled up in my eyes as I walked the half mile home that afternoon. My sorrow was almost overwhelming for a sixth-grader, not only because our President was dead, but primarily because in my heart of hearts I believed that he was in hell.

He was a Catholic, and I was a Christian fundamentalist.

I was the second child in a family of four children, the only boy. Since my father was a fundamentalist preacher, I was what people often called a “PK” (preacher’s kid). My parents had met at Houghton College after my mother transferred there from Nyack Bible Institute in New York. They returned to Chicago and were married by A. W. Tozer, a well-known fundamentalist author who was also their pastor. I was born while my father was attending Dallas Theological Seminary. At various times both of my parents taught at Moody Bible Institute.

I have fond memories of sitting in church every Sunday listening to my father preach. Through him I had an education in theology before I ever attended seminary. Every Sunday we attended church for Sunday school, morning worship, evening worship, and youth group. We also faithfully attended Wednesday prayer meeting and Friday youth group each week. Our entire lives revolved around our church.

The only annual religious celebrations our church observed were Christmas and Easter. Other than those two holidays, I had never even heard of a “church calendar” that recognized the events of the Incarnation every year. We did celebrate certain secular holidays, however, such as Mother’s Day.

We were called “fundamentalists” because we believed in the fundamentals of the Christian faith. Fundamentalism as a theological movement had been formulated in reaction to the rise of modernism in Protestant theology around the beginning of the twentieth century. We felt that it was important that we be clear on the inspiration and inerrancy of the Bible, as well as the truths of Christ’s Deity, virgin birth, substitutionary atonement, bodily resurrection, and imminent second coming to set up His earthly kingdom. (The last of these beliefs is known as “premillennialism.”)

Although we believed that fundamentalist Christianity predated the Reformation, we still accepted the twin pillars of the Reformation: sola Scriptura (Scripture alone) and sola fide (faith alone).

A person became a Christian, we insisted, by believing that Christ died to pay the penalty of sin, admitting that all his own efforts at heaven were useless, and accepting Christ as his personal Savior. A single prayer was the only prerequisite for a “personal relationship” with God.

On a practical level, being fundamentalist meant keeping myself separate from the evils of the world. As such I did not dance, attend movie theaters or the ballet, use tobacco, drink alcohol, swear, play cards, gamble, or date non-fundamentalists. (Our Southern counterparts also forbade males and females to swim together.) I was almost thirty when I first stepped into a tavern. When I took my own children to see old Walt Disney reruns, I was seeing the movies for the first time.

The adults around me lived up to these standards, and their example made it easier to live this way. I never detected any of the hypocrisy in my parents that the major media tried to portray within fundamentalism. My parents taught me that commitment to the truth was always worth any sacrifice.

Views on the Catholic Faith

I was taught always to be polite and neighborly to Catholics and other people we considered to be non-Christians. Yet always we had the desire to see them some day become true believers like us. I was trained in how to turn a friendly conversation into one in which I could share the gospel. When I was in a social situation and failed to accomplish this goal, I felt a twinge of remorse, or even guilt.

Our worldview divided the world into very neat categories. Fundamentalists were the true Christians like those of the early Church. Liberals questioned the fundamentals of the faith. This group included most non-fundamentalist Protestants. Liberals might make it to heaven, but it was rather unlikely. It was bad to be a liberal, but it was much worse to be a Roman Catholic.

Catholics were not even really Christians, we believed, because they did not understand that salvation was by faith alone. We believed Catholics were going to hell because they tried to earn their salvation by good works rather than trusting only in the finished work of Christ on the Cross. No one was good enough to earn salvation. We could prove that from the Bible.

Most converts to fundamentalism were former Catholics. Although they were not saved, at least Catholics could be convinced from the Bible that they needed to be.

The last category was made up of those people who were total unbelievers. There weren’t that many of them around. I met my first atheist during my junior year in high school.

All through history, we believed, God had preserved a remnant of people who protected the truth just as we fundamentalists did now. It was easy to see that the Roman Catholic Church did not contain these believers. All one had to do was look at their beliefs.

Didn’t any Catholics ever read their Bible? We were convinced that so much of what they believed was in direct opposition to God’s Word. (I had never actually read any Catholic theology for myself, but nonetheless I was sure that I knew what Catholics believed.) We seldom pondered the many areas of agreement we had with Catholics, such as the Deity of Christ, the virgin birth, and the inspiration of Scripture.

It has been said that few people disagree with what the Church actually teaches, while there are multitudes who disagree with what they mistakenly think she teaches. I fit into the second category, finding offensive many teachings that I thought were Catholic.

