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Brothers of Jesus: Biblical Arguments for Mary’s Virginity
Seton Magazine ^ | Dave Armstrong

Posted on 05/31/2014 4:33:21 PM PDT by narses

In my previous article, I wrote about the “Hebraic” use of the Greek adelphos: as applying to cousins, fellow countrymen, and a wide array of uses beyond the meaning of “sibling.” Yet it is unanimously translated as “brother” in the King James Version (KJV): 246 times. The cognate adelphe is translated 24 times only as “sister”. This is because it reflects Hebrew usage, translated into Greek. Briefly put, in Jesus’ Hebrew culture (and Middle Eastern culture even today), cousins were called “brothers”.

Brothers or Cousins?

Now, it’s true that sungenis (Greek for “cousin”) and its cognate sungenia appear in the New Testament fifteen times (sungenia: Lk 1:61; Acts 7:3, 14; sungenis: Mk 6:4; Lk 1:36, 58; 2:44; 14:12; 21:16; Jn 18:26; Acts 10:24; Rom 9:3; 16:7, 11, 21). But they are usually translated kinsmen, kinsfolk, or kindred in KJV: that is, in a sense wider than cousin: often referring to the entire nation of Hebrews. Thus, the eminent Protestant linguist W. E. Vine, in his Expository Dictionary of New Testament Words, lists sungenis not only under “Cousin” but also under “Kin, Kinsfolk, Kinsman, Kinswoman.”

In all but two of these occurrences, the authors were either Luke or Paul. Luke was a Greek Gentile. Paul, though Jewish, was raised in the very cosmopolitan, culturally Greek town of Tarsus. But even so, both still clearly used adelphos many times with the meaning of non-sibling (Lk 10:29; Acts 3:17; 7:23-26; Rom 1:7, 13; 9:3; 1 Thess 1:4). They understood what all these words meant, yet they continued to use adelphos even in those instances that had a non-sibling application.

Strikingly, it looks like every time St. Paul uses adelphos (unless I missed one or two), he means it as something other than blood brother or sibling. He uses the word or related cognates no less than 138 times in this way. Yet we often hear about Galatians 1:19: “James the Lord’s brother.” 137 other times, Paul means non-sibling, yet amazingly enough, here he must mean sibling, because (so we are told) he uses the word adelphos? That doesn’t make any sense.

Some folks think it is a compelling argument that sungenis isn’t used to describe the brothers of Jesus. But they need to examine Mark 6:4 (RSV), where sungenis appears:

And Jesus said to them, “A prophet is not without honor, except in his own country, and among his own kin, and in his own house.” (cf. Jn 7:5: “For even his brothers did not believe in him”)

What is the context? Let’s look at the preceding verse, where the people in “his own country” (6:1) exclaimed: “Is not this the carpenter, the son of Mary and brother of James and Joses and Judas and Simon, and are not his sisters here with us?” And they took offense at him. It can plausibly be argued, then, that Jesus’ reference to kin (sungenis) refers (at least in part) back to this mention of His “brothers” and “sisters”: His relatives. Since we know that sungenis means cousins or more distant relatives, that would be an indication of the status of those called Jesus’ “brothers”.

What about Jude and James?

Jude is called the Lord’s “brother” in Matthew 13:55 and Mark 6:3. If this is the same Jude who wrote the epistle bearing that name (as many think), he calls himself “a servant of Jesus Christ and brother of James” (Jude 1:1). Now, suppose for a moment that he was Jesus’ blood brother. In that case, he refrains from referring to himself as the Lord’s own sibling (while we are told that such a phraseology occurs several times in the New Testament, referring to a sibling relationship) and chooses instead to identify himself as James‘ brother. This is far too strange and implausible to believe.

