Christians are sometimes made fun...
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Christians are sometimes made fun of because of their belief in the real presence of Christ in the bread and wine of the Eucharistic meal -- Christ's body and blood.
Historically we have been called, "worshipers of a bread God," and rumors have circulated that we celebrate cannibalistic feasts. The medieval theologian and reformer Martin Luther, argued against the simply symbolic "remembrance" aspect of the meal by stating that Christ plainly says, "This is my body ... this is my blood ...," and not "This represents my body, or is a symbol of my blood." Indeed, being the rather short-tempered fellow he was, he would lose patience with the tenuous arguments of his opponents, and take off his shoe and bang it on the table to the cadence of Jesus' words, "This ... (bang) ... is ... (bang) ... my ... (bang) ... body."
Luther's reliance on Jesus' clear promise to be really with us in the bread and wine, his body and blood, shows Luther's faith in God's Word and words. We too can claim this reliance of Martin's and Paul's through our faithful "participation in the blood ... the body of Christ."
-- Garrison
Historically we have been called, "worshipers of a bread God," and rumors have circulated that we celebrate cannibalistic feasts. The medieval theologian and reformer Martin Luther, argued against the simply symbolic "remembrance" aspect of the meal by stating that Christ plainly says, "This is my body ... this is my blood ...," and not "This represents my body, or is a symbol of my blood." Indeed, being the rather short-tempered fellow he was, he would lose patience with the tenuous arguments of his opponents, and take off his shoe and bang it on the table to the cadence of Jesus' words, "This ... (bang) ... is ... (bang) ... my ... (bang) ... body."
Luther's reliance on Jesus' clear promise to be really with us in the bread and wine, his body and blood, shows Luther's faith in God's Word and words. We too can claim this reliance of Martin's and Paul's through our faithful "participation in the blood ... the body of Christ."
-- Garrison