I thought it was obvious that Mary had not remained a virgin after Christ’s birth, since the Bible mentions the brothers of Jesus. I could see no basis for a belief in the Assumption or the Immaculate Conception. The view of Mary as Coredemptrix and Mediatrix seemed to lower the role of Christ as our sole redeemer and mediator.

Catholic prayers to saints and veneration of images and relics also seemed to impinge on the authority of Christ. The belief that our own works were involved in our salvation seemed to fly in the face of Bible verses I had memorized as a child. How could water baptism be essential to our regeneration? That seemed too physical, too superstitious, too medieval to be true.

Purgatory flew in the face of Christ’s finished work on the Cross, as did the sacrifice of the Mass. Everyone knew that indulgences had proved to be so susceptible to manipulation. The idea that a mere man, the pope, could be infallible — well, that idea was hardly worth addressing. The few Catholics that I did know did not even seem to believe that idea.

The practice of adoring a wafer of bread and chalice of wine seemed to be as foreign to true Christianity as anything of which I could conceive. I would never have addressed any non-relative as Father, especially a priest who had never married and had children of his own. Why would anyone confess their sins to a mere mortal when they could go directly to God and be forgiven with so much less trouble?

Everyone whom I respected was convinced that the Catholics had inserted books into their Bible to bolster these false beliefs. With their Traditions, the Catholic Church belittled scriptural authority.

As is evident, there was very little distinctive to the Catholic faith that I had not been trained to reject. But what made things even worse were lukewarm Catholics. It seemed that Catholics lacked any deep commitment to their beliefs. Was it because they did not undergo adult baptism?

Baptism

In fundamentalism, babies were never baptized. Baptism was not a sacrament that actually changed someone. Nor did it bestow anything. Baptism was merely an ordinance that we did as adults for one reason: to show our obedience to Christ’s command. Since a baby could never do that, it was reserved for teenagers and adults.

I remember being baptized by my father at age 14. I publicly announced my faith in Christ, and he baptized me in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. I was then completely immersed in what I recall was extremely cold water.

In the years leading up to my baptism, I had answered numerous “altar calls.” An altar call was frequently given at the end of a service. While singing a hymn, people in the congregation were urged to walk down to the front of the aisle and meet with an elder of the church. At that time, he would be led in prayer to receive Christ as personal savior.

The catch 22 was this: How did you know whether your faith was strong enough to save you? As a child, I repeatedly would hear the altar call and wonder, “What if I was not really sincere last time?” The best solution was to go down again and make sure. Since faith was all it took to be saved, it was important to be sure that the faith you mustered up was genuine!

It was sometime after becoming Catholic that I realized my baptism had been a turning point. Although it was too subtle to notice at the time, in hindsight I realized that my relationship with God had turned a corner at my baptism. Before it, I had continually wondered if my faith was strong enough, and walked the aisle in an effort to make sure. After my baptism, I had a deep assurance that God was my loving Father. I no longer doubted that He wanted me to go to heaven even more than I did myself.

Without knowing it at the time, I had experienced my first sacrament. God had imprinted my soul with His mark. I was His.

It would take me decades before I would appreciate this truth, but God had given me the grace of faith through a sacrament. I did not totally understand the sacrament (who does?), but I did want to be baptized in accordance with Christ’s command. In His grace, God had carried me the rest of the way.

Years later, I was amazed that the Church steadfastly refused to rebaptize me after investigating my initial baptism. As a fundamentalist, I had seen many Catholics rebaptized when they left the Catholic Church. In seminary, I was taught that rebaptizing Catholic converts was necessary.

Seminary

The seminary I attended was evangelical Protestant. Perhaps I should define terms here. Within a few generations after the emergence of the fundamentalist movement, many fundamentalists had adopted for themselves the name “evangelicals” instead. This “evangelicalism” became in certain ways theologically broader than fundamentalism and more accepting of modern culture. Many evangelicals laid aside the strict fundamentalist rules against attending the theater, playing cards, and the like.

I met some wonderful professors and fellow students at the seminary. I learned a great deal, but some lessons stuck with me even after I left.

First, my Church history class was taught by a devout Presbyterian. I came away from the course with the distinct impression that the Protestant Reformation was very complex. There were important political forces at play that overshadowed any theological disagreements.

This fracturing of Christianity had continued right down into our own day. I had seen congregations split over “theological issues.” But when all the facts came to light, a different story usually emerged. There were political disagreements in these congregations that were at least as important as the theological. There would be two strong-willed men, or two groups of men, that simply chose to split a congregation rather than submit to any authority. Theology was many times the public justification, but certainly not the entire reason.

I also discovered that when Protestants study early Church history, they rarely read the primary sources at length. We read a great many comments about what the early Church Fathers believed. But any actual writings by the Fathers were read in snippets.