Moreover, James also refrains from calling himself Jesus’ brother, in his epistle (James 1:1: “servant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ”): even though St. Paul calls him “the Lord’s brother” (Gal 1:19: dealt with above). It’s true that Scripture doesn’t come right out and explicitly state that Mary was a perpetual virgin. But nothing in Scripture contradicts that notion, and (to say the same thing another way) nothing in the perpetual virginity doctrine contradicts Scripture. Moreover, no Scripture can be produced that absolutely, undeniably, compellingly defeats the perpetual virginity of Mary. Human Tradition

The alleged disproofs utterly fail in their purpose. The attempted linguistic argument against Mary’s perpetual virginity from the mere use of the word “brothers” in English translations (and from sungenis) falls flat at every turn, as we have seen.

If there is any purely “human” tradition here, then, it is the denial of the perpetual virginity of Mary, since it originated (mostly) some 1700 years after the initial apostolic deposit: just as all heresies are much later corruptions. The earliest Church fathers know of no such thing. To a person, they all testify that Mary was perpetually a virgin, and indeed, thought that this protected the doctrine of the Incarnation, as a miraculous birth from a mother who was a virgin before, during and after the birth.


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To: JPX2011
What arrogance. Who said you had the authoritative interpretation of scripture?

Is this a serious question? Because I am seeing quite a few people suggesting that 'brother' really means 'cousin', that 'first born' really means 'only born', and that 'take her as your wife' really means 'don't take her as your wife'. In other words, I am to ignore what is written in plain English and instead replace it with what you dictate? And you call me 'arrogant'? Unbelievable.

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Mary is your Blessed Mother.

Blessed? Absolutely. My mother? No.

.

Her assent allowed you to be saved (hopefully).

It is God and God alone that 'allows' me to be saved. Mary does not sit in intercession at the Right Hand of the Father. Christ, Lord Jesus does.

.

Show some respect.

I have shown zero disrespect for Mary throughout this entire thread. Besides, I am not the one here making her out to be someone she clearly is not.

.

Why is it so important that protestants think Mary was not a virgin?

I nor anyone else can speak for all Protestants. But as for myself, I do believe Mary was a virgin at the time that she gave birth to Jesus. And I haven't seen any non-Catholic on this thread dispute that. The thing that is important to me is that scripture can hold true without contradiction. Yet the moment you inject into scripture that Mary must have died a virgin, then you unleash several contradictions into scripture. It's nothing personal against Mary. It has to do with whether scripture can be believed.

.

Could it be that holiness is a characteristic lacking in protestant theology. Mary as an example of faithfulness and holiness is too difficult an example to strive for? Total depravity demands it?

I will ask again. Are you seriously suggesting that having marital relations inside of marriage just as God intended is somehow 'unholy'? Really?

201 posted on 06/01/2014 11:39:44 AM PDT by Hoodat (Democrats - Opposing Equal Protection since 1828)
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To: JPX2011
Free access huh? Gee,it’s such a shame that the middle ages didn’t have Obama-mandated free internet for all the illiterates so they could read and study the Bible. I mean it would’ve made it so much easier rather than this hand copy the bible business in the languages of the day and then chain it up in the Church or library so it wouldn’t be stolen.

Jan Hus was burned at the stake because he dared translate the Bible into the common language so that everyone could read it. Yet he's the arrogant one, right?

202 posted on 06/01/2014 11:46:05 AM PDT by Hoodat (Democrats - Opposing Equal Protection since 1828)
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To: narses
Luther did not have full access to the Bible? How odd.

As far as straw man arguments go, that is perhaps the most inane one I have ever seen.

203 posted on 06/01/2014 11:49:35 AM PDT by Hoodat (Democrats - Opposing Equal Protection since 1828)
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To: editor-surveyor; dcwusmc; Jed Eckert; Recovering Ex-hippie; KingOfVagabonds; Berlin_Freeper; ...

“The cunningly devised fables of the RCC have led billions to eternal destruction.”

The tiny little wacko sect that hates Easter, Christmas and Church on Sunday is heard from!

Any more hatred left there Pope editor-surveyor?


204 posted on 06/01/2014 2:15:19 PM PDT by narses (Matthew 7:6. He appears to have made up his mind let him live with the consequences.)
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To: Blue Collar Christian

You ignore the Teaching Authority of the Apostles - their hand picked successors wrote the Bible and have taught us ever since He appointed them.

