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May 9th 2011, 12:21 PM #106
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May 9th 2011, 12:25 PM #107
Re: Things I don't get about Real Presence
As a sci-fi nerd I find this highly appealing.
I suppose for the Orthodox, it's even more exotic when you factor in the idea the Divine Liturgy is a catching up to Heaven. I supposed that's what was most influencing me when I said it might involve alternate dimensions.
Who knows, maybe lack of caloric content is an emergent property from combining glorified Flesh with bread, sort of like the wetness of water!
Well, to be fair, I'd put this more under, "evidence for Christianity in general." One might believe memorialism is only a faint shadow of the true Eucharist and thus will have nowhere near the benefits of RP (not to mentioning possibly containing curses for the memorialist) but quantifying the differences in the benefits to the various groups of communicants would be impossible.
Didn't St. Augustine say on John 6 that if you believe in Christ you've already partaken of the Flesh and Blood, or is that out of context?...the compass of existence held more than my text-books had revealed, more than I had ever dreamed of. In short I lost my superiority, and this, though I was not then aware of it, is the first step towards finding God.-A.J. Cronin
the burn notice commercial worked beautifully, the actual vid just froze. well played google-yxboom
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May 9th 2011, 12:26 PM #108
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Male - Non-theistRe: Things I don't get about Real Presence
I agree that immaterial and physical seem to be antonyms. I don't think an immaterial being is 'physically present' anywhere. That's kinda my point, though. Omnipresent would imply that he is 'physically present' everywhere at once, which doesn't make sense. I consider God to exist outside of our physical universe, which further reduces the usefulness of an omnipresent claim. He'd essentially be 'everywhere' at once while simultaneously being 'nowhere' at once, which gets silly pretty fast.
Insofar as 'omnipresence' is used synonymously with 'omniscience', I would agree that Psalm 139 affirms it. I am not so sure that omnipotence entails omnipresence, though I would agree that it at least requires being able to manifest in multiple places at once.
Which brings me back to why I find these terms confusing. 'He is in every place but doesn't fill every place' makes a certain sort of sense until you start naming specific places where He is present. Standing on Mount Rushmore would imply some sort of physical presence, which is where the confusion sets in.
I think the bottom line is that our concept of 'presence' is useless when you start applying it to God. At least, that's how it seems to me.What the world thinks the most valuable exhibition of the Dao is to be found in books. But books are only a collection of words. Words have what is valuable in them - what is valuable in words is the ideas they convey. But those ideas are a sequence of something else - and what that something else is cannot be conveyed by words. When the world, because of the value which it attaches to words, commits them to books, that for which it so values them may not deserve to be valued - because that which it values is not what is really valuable. Thus it is that what we look at and can see is (only) the outward form and colour, and what we listen to and can hear is (only) names and sounds. Alas! that men of the world should think that form and colour, name and sound, should be sufficient to give them the real nature of the Dao. The form and colour, the name and sound, are certainly not sufficient to convey its real nature; and so it is that 'the wise do not speak and those who do speak are not wise.' How should the world know that real nature?
--Zuangzi, Way of Heaven
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May 9th 2011, 12:27 PM #109
Re: Things I don't get about Real Presence
...the compass of existence held more than my text-books had revealed, more than I had ever dreamed of. In short I lost my superiority, and this, though I was not then aware of it, is the first step towards finding God.-A.J. Cronin
the burn notice commercial worked beautifully, the actual vid just froze. well played google-yxboom
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May 9th 2011, 12:33 PM #110
Re: Things I don't get about Real Presence
He takes up as much space as a five foot something man would (though He wouldn't let you bump into Him or anything like that). I'm just saying He can stand on top of the mountain without having to at the same time be stuck up Lincoln's nose. I'm going for a more colloquial definition of "place" as a general locality.
Don't conflate this with Berman's fine points on the immaterial side of omnipresence though. He probably thinks I'm on shrooms right now
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...the compass of existence held more than my text-books had revealed, more than I had ever dreamed of. In short I lost my superiority, and this, though I was not then aware of it, is the first step towards finding God.-A.J. Cronin
the burn notice commercial worked beautifully, the actual vid just froze. well played google-yxboom
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May 9th 2011, 12:47 PM #111
Re: Things I don't get about Real Presence
Either something like eternal security for David, or else just omnipotence.