I later found what I thought might be a large part of the reason why. When I read the Fathers on my own, I came to the distinct impression that they were thoroughly sacramental and thoroughly obedient to a hierarchy already existent within the Church. In other words, they were not Protestants, evangelicals, or fundamentalists. The early Fathers had been thoroughly Catholic.

I found the theological terrain within evangelicalism in crisis. During college, I had majored in philosophy. I had come to the point where I no longer considered myself a fundamentalist. The rigidity of its theology and the lack of charity were exhibited most clearly in its doctrine of “separation.” But overall, I had just come to disagree with too much that fundamentalists held important.

In seminary, however, I found that evangelicalism was “all over the map.” There were disagreements about everything even within the seminary itself. Some of the matters of disagreement were perhaps understandable: predestination, premillennialism, the ordinances of the church. But other issues seemed to be basic enough that there should have been some semblance of consistency. There was not.

The most disturbing disagreements centered on the many Bible passages that had no plausible “Protestant” explanation. I had tucked some of them in the back of my mind before seminary. I was sure I would discover the answers to these passages. But rather than finding them answered, I found myself with a longer and longer list as I progressed through my training.

I was surrounded by the brightest and best that evangelicalism had to offer. My professors came from many different Protestant traditions. But none of them had a satisfying interpretation of these passages — even though these verses were in the one Book that they all agreed contained all they needed for salvation.

Suffering

Perhaps two examples might be helpful to illustrate this dilemma.

First, how an all-loving and all-powerful God can allow human suffering has been a topic of discussion since long before the biblical character Job suffered. As a college philosophy major, I read The Problem of Pain by C. S. Lewis for the first time. It made tremendous sense to me.

Lewis’s major point is that suffering is not random. Suffering helps a Christian grow even when no one else knows about it. Suffering teaches unqualified obedience. This perspective made a tremendous amount of sense, but unfortunately it is incomplete when compared with Scripture.

I remember once sitting in our living room with the president of Dallas Theological Seminary when I was a teenager. I had a question. How would he reconcile Colossians 1:24 with the idea of salvation by faith alone?

St. Paul had written to the Colossians: “Now I rejoice in what was suffered for you, and I fill up in my flesh what is still lacking in regard to Christ’s afflictions, for the sake of his body, which is the church.”

Paul’s perspective on suffering was much more comprehensive than C. S. Lewis’s ideas. Paul attributed salvific merit to his own suffering, even for others. His perspective in this passage was not that people could be saved by “faith alone.”

Somehow Paul assumed that the Colossians knew that faith must be perfected through suffering — dare I say, through works. He did not justify his statement as though it were a novel idea. He just stated it and moved on, as though no knowledgeable Colossian Christian would have had any doubt about his statement.

I was surprised that the learned, holy fundamentalist president of Dallas Theological Seminary had no good way to reconcile this verse in Colossians with his soteriology (theology of salvation). But I could tell that he had obviously thought about it a great deal. Later in seminary, I encountered this phenomenon repeatedly. Verses existed that could not be reconciled with any Protestant tradition by any of the professors I encountered. But it seemed to me that if some of Scripture directly contradicted my theology, it was my responsibility to rethink the theology, not the Bible.

Suffering and its role in salvation did not make sense to me until I discovered the writings of Pope John Paul II long after seminary. Somehow I got on a mailing list for a Catholic publisher. I was scandalized that they had somehow obtained my name. But I love books, so I stayed on the list.

One day I saw a book in that publisher’s catalog that had organized topically the thinking of Pope John Paul II. The Pope had been so influential in the liberation of Europe that I thought I should read some of what he had to say. It was my first direct encounter with a faithful Catholic author.

The Pope made clear that suffering is not enjoyable. But he insisted that it is essential to salvation. This thoroughly Catholic concept not only makes sense of the verse in Colossians; it infuses suffering with dignity. This was the beginning of my discovery that Catholic literature plumbed a depth of spirituality I had never even dreamed was available in print.

In some mysterious way, Pope John Paul taught, our suffering can even help in the process of other people’s salvation. Perhaps I should let him speak for himself:

“In the Paschal Mystery Christ began the union with man in the community of the Church. … The Church is continually being built up spiritually as the Body of Christ. In this Body, Christ wishes to be united with every individual, and in a special way He is united with those who suffer. … The sufferings of Christ created the good of the world’s Redemption. This good in itself is inexhaustible and infinite. No man can add anything to it. But at the same time, in the mystery of the Church as His Body, Christ has in a sense opened His own redemptive suffering to all human suffering. In so far as man becomes a sharer in Christ’s sufferings … to that extent he in his own way completes the suffering through which Christ accomplished the Redemption of the world. Does this mean that the Redemption achieved by Christ is not complete? No … Christ achieved the Redemption completely and to the very limit, but at the same time He did not bring it to a close. … It seems to be part of the very essence of Christ’s redemptive suffering that this suffering requires to be unceasingly completed” (Salvifici Doloris, 24; emphasis in the original).