For 1,600 years the teaching was clear and undefiled. Even the grand heresiarchs of the proddy revolution agreed with the Church on this subject.


205 posted on 06/01/2014 2:17:18 PM PDT by narses (Matthew 7:6. He appears to have made up his mind let him live with the consequences.)
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To: editor-surveyor

206 posted on 06/01/2014 2:17:40 PM PDT by narses (Matthew 7:6. He appears to have made up his mind let him live with the consequences.)
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To: narses

True, I ignore everything that scripture does not support on topics Biblical. What truth I need is in the Bible, not in Catholic teaching, whether the Protestant reformers you label heresiarchs in your Catholic condiscention of the “proddy revolution” agreed with it or not.


207 posted on 06/01/2014 2:49:32 PM PDT by Blue Collar Christian (Vote Democrat. Once you're OK with killing babies the rest is easy. <BCC><)
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To: Blue Collar Christian

The Apostles predated Scripture. Their teaching authority is clearly enumerated in Scripture and you gleefully brag about ignoring them. How is that “Church of One” working out for you? More important, can it survive eternity?


208 posted on 06/01/2014 2:53:37 PM PDT by narses (Matthew 7:6. He appears to have made up his mind let him live with the consequences.)
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To: Hoodat

209 posted on 06/01/2014 2:54:25 PM PDT by narses (Matthew 7:6. He appears to have made up his mind let him live with the consequences.)
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To: ealgeone
We do know that Satan does attempt to thwart the Kingdom of God and insert little variances in the teaching of the Bible. Been happening since Genesis 3.

And what do you say happened in Genesis 3 that inserted little variances in the teaching of the Bible ? Are you saying the text is invalid because it quotes the serpent ?
Or that all the re-formed denominations and sects are of the adversary ?
Or there is only one teaching of the Bible that is valid, and if so, who holds the keys ?

Do you believe what Jesus said, not believe, or fall in the camp of ye of little faith ?

When Jesus came into the coasts of Caesarea Philippi, he asked his disciples, saying, Whom do men say that I the Son of man am? And they said, Some say that thou art John the Baptist: some, Elias; and others, Jeremias, or one of the prophets. He saith unto them, But whom say ye that I am? And Simon Peter answered and said, Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God. And Jesus answered and said unto him, Blessed art thou, Simon Barjona: for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but my Father which is in heaven. And I say also unto thee, That thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it. And I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven: and whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth shall be bound in heaven: and whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.

210 posted on 06/01/2014 2:59:26 PM PDT by af_vet_1981 (The bus came by and I got on, That's when it all began)
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To: Iscool
Miriam nor virgin appear in the verse...And the woman travailed at birth...Could not possibly be Mary the mother of Jesus...How could your religion even consider such a thing???

Are you denying that Miriam/Mary gave birth to a man child, who was to rule all nations with a rod of iron or do hold that she had no pain during the birth and so it could not be her ? Your comments do not make sense to me.

211 posted on 06/01/2014 3:20:56 PM PDT by af_vet_1981 (The bus came by and I got on, That's when it all began)
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To: narses
This is how the birth of Jesus the Messiah came about: His mother Mary was pledged to be married to Joseph, but before they came together, she was found to be pregnant through the Holy Spirit. Matthew 1:18 NIV

Similar language as 1 Corinthians 7:5 - Do not deprive each other except perhaps by mutual consent ... Then come together again so that Satan will not tempt you because of your lack of self-control.

When Joseph woke up, he did what the angel of the Lord had commanded him and took Mary home as his wife. But he did not consummate their marriage until she gave birth to a son. And he gave him the name Jesus. Matthew 1:24-25 NIV

v.25 KJV - And knew her not till she had brought forth her firstborn son: and he called his name JESUS.

Matthew, who was a contemporary with Mary and may have received his info directly from both Joseph and Mary, in the same chapter twice makes it clear that Joseph and Mary were intimate after Jesus was born. Knew her - Hebrew idiom for sexual relations see Gen 4:1 and others.