Originally posted by RBerman
If the Bible says that God is present somewhere, such as in the temple or in heaven or in the heart of the believer, then that implies he is not present everywhere.It means that he knows what's going on there, and it means that he can act there. So if you think God is omnipotent and omniscient, then you think that God is omnipresent.
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May 9th 2011, 12:51 PM #112
Re: Things I don't get about Real Presence
A proper definition of Omnipresence does not imply that God is "physically present" anywhere in the sense that he occupies space or is material. It means simply that God is aware of everything everywhere, and God can act everywhere. If you want to define omnipresence in such a way that God doesn't possess it, while still affirming what I affirm when I use the term omnipresence, you're breeding confusion.
My string of logic was that a being who can do anything (i.e. He is omnipotent) can known everything (i.e. He is omniscient). Omniscience is thus a corollary of omnipotence. And a being who is omnipotent (and thus omniscient) can act everywhere, and in that sense is omnipresent.Insofar as 'omnipresence' is used synonymously with 'omniscience', I would agree that Psalm 139 affirms it. I am not so sure that omnipotence entails omnipresence, though I would agree that it at least requires being able to manifest in multiple places at once.
Which is why it's important to stipulate that God's presence is not a material one, so that even the idea of "God standing" somewhere involves a level of metaphor and abstraction.Which brings me back to why I find these terms confusing. 'He is in every place but doesn't fill every place' makes a certain sort of sense until you start naming specific places where He is present. Standing on Mount Rushmore would imply some sort of physical presence, which is where the confusion sets in.
Well, at the very least it's not something that can be applied unthinkingly. You have to consider the ways that God is not a creature when you use any human terminology to discuss Him. Even the idea of God being a "Him" means some different things than it means for a human, yes?I think the bottom line is that our concept of 'presence' is useless when you start applying it to God. At least, that's how it seems to me.
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May 9th 2011, 12:53 PM #113
Re: Things I don't get about Real Presence
The Bible does speak of a special sense of "God's presence" referring to his Shekinah glory in the tabernacle tent or the temple of Solomon. By association, "the presence of God" also means the condition of being in God's favor. Thus the Israelites were said to be carried off to Babylon, "away from the presence of God" even after the temple had been destroyed and the Shekinah glory was no longer there anyway.
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The following tWebber says Amen to RBerman for this useful Post:
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May 9th 2011, 12:54 PM #114
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May 9th 2011, 01:31 PM #115
Re: Things I don't get about Real Presence
Having the ability to act everywhere and actually acting everywhere are fairly different.
Originally posted by RBerman
Doesn't that sort of concede that the omnipresence language is unbiblical?The Bible does speak of a special sense of "God's presence" referring to his Shekinah glory in the tabernacle tent or the temple of Solomon. By association, "the presence of God" also means the condition of being in God's favor. Thus the Israelites were said to be carried off to Babylon, "away from the presence of God" even after the temple had been destroyed and the Shekinah glory was no longer there anyway.
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May 9th 2011, 01:56 PM #116
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Male - Non-theistRe: Things I don't get about Real Presence
Aha! The difference here is between using omnipresent as 'being able to act everywhere' versus using it as 'is everywhere'. This may be semantics, but I consider it an important distinction. You seem to be using the former, which is fine, but I have always considered that an inherent part of omnipotence.
Agreed.
I'm not sure about that last statement. Speaking for myself, I call God 'Him' because He is identified as God the Father (and later God the Son). I also come from a culture where the male gender is used for gender-neutral things as well. (My unborn baby is a 'he' even though we don't yet know its gender. People get mad when I use 'it'.
)
The difference, in my opinion, is that calling God a 'him' isn't intended to convey something meaningful while discussing God's presence is. That could just be a difference in understanding/upbringing, though.What the world thinks the most valuable exhibition of the Dao is to be found in books. But books are only a collection of words. Words have what is valuable in them - what is valuable in words is the ideas they convey. But those ideas are a sequence of something else - and what that something else is cannot be conveyed by words. When the world, because of the value which it attaches to words, commits them to books, that for which it so values them may not deserve to be valued - because that which it values is not what is really valuable. Thus it is that what we look at and can see is (only) the outward form and colour, and what we listen to and can hear is (only) names and sounds. Alas! that men of the world should think that form and colour, name and sound, should be sufficient to give them the real nature of the Dao. The form and colour, the name and sound, are certainly not sufficient to convey its real nature; and so it is that 'the wise do not speak and those who do speak are not wise.' How should the world know that real nature?
