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Matthew Ch 5 Lose A Body Part Rather Than Go To Hell.


superblue

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Literally or merely spiritual ?

 

Would it physically and spiritually be better to, cut your eye out, your hand off, or any other part of your body that lead you to sin, versus going to hell.

 

The eyes and hands seem to be the two be things that physically allow the ease to sin, then there is the tongue , if ya cant keep the foul words that are used to hurt others from coming out,

 

 

anyhow I think that gets the drift across.

 

flip side,

 

why would it literally not be better to physically remove a body part to prevent one from sinning.

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Not The Philosopher

why would it literally not be better to physically remove a body part to prevent one from sinning.

 

Physical mutilation is wrong - the ends do not justify the means.

 

I mean, you need to be alive to sin, right? Taken to its logical conclusions, the 'physical' approach seems to suggest that it would be better to take one's own life in order to prevent future sin.

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It's figurative -  the same concept could apply to mindsets, attitudes, people who are meant to be friends etc. In term of body parts: it's the mind that allows the body part to be a part in sin, not the body part! So hacking your bits away doesn't solve the problem, on the inside of the person.  Jesus said the kingdom is within you (or in your midst). I'd suggest hell has that same capacity.

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so then if I may spin my own thread out of context, exactly how and when are we to take such examples literally, being that, in that time when that was being said,  what if a person took it to be literal, an started loppin of an ear , gouging out an eye, an etc... An then the person retorts, well I just heard Christ say it would be better to do so, would Christ of turned around, an healed that person and explained things fully to that person ? An been like look this is what I meant, I just had to say it in a parable.

 

I do understand the spiritual meaning to this verse in Matthew, but it did make me wonder what the people at the time thought, and if anyone actually did it,

 

which brings me to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transubstantiation

 

and I am also reviewing this as it seems fairly simply written for one to understand or get a basic understanding which in the end is answered as usual, in mystery and faith.

 

so mystery and faith, versus I guess a spiritual not literal interpretation of examples that Christ gave us such as in Matthew, why is that.

 

Why is it, we don't say, well the Eucharist is merely just a spiritual example, something for us that is merely symbolic and is a representation of Christ, VS Gospel readings, or even old testament readings,  where we say well okay now that is not a literal example being given, that is merely spiritual, which spiritual is as literal and works in mystery and faith as well. I understand at the spiritual level there is a literal transformation that we may not see or even feel at times, but when it comes to the Bible, exactly how did our early leaders decide what should literally take place, and what is merely a spiritual transformation.

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PS

 

South Park took a stab jokingly at Transubstantiation which was rather funny I didn't find it offensive as it was how the children on the show were trying to rationalize it, and it was something along the lines of so Christ turned himself into crackers so we could eat him,

 

and then the kids just called shinanigans when they found out they had to drink a small portion of wine as it was the blood of Christ,

 

so then one could ask, why in the world would the Son of God want us to physically consume him in the first place, because the image and reasoning does not make a lot of sense, seems like a simpler way of making a pact with someone, a hug, a high five, what ever... may sound irreverent but im not trying to be, I just find it rather amazing, on why Christ chose bread and wine, to connect with us when he had plenty of other options, and to say love, doesn't really hold up as an answer, ya don't have to consume someone to love someone. 

 

anyhow that is why it is a Mystery in faith aint it.

 

k bye.

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I believe it was Origen who literally castrated himself along this line of reasoning and he was condemned for it.

Regarding Holy Communion, yes I've seen that and thought it was funny too. And no, we don't need to consume someone to love them, but Holy Communion isn't about showing we love Christ, it's about receiving his life into our bodies, that we might become 'partakers of the divine nature'.

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I believe it was Origen who literally castrated himself along this line of reasoning and he was condemned for it.
 

 

Fact.  (To clarify: this wasn't the only reason he was condemned.)

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PS

 

South Park took a stab jokingly at Transubstantiation which was rather funny I didn't find it offensive as it was how the children on the show were trying to rationalize it, and it was something along the lines of so Christ turned himself into crackers so we could eat him,

 

and then the kids just called shinanigans when they found out they had to drink a small portion of wine as it was the blood of Christ,

 

so then one could ask, why in the world would the Son of God want us to physically consume him in the first place, because the image and reasoning does not make a lot of sense, seems like a simpler way of making a pact with someone, a hug, a high five, what ever... may sound irreverent but im not trying to be, I just find it rather amazing, on why Christ chose bread and wine, to connect with us when he had plenty of other options, and to say love, doesn't really hold up as an answer, ya don't have to consume someone to love someone. 

 

anyhow that is why it is a Mystery in faith aint it.

 

k bye.

 

Food and eating is one of the most important parts of living beings. As living beings we are perpetually open to the outside and without this openness we would die. We must gain our life from outside. It's because we're not self-sufficient. This teaches us that who we are is nothing but what others give. We must learn as Christians to give all that we have and all that we are. Giving ourselves for the consumption and enjoyment and nutrition of others is the only way to live.