Suffering’s role in our salvation is clearly taught in Scripture. I found no good explanation for this fact until I embraced the ancient faith of the Catholic Church.

The “End Times”

The biblical truth about suffering was only one of many truths I encountered that pressed me to explore Catholic teaching. I came to the firm conclusion that the best way to understand the Bible was to listen to the Catholic Church. Even so, a second example might be helpful.

I had always believed in a version of premillennialism that teaches Christ will return very soon to set up a 1,000-year reign in Jerusalem with the Jews. Most American premillennialists also believe this scenario entails a “rapture” that will take “true believers” out of the world. This “rapture” will allow a seven-year “Great Tribulation” that punishes unbelievers and prepares the world for Christ’s second coming.

You may have heard of Christians who are striving to rebuild the Jerusalem temple, or seeking to breed the pure red heifer whose ashes, once sacrificed and burned, they believe are necessary to consecrate the temple site (see Numbers 19:1–10). These people are premillennialists.

While in seminary, I pondered how to reconcile Christ’s finished work on the cross with any resumption of the Old Covenant animal sacrifices. The Book of Hebrews, for example, teaches that the old cult is no longer necessary and must pass away.

For me, the hardest biblical passage related to this discussion was found in Zechariah. I remember standing in a hallway with a man whose specialty was general eschatology (study of the “end times”). A young man approached us and asked this respected teacher about this verse. His question was this: “If Jesus’ sacrifice is final and complete, why will there be sacrifices needed in Jerusalem after the death and resurrection of Jesus?”

The scholar’s face momentarily clouded with annoyance. I have never forgotten his next statement. He admitted that he knew of no plausible evangelical explanation for these two verses.

Zechariah 14:20–21 states prophetically: “On that day … all who come to sacrifice [in Jerusalem] will take some of the pots and cook in them.” Most premillennialists agree that this passage is speaking of a time after Christ’s first coming. Why is it so problematic for them? Because they understand these events to occur during the 1000-year reign of Christ over an earthly kingdom with its capital at Jerusalem.

Here’s the rub. After Christ has died and set up His kingdom, why would sacrifices be resumed? There is absolutely no good Protestant response to that question. Evangelicals are adamant about the fact that priesthood here on earth is no longer needed. Sacrifices after the passion of Christ are unnecessary. The crucifixion of Christ was the last sacrifice ever needed. So why rebuild Jerusalem’s temple?

This verse had remained an enigma to me for sixteen years, ever since seminary. When I was investigating Catholic Church teaching, I realized that Zechariah was actually talking about a sacrifice offered in Jerusalem every day now. He was referring to the Eucharist!

The Eucharist is the only sacrifice that would have any value after the Messiah’s passion because of its connection to the passion. The sacrifice of the Mass is being offered every day in Catholic churches, not only in Jerusalem, but all over the world. In other words, the continuing sacrifices of the Church were foretold in the Old Testament. When this reality dawned on me, I got so excited I ran into our living room and gave a “high five” to my thirteen-year-old son.

Crisis and Reconciliation

We all reach certain critical decision points in our Christian pilgrimage. God gives us a choice: to follow or not to follow. These crisis points are never easy. They always involve sacrifice and suffering. And they are always an occasion of grace.

At the rather late age of 40, I knew that I had approached one of these crisis points. I had been studying Scripture all my life. By this time, I had spent the previous months studying Catholic teaching in relation to Scripture. I had desperately attempted to find a reason not to become Catholic.

I knew my family would lose friends. I knew my wife and children would have to start all over again in a new social circle. I knew that once I “went public” with these convictions, life could never again be the same. I hesitated, wondering if this was the right thing to do.

One day I woke up and knew something for certain. I turned to my wife and said, “Colleen, I know that I believe.” We had been investigating and discussing so much that I did not even need to tell her what I believed. After months of study and discussion, she knew that I was referring to the Eucharist. I believed it really was Christ’s Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity. This faith was a gift from God.

It was not a bolt out of the blue. I had spent months trying to justify to myself what I had always believed: the Protestant interpretation of John 6. Jesus had said, “I am the living bread which came down from heaven; if any one eats of this bread, he will live forever; and the bread which I will give for the life of the world is my flesh” (v. 51, emphasis added).

After studying this text from a Catholic perspective, I knew in my head that the Church was right. John 6 clearly taught that the Body of Christ was the sustenance that I needed for eternity. Zechariah had predicted it. Jesus had instituted it. And only one Church in town taught this truth as Jesus stated it: the Catholic parish five blocks from my house.

