But, alternatively, do you really need me to clarify for you what materialism means? Come on, I'm the philosophical dilettante here, not you. As to the relevance of the criticism of materialism, revert back to Thorongil's OP for the context of materialism. — Noble Dust
What is not included in "almost"? — Noble Dust
so I don't believe in the magical transformation which Eastern Orthodox Christians and Catholics are expected to believe in as a central tenet of their religion. — Sapientia
And did I ever imply they were physical :s ?That verse is not about the Eucharist, and within the context of these two verses is clearly symbolic/spiritual. — ProbablyTrue
They do, but they don't physically become the flesh and blood of Jesus.If you're saying that transubstantiation is not physical in some sense, where the bread and wine actually become Jesus' flesh and blood, then what is the claim? — ProbablyTrue
Do you disagree with this? — ProbablyTrue
Now I agree with it."The only possible meaning is that the bread and wine at the consecration become Christ's actual body and blood. Evidently Paul believed that the words Christ had said at the Last Supper, "This is my Body," meant that reallyand physicallythe bread is his body. In fact Christ was not merely saying that the bread was his body; he was decreeing that it should be so and that it is so." — ProbablyTrue
So they do REALLY become the flesh and blood of Jesus. But that's not a physical becoming. — Agustino
Yes, in an absolutely substantial manner, just not a physical one (in terms of their appearance).So they become the flesh and blood, but not in any perceptible or substantial meaning of the word "become" — ProbablyTrue
Yet it's clearly implied. I'll let T Clark correct me if I'm mistaken. — Noble Dust
Transubstantiation is no harder to believe than that light is a wave and particle at the same time. That there are a practically infinite number of parallel universes that can never be seen. That the world consists of mathematics. That objective reality exists when there is no way, even in theory, to know it directly. — T Clark
He may have been married back in Old Testament times. He was cranky, vindictive, and mean. They must have broken up after she found out Mary was having his kid. That's why Christian doctrine is so much nicer after Jesus was born. — T Clark
↪T Clark See Noble Dust, I told you that you were smoking crack — Agustino
Interesting. So, as someone who is not a materialist, what is your criticism of transubstantiation? — Noble Dust
I remind you that I've already provided my personal reasons for believing the doctrine here:
I believe the doctrine because my own understanding and study of religion, combined with understanding of human anthropology and my own experiences (mystical or otherwise) reveal that (1) Christianity is unique amongst the world's religions, (2) mystical experiences of the kind the doctrine speaks about do happen to people, (3) the meaning of the doctrine is transparent, clear and understandable, and (4) transubstantiation fits into the larger scheme of things predicated by other things I know.
So those are my personal reasons for believing. And there probably are more. Now I don't doubt that you'll have further arguments with each one of those, since you are set to try to disprove what I say, not to consider it. That's okay, but realise that I do have reasons for believing it, even if you don't share them. — Agustino
Yep, some of them no doubt are. — Agustino
Some of them aren't intelligent, others are extremely intelligent. There are both kinds of people. Or do you mean to suggest that only stupid people have mystical experiences or claim to have had them? — Agustino
In the grand scheme, Tertullian's opinion is just one of many so even this doesn't amount to much. I doubt we'll solve a major theological schism here in the ShoutBox. — ProbablyTrue
this has nothing to do with materialism. You can be a hardcore materialist and still believe in transubstantiation. — Agustino
You're confusing understanding and agreement. The failure is all yours. It is because I see it for what it is that I reject it, as I reject magical thinking in general. — Sapientia
So the Catholic Church asserts something that cannot possibly be verified in any way, but because it's religious doctrine, we should give it some credence? That seems absurd.
Transubstantiation is not at all explicit in the text itself. Many, if not most, of the early church writers did not see the breaking of bread and drinking of wine as anything other than symbolic. Protestants also do not believe in transubstantiation. — ProbablyTrue
But Jesus Christ is unique to Christianity and unique amongst the religions. No other religion has such a figure, which has absolute central importance to the religion. You can imagine Islam without Muhammad, or Moses without Muhammad, or Buddhism without Buddha, or Hinduism without Krishna, etc. but you cannot imagine Christianity without...Christ.1. Christianity isn't that unique. It has features in common with Judaism and Islam, in particular. — Sapientia
Which wars? :B3. No, it isn't. It's the complete opposite. It's controversial, and there have been wars over how it ought to be interpreted. — Sapientia
Some historical events, such as the Resurrection, my current understanding of metaphysics, etc.4. Such as...? — Sapientia
>:O - yeah if we could all be knights of pure reason like you Sappy :PIt's not so much a lack of intellect for these type of people, but an excess of emotion. — Sapientia
Yeah, so what if they believe only matter and physical forces exist? Do colors exist for the materialist? Yep. So the materialist also acknowledges the existence of qualities, however he does not think that these are ultimately real. You can absolutely be a materialist and believe in transubstantiation because the latter is qualitative.This makes no sense. A materialist is someone who believes that only matter and physical forces exist, which rules out the existence of God, angels, demons, souls, substantial forms, Platonic Ideas, etc. Transubstantiation requires the existence of God at the very least. Therefore, one cannot be a materialist and believe in transubstantiation. — Thorongil
Yes, I agree with the absurdity of expecting people to believe in a literal interpretation, and that there's special pleading involved. If I were a Christian, I would definitely not be a Catholic or an Eastern Orthodox Christian. I would be a Protestant. — Sapientia
Yes, I agree with the absurdity of expecting people to believe in a literal interpretation, or expecting people to buy that it's reasonable and not a matter of blind faith. I also agree that there's special pleading involved, on account of it being religious, and being of this particular religion. If I were a Christian, I would definitely not be a Catholic or an Eastern Orthodox Christian. I would be a Protestant. — Sapientia
Transubstantiation is no harder to believe than that light is a wave and particle at the same time. That there are a practically infinite number of parallel universes that can never be seen. That the world consists of mathematics. That objective reality exists when there is no way, even in theory, to know it directly. — T Clark
If you proportion belief to the available evidence, then no, they're not comparable. There's a lot of evidence for particle-wave duality. There's not a lot of evidence for transubstantiation, unless you lower the bar and allow for hearsay and funny feelings, which I'm not willing to do. — Sapientia
If you proportion belief to the available evidence, then no, they're not comparable. There's a lot of evidence for particle-wave duality. There's not a lot of evidence for transubstantiation, unless you lower the bar and allow for hearsay and funny feelings, which I'm not willing to do. — Sapientia
Just hearsay, no funny feelings. — Akanthinos
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