Just on this evidence alone, the question should be settled. There are no special brownie points awarded for celibacy. In fact, to refrain from sexual intimacy within a marriage would go against Jewish custom, nature, and God's Word. It would force Joseph, who we are told was a just man, to remain a virgin too. Would that be possible? Yes, but for what possible purpose would God place such unwarranted stress on this couple for at least 12 years - the last mention of Joseph in scripture was Jesus' visit to the Temple at 12 years old.

212 posted on 06/01/2014 3:49:37 PM PDT by Kandy Atz ("Were we directed from Washington when to sow and when to reap, we should soon want for bread.")
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To: Bulwyf

I think you overcomplicate the matter. As I read the Bible, there are three components to salvation: believe in Jesus, repent, be born again. Admittedly Catholics pray to Mary (and various other saints) and I think they are wrong to do so. All of us, Protestant and Catholic, do many things which, taken alone, might cast our salvation into doubt according to someone. But do those things invalidate our salvation if we’ve met the three criterion? No, because the blood of Jesus covers those sins and errors. So, praying or not praying to Mary won’t invalidate your salvation; believing or not believing the bread becomes the literal body of Christ won’t invalidate your salvation; drinking grape juice instead of wine at communion won’t invalidate your salvation. Do you get my point? These matters are principles worked out by the various religious groups for reasons that seem right to them, but they are NOT the basis for your salvation.


213 posted on 06/01/2014 3:50:07 PM PDT by Hootowl
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To: Hootowl

Yes, the eternal virginity of Mary is a “doctrine” without a purpose.

It has no effect on believing on Jesus for salvation.

If it is SO important, why does scripture imply that Mary DID have other children?

No one taking the scripture at face value would see a perpetual virginity state for Mary.


214 posted on 06/01/2014 4:04:19 PM PDT by bkaycee (John 3:16)
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To: narses
The Apostles predated Scripture.

Really? They were here before Moses? /s

215 posted on 06/01/2014 4:08:07 PM PDT by Cvengr (Adversity in life and death is inevitable. Thru faith in Christ, stress is optional.)
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To: bkaycee

216 posted on 06/01/2014 4:09:14 PM PDT by narses (Matthew 7:6. He appears to have made up his mind let him live with the consequences.)
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To: narses

Why do I need to believe in Mary’s perpetual virginity to be saved?


217 posted on 06/01/2014 4:21:11 PM PDT by bkaycee (John 3:16)
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To: editor-surveyor

So you say Psalm 69:5 does not count but Psalm 69:8 does. It’s not consistent but if it makes you feel better, okay.

5 You, God, know my folly;
my guilt is not hidden from you. <==== Doesn’t count.

8 I am a foreigner to my own family, a stranger to my own mother’s children;<-—— Does count.

You really can’t explain it.


218 posted on 06/01/2014 4:22:24 PM PDT by BeadCounter
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To: bkaycee; dcwusmc; Jed Eckert; Recovering Ex-hippie; KingOfVagabonds; Berlin_Freeper; UnRuley1; ...

You need to follow Our Lord and His Church.

This is My Body, This is My Blood

by Fr. John A. Hardon, S.J.

Saint Robert Bellarmine, writing in the sixteen hundreds, counted over two hundred interpretations of our Lord’s words at the Last Supper, “This is my Body…this is my Blood.” Over the centuries, this has been the principal source of division among the Protestant Churches of the world.

My purpose in this conference will be twofold: first to identify and explain what the Catholic Church understands by the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist, and then to see how basic to Protestantism is the denial of the Real Presence.

