Unique
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Matt.
12:32
Matt.
16:18
Matt.
26:26
Luke 10:16
Luke 22:32
John 21:16
John 6:53
John 20:23
1
Cor. 3:13
1
Cor. 7:1
James 5:14
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- Matthew 26:26
-
- " . . . this is my body."
Problem:
Roman Catholics understand this passage to teach that when the appropriate words are
uttered by the priest, the Wafer is changed into the real body of Christ. This is the
doctrine of Transubstantiation.
Solution:
- At the time these words were uttered Jesus was there present with the disciples; he had
not yet died.
There is an abundance of passages, similar to this one, where the verb "is" is
used for "to mean, to symbolize"; e.g.,
- "I am the door." (John 10:7).
- "I am the true vine." (John 15:1).
- "That Rock was Christ." (1 Cor. 10:4).
- "The seven heads are seven mountains." (Rev. 17:9).
If the Romanist insists that "This is my blood" means literally that the wine
is transformed into Christ's very blood; then "this cup is the new testament"
(covenant) must mean that the literal cup becomes a literal covenant (1 Cor. 11:25).
The Lord's Supper is a commemoration of a sacrifice, not a repetition of it.
When it is realized that the doctrine of transubstantiation means that the wafer is
changed into the whole Being of Christ, which is then offered as a propitiatory sacrifice,
it is important to point out that Christ has been offered "once for all". (Heb.
10:10; cf 7:27). The sacrifice needs no repetition.
Correction on point 2 done on 12/2/99 by Tim Young |