But that morning was different. That morning I woke up with the firm conviction in the center of my soul that the Church was correct about the Eucharist. I was certain of this divine truth. This grace was not a gift that I deserved. I do not know why I was singled out to receive it. Someone was obviously offering prayers and sufferings up for my enlightenment.

At this point God showed me that He had already given me another great gift: my beloved wife. At that crisis point, she simply said, “David, if that is what you believe, then you need to follow your beliefs and join the Church.”

Several months later, through another grace of God, I was reconciled to the Catholic Church: not alone, but together with my wife and all six of our children. That was 17 years ago. Since then, God has blessed us with two more children.

I can honestly say that reconciling with the Church is the best thing our family has ever done. This Church is a wonderful place to raise a family and to travel on our pilgrimage to heaven. In fact, it is the only place God ever intended for us.


TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; Evangelical Christian; Theology
KEYWORDS: bornagain
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 141-160161-180181-200 ... 221-228 next last
To: Greetings_Puny_Humans

******Christ specifically explains that He will ascend up to where He was before, and that His words are spiritual, ‘the flesh profits nothing.’ In other words, how can they expect to eat and drink him physically if He is going back to heaven? Since no one took a bite out of him to gain eternal life while they still could, I think we can safely assume that the Apostles understood “eating” and “drinking” Christ spiritually, just as Christ recommended. Furthermore, when Christ institutes the Lord’s Supper, He specifically says that it should be done for remembrance. Not for eternal life. If one is celebrating The Lord’s Supper as a remembrance, He is calling us to remember what Christ did for us on the cross, and not instituting a way to get into heaven by chewing and eating.*****

What I find interesting in these exchanges is the absolute inability of non Catholics to see the evolution of Jesus’ teachings throughout the Gospels. What a disjointed grasp of Scripture they have!

Little pieces, I guess just the shiny ones catch their attention and hold sway over them such that they have no idea of the glaring and gaping holes left by what is missing.

Jesus didn’t just throw everything at the Apostles at once, even saying that they weren’t ready for all that He had to tell them. That is why there is a flow of teachings from Him to them so that they can adjust to and grasp what they were being given.

Jesus feeds the five thousand.

Jesus gives the Bread of Life discourse.

Jesus tells them they must eat His body and drink His blood to have life within them.

Jesus breaks the bread, looks to heaven and tells them “This is My body”, likewise the cup saying, “This is MY blood.”

There’s a flow, a gentle leading of them to the truth. I think when one thinks they can “safely assume” anything, I can know that they only safely assume what they feel safe accepting rather than what is actually written.


161 posted on 05/15/2013 6:26:30 PM PDT by Jvette
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 99 | View Replies]

To: Jvette
Yes, I do fell better KNOWING that Jesus wants for me to share His crown of glory,

What? You believe God is sharing His glory with you?

She listened to God’s word, held it close in her heart and gave over to Him her entire being.

So did the apostles and ALL those who Hear and Obey. Everything I posted that Jesus said went over your head - you can't understand it.

"The person without the Spirit does not accept the things that come from the Spirit of God but considers them foolishness, and CANNOT UNDERSTAND them because they are discerned only through the Spirit." 1 Cor 2:14

162 posted on 05/15/2013 6:27:38 PM PDT by presently no screen name
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 159 | View Replies]

To: Jvette

“What I find interesting in these exchanges is the absolute inability of non Catholics to see the evolution of Jesus’ teachings throughout the Gospels. What a disjointed grasp of Scripture they have!”


What makes you think this is a disjointed grasp of scripture? You’re mere assertion that it is so? I notice you didn’t bother to explain what it is. So, let’s connect scripture with scripture. If Augustine is wrong and John 6 has nothing to do with eating and drinking through faith, why is it that the Lord’s Supper, instituted later, is only done so for the purpose of “remembrance.” Not as a legalistic method of salvation?


163 posted on 05/15/2013 6:45:33 PM PDT by Greetings_Puny_Humans
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 161 | View Replies]

To: Jvette
So the magisterium is your god........What a ridiculous statement.

WHY do you say it's ridiculous? When you basically said it. Your own words below...You trust 'man' as you trust God.

His protection and guidance is upon the Magisterium, we can trust them as we trust Him.

Catholicsm is based on 'man', with 'man' as it's head with 'man made' teachings and it has NOTHING to do with God.

Jesus is The Head of His Body/His Church and it is based on HIS WORD Alone and His Word is The FINAL Authority.