Catholic Faith in the Real Presence

When Catholic Christianity affirms, without qualification, that “in the nourishing sacrament of the Holy Eucharist, after the consecration of the bread and wine, our Lord Jesus Christ, true God and true man,” is present “under the appearances of those sensible things,” it rests its faith on the words of Scripture and the evidence of Sacred Tradition. 1

The beginning of this faith comes from the discourse recorded by St. John, writing toward the end of the first century. Christ had already worked the miracle of multiplying the loves and fishes. He had also spoken at length about the need for faith in Him and His words as a condition for salvation. Then He continued:

I am the bread of life. Your fathers ate the manna in the desert and they are dead; but this is the bread that comes down from heaven, so that a man may eat and not die. I am the living bread which has come down from heaven. Anyone who eats this bread will live forever; and the bread that I shall give is my flesh, for the life of the world.
Then the Jews started arguing with one another. Did they understand Him correctly? Was He actually telling them He would give His own flesh for food? “How can this man give us His flesh to eat?” they asked. Instead of reassuring them that he did not mean to be taken literally, Christ went on:

I tell you most solemnly, if you do not eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink His blood, you will not have life in you. Anyone who does eat my flesh and drink my blood has eternal life, and I shall raise him up on the last day. For my flesh is real food and my blood is real drink. He who eats my flesh and drinks my blood lives in me and I live in him. As I, who am sent by the living Father, myself draw life from the Father, so whoever eats me will draw life from me. This is the bread that came down from heaven; not like the bread that your ancestors ate; they are dead, but anyone who eats this bread will live forever (John 6:48-58).
The evangelist explains that Christ taught this doctrine in the synagogue, but that hearing it “many of his followers said, ‘This is intolerable language, How could anyone accept it?’” Jesus was fully aware that His followers were complaining and, in fact, asked them, “does this upset you?” But He took nothing back. Rather He insisted, “The words I have spoken to you are spirit and they are life. But there are some of you who do not believe.” At the same time He explained that such faith is not of man’s making, since “no one could come to me unless the Father allows him.”

Following this animated dialogue, we are prepared for the statement, “After this, many of His disciples left Him and stopped going with Him.” Then, to make absolutely certain there was no mistaking what He was saying, Jesus said to the Twelve, “What about you, do you want to go away too?” To which Simon Peter replied, “Lord, who shall we go to? You have the message of eternal life, and we believe” (John 6:59-68).

The Church’s decisive revelation on the Real Presence is in the words of the consecration, “This is my body; this is my blood,” whose literal meaning has been defended through the ages. They were thus understood by St. Paul when he told the first Christians that those who approached the Eucharist unworthily would be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord. There could be no question of a grievous offense against Christ Himself, unless Paul assumed that the true Body and the true Blood of Christ are really present in the Eucharist.

The Rise of Eucharistic Heresy

The first ripples of controversy came in the ninth century, when a monk from the French Abbey of Corbie wrote against his abbot, St. Paschasius (785-860). Ratramnus (d. 868) held that Christ’s Body in the Eucharist cannot be the same as Christ’s historical body once on earth and now in heaven because the Eucharistic is invisible, -impalpable, and spiritual. He wanted to hold on to the Real Presence but stressed the Eucharist as symbolic rather than corporeal. His book on the subject was condemned by the Synod of Vercelli, and his ideas, it is held, influenced all subsequent theories that contradicted the traditional teaching of the Church.

Within two centuries the issue had reached such a point of gravity that a formal declaration was evoked from the Holy See. In 1079, Archdeacon Berengar of Tours who favored Ratramnus’ position and wrote against what he considered the excessive realism of Paschasius, was required by Gregory VII to accept the following declaration of faith in the Eucharistic presence:

I believe in my heart and openly profess that the bread and wine placed upon the altar are, by the mystery of the sacred prayer and the words of the Redeemer, substantially changed into the true and life-giving flesh and blood of Jesus Christ our Lord, and that after the consecration, there is present the true Body and Blood of Christ which was born of the Virgin and, offered up for the salvation of the world, hung on the cross and now sits at the right hand of the Father, and that there is present the true Blood of Christ which flowed from His side. They are present not only by means of a sign and of the efficacy of the sacrament, but also in the very reality and truth of their nature and substance. 2
This profession of faith in the Real Presence was quoted verbatim by Pope Paul VI in his encyclical Mysterium Fidei. The Holy Father quoted this profession of faith in the Real Presence in 1965, during the sessions of the Second Vatican Council. The reason was because he saw a resurgence of the Eucharistic heresies which began to evade the Catholic Church almost a thousand years ago.