 

We eat the Body of Christ and thus participate in his humanity. We become his Body. We Christians are the Body of Christ. But just as God gives himself up to us, we too must give ourselves up as well. We are the Body of Christ who is broken up and fed to ourselves and others. How beautiful is that.

 

Without food, we die. But in eating God, we live. We participate in his salvation, his victory, his resurrection.

Edited by Kia ora
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Catherine Therese

Physical mutilation is wrong - the ends do not justify the means.

 

That is true, but depending on the circumstances, you could get a principle of double effect scenario, and that could allay any concerns re: consequentialism.

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I believe it was Origen who literally castrated himself along this line of reasoning and he was condemned for it.

Regarding Holy Communion, yes I've seen that and thought it was funny too. And no, we don't need to consume someone to love them, but Holy Communion isn't about showing we love Christ, it's about receiving his life into our bodies, that we might become 'partakers of the divine nature'.

 

That story comes from the time of Origen's condemnation, today it is widely believed that the story was made up to shame him. 

 

It wouldn't make any sense though, considering Origen's exegesis. He was maybe the least literal exegete from the time of the Fathers. 

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Fact.  (To clarify: this wasn't the only reason he was condemned.)

  

That story comes from the time of Origen's condemnation, today it is widely believed that the story was made up to shame him. 
 
It wouldn't make any sense though, considering Origen's exegesis. He was maybe the least literal exegete from the time of the Fathers.


I'll defer to your greater knowledge, but in any case I meant 'condemned' in the sense that everyone agreed that was not a legitimate thing to do. I wasn't referring to his formal theological condemnation.

Even if the story isn't true, the fact that it was attributed to him to his detriment still makes the same point: bodily mutilation is not an option.
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The issue of eunuchs and their status was a challenge to the early church and their views changed over time. The reality that castrations were not always voluntary and that there was often a loss of legal standing, to various degrees, and the implications of 'self harm' and the need to expand the communities were factors at hand. It also, dare say, didn't help that eunuchs often served as Pagan priests. So there was a big incentive to discourage this. Of course, not all eunuchs were castrated and what could have been included by the term at the time (including those not inclined towards women) is probably breaking off thread :cool:

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The only person I know who tried to take these injunctions literally was a person with a severe mental illness. She was very anxious about going to hell and thought that cutting off body parts might save her. She had quite serious problems with self-harm and in her unwell mind this Gospel passage was a divine seal of approval on what she was doing to herself.

 

Christ is the Divine Physician and he didn't come here to hurt us. His whole ministry on earth was about making people whole. Urging them to mutilate themselves is hardly in keeping with his miracles of healing, and nor is it in keeping with our understanding of sin. In the Garden, Adam blamed Eve (and even tacitly tried to blame God - "Well, you put her here with me!"), who blamed the snake. The Genesis story makes it very clear that trying to put the blame for sin on external things - whether that's other people, passing fauna, or body parts - is a mistake: it is our choices that are at fault and our choices only. That passage is an allegory, intended to make clear the importance of breaking away from sin, without any excuses or equivocations and it does so by necessity in very visceral language. But to renounce sin is to affirm belief in a world where pain and hurt need not exist, through the pure love of Jesus, and so it makes no sense to deliberately hurt yourself in order to try and bring yourself there.

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Food and eating is one of the most important parts of living beings. As living beings we are perpetually open to the outside and without this openness we would die. We must gain our life from outside. It's because we're not self-sufficient. This teaches us that who we are is nothing but what others give. We must learn as Christians to give all that we have and all that we are. Giving ourselves for the consumption and enjoyment and nutrition of others is the only way to live.

 

We eat the Body of Christ and thus participate in his humanity. We become his Body. We Christians are the Body of Christ. But just as God gives himself up to us, we too must give ourselves up as well. We are the Body of Christ who is broken up and fed to ourselves and others. How beautiful is that.

 

Without food, we die. But in eating God, we live. We participate in his salvation, his victory, his resurrection.

 

 

That doesn't exactly hold up, when there is only the obligation to receive the Eucharist once a year during the Easter season, or at Easter.  Which seems to suggest a lot to me which I wont get in to.

 

How about I just don't want eat God or his flesh because it is rather disturbing , not to mention no one can explain exactly what part of the body we are actually consuming.  From what a priest once said during a mass, we have about 15 minutes until the species is fully digested, to have Christ in us so to speak. 15 minutes is a lot of time for some and not enough for others.

 

It isn't that I don't believe, it is too much to go into, what is beautiful to some is merely a giant basket of convolution to others, the truth is God can do what ever he wants, he could have easily said, spin in a circle two times on Sunday and say an Our Father and we are united,

 

it may sound stupid, but it is the truth, and if it did happen, there would be someone else saying how beautiful it is we are united with God through simply spinning in a circle two times and saying an Our Father  and we are thus yada yada yada.

 

Plus there is a lot more needed in the human survival besides food, and if anyone wants to go an give a shot , it appears humans can survive roughly 40 days with out food,  ( water is a different thing we have to have water ).

 

don't interpret this as sarcasm it isn't  if anything I am getting at, is indeed the complexity and mystery of the Eucharist and why Christ chose what he chose.

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