164 posted on 05/15/2013 7:01:48 PM PDT by presently no screen name
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 154 | View Replies]

To: Greetings_Puny_Humans

******“For if sacraments had not some points of real resemblance to the things of which they are the sacraments, they would not be sacraments at all. In most cases, moreover, they do in virtue of this likeness bear the names of the realities which they resemble. As, therefore, in a certain manner the sacrament of Christ’s body is Christ’s body, and the sacrament of Christ’s blood is Christ’s blood. (Augustine, Letters, 98)******

Augustine here is saying that the Sacrament are sacraments because they are REAL, as in TRUE, ACTUAL, AUTHENTIC in regards to that which they are named for. They bear the realities, as in...the state of being true to that which name they bear. Therefore, if the sacrament was not real, it would not be named for the realities which it bears.

So in a certain manner, that is without doubt in some way, the Sacrament is Christ’s body and Christ’s blood.

Augustine here is trying to explain how it is that we see and taste bread and wine, but we are partaking in Christ’s body and blood.

TRANSUBSTANTIATION!

The word symbolic or symbolism is not used here. Rather the words used are certain, real, realities. This is conjunction with Augustine’s assertion you posted shows that he did in fact try to explain the Eucharist as transubstantiation, but did use that word.

Your other “proof” that Augustine did not believe....

“They said therefore unto Him, What shall we do, that we may work the works of God?” For He had said to them, *****“œLabor not for the meat which perisheth, but for that which endureth unto eternal life.” “What shall we do?” they ask; by observing what, shall we be able to fulfill this precept? “Jesus answered and said unto them, This is the work of God, that ye believe on Him whom He has sent.” This is then to eat the meat, not that which perisheth, but that which endureth unto eternal life. To what purpose dost thou make ready teeth and stomach? Believe, and thou hast eaten already.*****

Here Augustine is speaking of Jesus’ rebuke of the crowds who followed Him after the feeding of the five thousand. They wanted a full belly and no idea of the eternal nature of the food which Jesus would give them to eat. Augustine is simply reiterating what Christ said, Why do you eat? Is is for earthly satiation or for eternal life?

“This is the work of God, that ye believe on Him who He has sent.” That is what the Church does.....we believe Jesus, whom God has sent when He says, “unless you eat my flesh and drink my blood, you have no life within you.”

*****” Understand spiritually what I have said; ye are not to eat this body which ye see; nor to drink that blood which they who will crucify Me shall pour forth. I have commended unto you a certain mystery; spiritually understood, it will quicken. Although it is needful that this be visibly celebrated, yet it must be spiritually understood.” NPNF1: Vol. VIII, St. Augustin on the Psalms, Psalm 99 (98)****

This passage goes back again to the misunderstanding of those disciples who left Christ after hearing His exhortation that they must eat His flesh and drink His blood.

******I have commended unto you a certain mystery; spiritually understood, it will quicken.******

Of, relating to, consisting of, or having the nature of spirit; not tangible or material. See synonyms at immaterial.
Of, concerned with, or affecting the soul.
Of, from, or relating to God; deific.
Of or belonging to a church or religion; sacred.
Relating to or having the nature of spirits or a spirit; supernatural.

Read more: http://www.answers.com/topic/spiritual#ixzz2TPzZW5kk

When we look at this definition of spiritual, since there is not real definition of “spiritually”, we see that the first definition is “not tangible” or “material”.

It is stated quite clearly here, THIS IS A MYSTERY which is not tangibly or materially seen but this mystery does quicken, that is gives life.

Still no refutation of the Real Presence through transubstantiation.

****These are pretty firm refutations of the Catholic View. They even understand John 6 in the way Protestants do today. Augustine isn’t alone in this. Here’s from a Pope:*****

Only in the wishful thinking of non Catholics, especially when taken together with all the other Augustine sermons regarding this subject.

*****The idea of a constant tradition on this matter is simply fiction. It stands only by reading into the Fathers the current theology of Rome today, and falsely claiming that all held the same view.*****

Wrong again as I could copy and paste quote after quote after quote going all the way back to the first century the men and women of the faith trying to explain this MYSTERY and supporting the Catholic understanding of the Sacrament of the Eucharist.

I will finish by asking you to name that Church to which Augustine belonged to and served as Bishop of Hippo for more than thirty years. Come on, I know you can:)


165 posted on 05/15/2013 7:29:30 PM PDT by Jvette
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 13 | View Replies]

To: Greetings_Puny_Humans

*****“Why don’t the Fathers support Roman dogma?” - “Well, my boy, THAT’s a mystery!” LOL******

There you go again, LOL! Can’t help yourself, huh?

I never said that what you claim is the Fathers not supporting dogma of the Catholic Church is a mystery.

I said, and what I shame I have to repeat myself so often to keep things straight, that.....

There is not one single man within the Church, to whom we can point and say, everything this man has said is perfect and orthodox.

The breadth of ignorance regarding Catholic doctrine exhibited here daily is vast and mind boggling. At least it is my hope that what I read here is truly ignorance and not something more malevolent.