In my thirty years of working for the Holy See, I have learned many things. Among them was the rise of a widespread undermining of faith in the Real Presence.

Protestant Roots of Heretical Catholicism

I never tire repeating the direct order I received from Pope John Paul II in 1986 and 1988 to do everything in my power to restore faith in the Real Presence in the United States, where it has been lost, and strengthen this faith where it still exists.

According to the Holy Father, unless this faith in the Real Presence is strengthened and restored, he feared for the survival of the Catholic Church in more than one diocese in our country.

It all began with the Protestant so-called reformation. In countries like ours, where Protestantism has become the prevailing culture of a nation, two truths of the Catholic faith have suffered profoundly. They are faith in the priesthood and faith in the Real Presence.

Whatever else Martin Luther denied, it was the existence of a priesthood instituted by Jesus Christ when He ordained the apostles bishops and priests at the Last Supper. Over the years one of my favorite definitions of Protestantism has been “priestless Christianity.” In the words of Martin Luther, the idea that there are two levels in Christianity, the spiritual and the temporal, is untrue. There is no basic distinction between priest and the laity. Says Luther:

It is fiction by which the Pope, bishops, priests and monks are called the spiritual estate, while the princes, lords, artisans and peasants are the temporal estate. An artful life and hypocritical invention, but let no one be afraid of it, because all Christians are truly of the spiritual estate, and there is no difference among them, save office. For we are all consecrated priests by baptism. Since we are all priests alike, no man can put himself forward, or take upon himself without our consent and election to do that which we all have a like power to do. Therefore, a priest should be nothing in Christendom but a functionary; as long as he holds his office, he has precedence; if he is deprived of it, he is a peasant or a citizen like the rest. But now they have invented indelible characters and even imagine that a priest can never become a layman; which is all nothing but mere talk and human conjecture.
This was the beginning of the breakdown of Catholic Christianity. Once you deny that there is a priesthood, instituted by Christ, which alone has the power from Him to change bread and wine into His living Flesh and Blood, you have erased historic Christianity.

The full implications of Luther’s theology touched every aspect of Church and State relationship. Only civil laws have binding power on the citizens, since the State has a right to pass judgment on ecclesiastical legislation, but not vice versa. Civil officials may determine if churchmen are serving the common interest, and punish or depose as they please; but the Church does not have dual rights except those conceded by the State. Indeed, civil coercion can deprive any ecclesiastic, even the pope of his ministry and if need be, of the very title he pretends to have received from God.

Once we recognize this basic principle of Protestantism, we begin to see what happened in countries like ours. The priesthood, as a unique power instituted by Jesus Christ, has disappeared from all Protestant churches throughout the world. Inevitably this has deeply affected the Catholic church in Protestant-dominated nations like our own.

The impact of this heresy on the Catholic Church has been immense. Already in the sixteenth century, some six nations, all formerly Catholic, became Protestant. This includes England and, as a consequence, English-speaking countries like our own.

By now there are over four thousand Protestant denominations throughout the world. Mind you, these are not Protestant churches but denominations. Not a single one of them, anywhere in the world, believes in the Real Presence of Jesus Christ in the Blessed Sacrament. Why not? Because they do not believe in the priesthood.

Impact on the Catholic Eucharistic Faith

We could now begin not only another lecture on the widespread Eucharistic errors in the Catholic church today. We could literally speak for the next three months, seven hours a day, describing the widespread breakdown of authentic Catholic doctrine in the Real Presence.

Among the hundreds of false interpretations of the Real Presence, one of the most popular is to identify Christ in the Eucharist with the exercise of His extraordinary power.

The meaning of the phrase, “Body in Christ” (Romans 12:5), is that the Body by which Christians are formed is to be identified with the pneumatic Christ, who is the source of Divine Life, and the origin of charismatic graces and of (all) moral and religious activity…The indwelling of Christ in the faithful described in the expression, “Christ in us,” is not to be limited to an impersonal force operating in the Christian. It should be taken literally to mean the presence and activity of the pneumatic Christ in man…The Body of Christ which constitutes the Church can be said to be Christ because the pneumatic Christ is incorporated in it, because He gives to it the principle of activity and manifests Himself visibly by means of it. 3
What is the author saying? He is telling us that the Real Presence is the Body of Christ dwelling in the souls of all the members of the Mystical Body.

