Posted on 01/02/2017 4:25:11 AM PST by BlessedBeGod
...If the Church were to change its rules on shared Eucharistic Communion it would go against Revelation and the Magisterium, leading Christians to commit blasphemy and sacrilege, an Italian theologian has warned.
Drawing on the Churchs teaching based on Sacred Scripture and Tradition, Msgr. Nicola Bux, a former consulter to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, stressed that non-Catholic Christians must have undertaken baptism and confirmation in the Catholic Church, and repented of grave sin through sacramental confession, in order to be able to receive Jesus in the Eucharist.
Msgr. Bux was responding to the Register about concerns that elements of the current pontificate might be sympathetic of a form of open Communion proposed by the German Protestant theologian, Jürgen Moltmann.
The concerns have arisen primarily due to the Holy Fathers own comments on Holy Communion and Lutherans, his apparent support for some remarried divorcees to receive Holy Communion, and how others have used his frequently repeated maxim about the Eucharist: that it is not a prize for the perfect, but a powerful medicine and nourishment for the weak.
The debate specifically over intercommunion with Christian denominations follows recent remarks by Cardinal Walter Kasper who, in a Dec. 10 interview with Avvenire, said he hopes Pope Francis next declaration will open the way for intercommunion with other denominations in special cases.
The German theologian said shared Eucharistic communion is just a matter of time, and that the Popes recent participation in the Reformation commemoration in Lund has given a new thrust to the ecumenical process.
Pope Francis has often expressed his admiration for Cardinal Kaspers theology whose thinking has significantly influenced the priorities of this pontificate, particularly on the Eucharist.
For Moltmann, Holy Communion is the Lord's supper, not something organized by a church or a denomination...
(Excerpt) Read more at ncregister.com ...
:)
Jesus gave us all of it.
He alone is the Finisher and Perfecter of our Faith.
And I can’t even begin to express my gratitude...All praise and glory to the Most High Son of the King of the Universe!
It’s all about HIM!!!!!
It's too bad the shortsighted arrogance of some Roman Catholics causes them to believe John's observance that the entire world could not hold ALL the books that could be written about Jesus and His actions gives them carte blanche to invent all manner of what those "things" might have been!
Yes, John did say that in his gospel record but he ALSO said:
Think about this, if the Early Church Fathers relied upon the written word of God to defend the doctrines of the Christian faith - even going so far as to say if they could NOT prove their beliefs by the Scriptures they should not be accepted - then how can you two thousand years later assert Scripture is secondary to "tradition"? Traditions - the actual ones - were BASED upon the revealed word of God and it was for that purpose they were written, disbursed and preserved. Jesus, Himself, used the written word to repel the deception and lies of the devil! We were told that for a reason.
Heck, I'd like to hear how rejecting the current duly elected Pope of Rome, Pope Francis, isn't also "protesting"!
Catholicism’s own catholic encyclopedia online admits the immaculate conception cannot be defended by Scripture. The Catholic, as we’ve seen, has to read into the texts to justify thier. Views. That’s very bad theology when you do that.
:)
Hebrews tells us Jesus is a one time sacrifice. He is in Heaven today. He does not come back again until the Second Coming.
Catholics claim this helps them be with Christ or feel His presence yet Christ told us He'd send the Holy Spirit to be with us. He is our Comforter.
Catholics claim we are told to drink His blood in John 6. Yet in the accounts of the last supper Jesus says do this in remembrance of me. He also says this is my blood which is poured out for you.
In the OT, the blood,of the sacrifice was never consumed. It was poured out. Consumption of blood would also be a violation of the OT law.
There is a big difference in recognizing one's "father" in the faith - as Paul was to Timothy - and addressing someone as Father. I doubt Paul would have insisted Timothy call him Father Paul. I think Jesus was talking about those who would lord it over others and be like the Pharisees who loved the attention and the praise of men. He expected a servant attitude and humility among brothers and sisters in the faith. JMHO
So, Pope Boniface VIII was a "true" pope, would you say? He was pretty "dogmatic" when he declared:
We declare, say , define, and pronounce that it is absolutely necessary for the salvation of every human creature to be subject to the Roman Pontiff. -Pope Boniface VIII, Unam Sanctam (1302 AD)
I notice he didn't include any exceptions to that. Wouldn't that make you and that extreme minority of those on FR who identify as Catholic really the "protestants"???
I'm surprised that you even got a little bit of insistence that the dogma could be defended in Scripture since Catholics have pretty consistently stated that they don't believe Scripture is the primary authority for their beliefs. They rely upon their magisterium to define what must be believed and obeyed at any given time (it HAS changed over time). If you do some research on how the IC eventually became an article of faith it might surprise you to see how much of it was based upon the hearsay of mystics and "saints" who claimed apparitions revealed it to them as well as the bombardment of requests from lay Catholics to Rome to make it so. The same with the Assumption. So rather than Rome heeding the Holy Spirit who reveals all truth, they bowed to popular demand. It is why it took almost two thousand years to formulate these two beliefs as dogma of the RCC.
There is a fifth Marian dogma being pushed right now. Very similar to how the IC came into being. Popular support.
I wonder how many of your fellow Catholics agree with your assertion?
Jesus is Catholic. Really? I think when you get to Heaven, Jesus may gently disabuse you of that notion. To me, the saddest thing about Catholicism, is that you don’t even realize the bill of goods you’ve been sold. If you’d just pick up your Bible, (the one WITHOUT the apocrypha) and read it, asking the Holy Spirit to teach you, you would see the truth, and it would set you free. But, no. As a form of control, you’ve been taught that “doctors of the church” have to interpret scripture for you. But that’s not true. The Holy Spirit is our guide. I don’t say you shouldn’t be Catholic, but there’s more. I suggest you look up Brother John Talbot. He has a Hermitage in Arkansas, which welcomes Catholics as well as non-Catholics. The non Catholics do not participate in the Eucharist during the mass, but there is nothing forbidding a protestant from having communion, on his own, in his own home or room there, in the protestant way. Most protestants do not believe in transubstantiaion, but take communion in the way Jesus taught — as an act of remembrance of Him. God bless you. (I have no interest in arguing back and forth with you. You’ve stated your beliefs, and I’ve stated mine. Let’s just leave it there.
In other words, in arguing against honoring Mary, apostolic succession, etc, you all are constantly “throwing the baby out with the bathwater” - “arguing that one false part of an argument negates the whole argument” - a logical fallacy. Fine, there’s still value in pointing out the bathwater to us.
But for your arguments against the Eucharist, where’s even your “bathwater”?
“I’d like to hear how rejecting the current duly elected Pope of Rome, Pope Francis, isn’t also “protesting”!”
There is already a term for that in history. It is called “The Counter-Reformation”
See:
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/04437a.htm
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