166 posted on 05/15/2013 7:40:44 PM PDT by Jvette
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 99 | View Replies]

To: Jvette

“Augustine here is saying that the Sacrament are sacraments because they are REAL, as in TRUE, ACTUAL, AUTHENTIC”


He says that they have the names they do by “virtue of this LIKENESS... of the realities which they RESEMBLE.” Unless, of course, you believe that the sacrament of the Holy Spirit (the oil that he used to anoint the new believers) or the Kiss of Peace, are really, truly, authentically the transubstantiated Spirit and Peace placed into the oil and the kisses respectively.

“Then came baptism, and you were, in a manner of speaking, moistened with water in order to be shaped into bread. But it’s not yet bread without fire to bake it. So what does fire represent? That’s the chrism, the anointing. Oil, the fire-feeder, you see, is the sacrament of the Holy Spirit.” (Augustine, Ser. 227)

Another, the sacrament of the kiss of peace:

“After that comes Peace be with you; a great sacrament, the kiss of peace. So kiss in such a way as really meaning that you love. Don’t be Judas; Judas the traitor kissed Christ with his mouth, while setting a trap for him in his heart. But perhaps somebody has unfriendly feelings toward you, and you are unable to win him round, to show him he’s wrong; you’re obliged to tolerate him. Don’t pay him back evil for evil in your heart. He hates; just you love, and you can kiss him without anxiety.” (Augustine, Ser. 227)

“Therefore, if the sacrament was not real, it would not be named for the realities which it bears.”


It does not say they “bear” the realities, he says they resemble the realities:

“... bear the names of the realities which they resemble.”

The kiss of peace “resembles” the reality it is representing in the kiss. The bread resembles the body of Christ and the Church itself, which is the body of Christ. In fact, to Augustine, the point of the Eucharist is to emphasize Christian unity with each other and with God.

“If you, therefore, are Christ’s body and members, it is your own mystery that is placed on the Lord’s table! It is your own mystery that you are receiving!” (Augustine, Serm. 272).

“They wanted a full belly and no idea of the eternal nature of the food which Jesus would give them to eat. Augustine is simply reiterating what Christ said, Why do you eat? Is is for earthly satiation or for eternal life?”


Augustine says “Believe, and thou hast eaten already.”

According to the RCC, one has not eaten until they’ve literally taken a bite offered to them in church. No one “believes” and takes the Eucharist through faith. Well, CHRISTIANS do, but not Catholics.

“This passage goes back again to the misunderstanding of those disciples who left Christ after hearing His exhortation that they must eat His flesh and drink His blood.”


Earlier you said that we live with “disjointed” scripture. So, are you saying that John 6 has NOTHING to do with the Lord’s Supper wherein we are instructed to celebrate it for the purpose of “remembrance?” In both cases Jesus Christ is talking about eating and drinking Him, though to be understood spiritually and received through faith. Why are we separating that from the Lord’s Supper? It’s not like Christ commanded us, as a matter of salvation to celebrate, but rather as a memorial.

“Only in the wishful thinking of non Catholics, especially when taken together with all the other Augustine sermons regarding this subject.”


I’m quote confident you guys live in an alternate dimension where every time Augustine, in this dimension, says “resemblance,” “signified,” or “likeness,” in your dimension it reads “just kidding!” after all of it! Must be a funny dimension.


167 posted on 05/15/2013 7:46:20 PM PDT by Greetings_Puny_Humans
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 165 | View Replies]

To: presently no screen name

I believe God in His divinity is glorious and Yes, He does deign to share that divinity with me through Jesus Christ His Son.

No, all the Apostles did not hear and obey God’s word perfectly. And no, not ALL those who HEAR and OBEY do so perfectly. It is certainly our desire, but not possible until we rest completely in Him in heaven.

***** Everything I posted that Jesus said went over your head - you can’t understand it. *****

If it gives you pleasure to think this, then by all means, please do so.


168 posted on 05/15/2013 7:47:55 PM PDT by Jvette
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 162 | View Replies]

To: presently no screen name
you can't understand it.

Reading the mind of another Freeper is a form of "making it personal."

Discuss the issues all you want, but do not make it personal.

169 posted on 05/15/2013 7:59:20 PM PDT by Religion Moderator
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 162 | View Replies]

To: Jvette
Mary is His mother, first on earth and now in heaven.

Oh??

I'll bet she's in her tomb; awaiting the last trumpet sound - just like so many other Christians believers who have died.

170 posted on 05/15/2013 8:01:15 PM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 159 | View Replies]

To: Jvette
"I am the LORD; that is My name! I will not yield My glory to another or My praise to idols." Isaiah 42:8

It's your eternity, not mine. If it pleases you to ignore God's Word - that's on you, not me.