Another author is writing for Karl Rahner’s Encyclopedia of Theology. It is a more then six-column article on transubstantiation. For one half of the article he describes what the Catholic Church over the centuries had understood by the term “transubstantiation.” But the times have changed.

Modern theologians, he claims, have discovered that the centuries-old understanding of transubstantiation should be radically changed. It should now rather be called transfinalization. The quotation from Rahner’s encyclopedia is a bit lengthy. But I think it should be given almost in full.

The more recent approaches suggest the following considerations. One has to remember that the words of institution indicate a change but do not give any guiding line for the interpretation of the actual process. As regards transubstantiation, it may then be said that substance, essence, meaning and purpose of the bread are identical. But the meaning of a thing can be changed without detriment to its matter.
A house, for instance, consists of a certain arrangement of materials and has a clearly established nature and a clearly established purpose. If the house is demolished and the materials used for building a bridge, a change of nature or essence has intervened. Something completely different is there. The meaning has been changed, since a house is meant to be lived in and a bridge is used to cross a depression. But there has been no loss of material. In an analogous way, the meaning of the bread has been changed through the consecration. Something which formerly served profane use now becomes the dwelling-place and the symbol of Christ who is present and gives himself to his own (Karl Rahner, Encyclopedia of Theology, pg. 1754).
So the writer goes on. And so scores of authors could be quoted, all professedly Catholic and all teaching the same thing. What the Catholic Church infallibly believes is the real physical Body and Blood of Christ has been reinterpreted to mean something else.

The result in a country like ours has been devastating. It is no coincidence that the number of Catholic seminarians in the United States has dropped by ninety percent since the close of Vatican II. Nor is it a coincidence that, in one Catholic Church after another, many of the people no longer genuflect before the Eucharist. Nor is it surprising that tabernacles have been removed from so many Catholic Churches.

But that is why we have this conference. We need to alert ourselves to the grave crisis through which the Church of Christ is going in our day.

There is only one solution. We must restore our faith in the Real Presence where it has been lost, and strengthen this faith where it still exists.

Prayer

Lord Jesus, we believe you are present in the fullness of your divinity and humanity in the Blessed Sacrament. We further believe that at the Last Supper you told the apostles, “This is my Body, this is my Blood.” We also believe that you told the apostles to, “Do this in commemoration of me,” by which you ordained them as priests and gave them the power to ordain other priests until the end of time. This we believe, and we are ready to lay down our lives for this faith. Amen.

Council of Trent, Decree on the Most Holy Sacrament of the Eucharist, Denzinger 874 (1636).

Fourth Roman Council, The Most Holy Eucharist: Denzinger 755 (700).

Werner Gossens, “L`Gglise Corps du Christ” (Paris. 4949), 61-63.


219 posted on 06/01/2014 4:26:23 PM PDT by narses (Matthew 7:6. He appears to have made up his mind let him live with the consequences.)
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To: narses

The Apostles predated (New Testament) Scripture, and NT Scripture predates the RCC. The RCC has counted generations of tradition as it evolved as to be equal to Scripture, and sadly some of it is not supported by Scripture. Clearly seeing this method of inventing history is one of the benefits of the heresy of the, what did you label it? proddy uprising, you know, where common folk could read the Bible.

The huge numbers of the RCC do not impress. The Church of the Bible is not the Roman Catholic Church, but is the bride of Christ, Christians. We are not a church of one, and Jesus is happy to include Catholics that are Christians, confused as some are.

If a believer will study the Scriptures, the believer will recognize the counterfeit.


220 posted on 06/01/2014 4:28:07 PM PDT by Blue Collar Christian (Vote Democrat. Once you're OK with killing babies the rest is easy. <BCC><)
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