--Zuangzi, Way of Heaven
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May 9th 2011, 03:15 PM #117
Re: Things I don't get about Real Presence
Regarding Jesus' body, here is part of what the Book of Concord have to say about it:
http://bookofconcord.org/fc-ep.php#V...%20of%20Christ
What this boils down to is the idea that because of the unity of the natures within the second Person of the Trinity, what the person does and is can be attributed to both natures--hence 'God doed for our sons", and Jesus is the same yesterday, today and tomorrow". This impacts the discussion at hand because due to some philosophical commitments, other communions do not believe that e.g. Jesus' body can be anywhere else but in its circumscribed place in space. The problem arises when we realize that Jesus' body seems to have "something extra", i.e. he can apparently pass through a sealed tomb stone, walk through locked doors etc. Interestingly, Calvin himself dealt with this issue, stating that because Jesus' body is just like ours, that obviously the stone was rolled away so Jesus could leave the tomb, and then rolled back into place. (Calvin Institutes IV 17:29) But what if Jesus' exalted, divinized body is not precisely like ours, but like what ours will become at the eschathon? If you are open to that possibility, then you should be open to the possibility of the Real Presence. Much of modern American Christianity is not open to it, so it is not open to the Real Presence.
My point is that a lot of these assumptions are based on our scientific observation, as Jawa said--which can change as we learn more.Infant faith? You betcha!
"Yet you are he who took me from the womb; you made me trust you at my mother's breasts. On you was I cast from my birth, and from my mother's womb you have been my God."
(Psa 22:9-10 ESV)
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May 9th 2011, 03:22 PM #118
Re: Things I don't get about Real Presence
True, but my definition of omnipresence only requires the ability to act everywhere.
Depends on how you define omnipresence. There are some versions of it that are unbiblical. "Presence" can mean more than one thing. God's omnipresence in one sense does not exclude God's presence in another sense. A single man can be both a father and a grandfather.Doesn't that sort of concede that the omnipresence language is unbiblical?
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May 9th 2011, 03:30 PM #119
Re: Things I don't get about Real Presence
Well, you're going to have to explain what it means for an immaterial God to be somewhere if you want to make a distinction between where God is and where God acts. There's a special sense in which God is in heaven, and a sense in which God is in our hearts, but I don't consider either of those in opposition to the idea that God is everywhere in another sense.
My point is that it's appropriate to call God "He" because that's how he identifies himself. That doesn't mean that everything true of a human "he" is true of God, though. Such terms are helpful when all parties understand what they do and don't mean, and unhelpful otherwise.I'm not sure about that last statement. Speaking for myself, I call God 'Him' because He is identified as God the Father (and later God the Son). I also come from a culture where the male gender is used for gender-neutral things as well. (My unborn baby is a 'he' even though we don't yet know its gender. People get mad when I use 'it'.
) The difference, in my opinion, is that calling God a 'him' isn't intended to convey something meaningful while discussing God's presence is. That could just be a difference in understanding/upbringing, though.
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May 9th 2011, 03:37 PM #120
Re: Things I don't get about Real Presence
The stone was rolled away from Jesus' tomb; it was not rolled back into place. I don't have a problem with saying that Mary is the Mother of God, or that God died for our sins, in the sense that I am affirming that Jesus is truly God. However in saying those things it should be understood that Mary is not the Mother of God the Father, and that God the Father did not die for our sins. Likewise for the Holy Spirit. Jesus' post-resurrection body does show unusual attributes, although arguably not more unusual than walking on water, which he did prior to the resurrection. I also don't view "Jesus has a resurrected body" to justify an "anything goes" approach to speculations about the Real Presence. But more importantly, I don't see anything in the Lord's Supper, either in the gospels or in 1 Corinthians, to make me think that Jesus intended to be speaking of his physical presence within the bread and wine that he was passing around at the table, which of course was prior to Jesus' resurrection body.
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