171 posted on 05/15/2013 8:24:32 PM PDT by presently no screen name
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 168 | View Replies]

To: Greetings_Puny_Humans

*****What makes you think this is a disjointed grasp of scripture?*****

Just an observation on my part, made based on the fact that non Catholics tend to throw out snippets of Scripture without relating how they fit in with the whole of Scripture.

****I notice you didn’t bother to explain what it is****

Oh but I have, if one has been paying attention.

****If Augustine is wrong and John 6 has nothing to do with eating and drinking through faith*****

Who said that Augustine is wrong? Why, if one has no faith would one partake in the Eucharist? But it is not one’s faith that makes the Eucharist what it is, but without faith, there is no purpose to participating in it.

As Augustine said, for what purpose do you ready your teeth and belly? If it is for earthly satiation, then it is without any benefit.

*****why is it that the Lord’s Supper, instituted later, is only done so for the purpose of “remembrance.” Not as a legalistic method of salvation?*****

Your quibble here would be with the Lord Himself and not me, for it was He that said one must eat and drink in order to have eternal life and it was He that took the bread, broke it after giving thanks and said, “This is my body” and “This is my blood.”

That being said, the use of the word remembrance in the NT Greek is not what you would propose as if the celebration of the Eucharist is nothing more than that.

I won’t cut and paste in the arguments for the actual Greek word used which does not translate into the simple use of the word remembrance.

Suffice it to say, that the intention of it is not what you infer here.


172 posted on 05/15/2013 8:32:57 PM PDT by Jvette
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 163 | View Replies]

To: presently no screen name

Rest assured, I would not have you worry about my eternal life and risk any discomfort for my sake.

Therefore, it is good to know that you won’t and I know that God will not hold it against you:)


173 posted on 05/15/2013 8:34:43 PM PDT by Jvette
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 171 | View Replies]

To: Elsie

You are certainly free to make that bet, though it will have to be with someone else, I don’t wager, even on a sure thing.


174 posted on 05/15/2013 8:36:23 PM PDT by Jvette
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 170 | View Replies]

To: presently no screen name
"So the magisterium is your god."

The Magisterium is the voice of the Paraclete that Jesus promised. (John 14:16)

Peace be with you

175 posted on 05/15/2013 8:40:13 PM PDT by Natural Law (Jesus did not leave us a book, He left us a Church.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 125 | View Replies]

To: Jvette

“Who said that Augustine is wrong?”


I settled this in another post with the words “signified,” “likeness,” “resemblance,” and the phrase “Believe and you have already eaten.”

So, you’re wrong about Augustine.

“Your quibble here would be with the Lord Himself and not me, for it was He that said one must eat and drink in order to have eternal life”


Jesus Christ said to celebrate the Lord’s supper as a remembrance. He did not say one had to eat bread and wine prayed over to get saved. As Augustine says, “Believe and you have eaten already.”

That view is scripturally consistent:

Rom_10:9 That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved.

Rom 3:26-28 To declare, I say, at this time his righteousness: that he might be just, and the justifier of him which believeth in Jesus. (27) Where is boasting then? It is excluded. By what law? of works? Nay: but by the law of faith. (28) Therefore we conclude that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law.

“I won’t cut and paste in the arguments for the actual Greek word used which does not translate into the simple use of the word remembrance.”


The word means remembrance:

“anamnesis”

—Greek Word Study (Transliteration-Pronunciation Etymology & Grammar)

1) a remembering, recollection

—Thayer’s (New Testament Greek-English Lexicon)
From G0363; recollection:—remembrance (again).


176 posted on 05/15/2013 9:56:19 PM PDT by Greetings_Puny_Humans
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 172 | View Replies]

To: Jvette
There is not one single man within the Church, to whom we can point and say, everything this man has said is perfect and orthodox.

And yet, the Church claims that a GROUP of them manage to espouse doctrine that is!

177 posted on 05/16/2013 4:20:04 AM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 166 | View Replies]

To: Jvette
The breadth of ignorance regarding Catholic doctrine exhibited here daily is vast and mind boggling.

The amount of spinning and conjecture to come up with some of that 'doctrine' is amazing!

178 posted on 05/16/2013 4:21:10 AM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 166 | View Replies]

To: Natural Law
The Magisterium is the voice of the Paraclete that Jesus promised. (John 14:16)

Is THIS a 'sure thing'?

179 posted on 05/16/2013 4:23:24 AM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 175 | View Replies]

To: Jvette
You are certainly free to make that bet, though it will have to be with someone else, I don’t wager, even on a sure thing.

I'll rest on Scripture - you can have your tradition.

180 posted on 05/16/2013 4:24:22 AM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 174 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 141-160161-180181-200 ... 221-228 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
Religion
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson