And that is what I am referring to as well - spiritual substance; substance that is spiritually discerned.Kerux wrote:{clip} ... The passages quoted [John 6:50-57] are obviously, on their face, refering to spiritual or symbolic bread, flesh, wine, etc.
I have given my position in my first post, essentially that I remain "agnostic" on transubstantiation.
However, I understand the RC reasoning and do acknowledge the Last Supper as a sacrament, a spiritual mystery, due to something I sense (spiritually discern) that is very important about it. I see there is room for interpretation (metaphors being something more than metaphors in a literary sense due to a spiritual component) and Protestants will believe one thing, Catholics another, and I am happy enough with the idea of varying layers of belief according to faith.
Kerux, I do not disagree with you at all that objective reality is not objectively changed by thinking it is something else.
I think my previous post has been misread.
What I am questioning is how one can always be certain of objective reality where there is the possibility of a spiritual component involved, and that some things do require an exercise of faith to deepen one's understanding of its nature.
It may be that our physical senses aid us to perceive only a certain part of reality, and one day we stop seeing "but a poor reflection as in a mirror".
As we are told in 1 Corinthians 13:12 "Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I am fully known."
The chicken wing might go some way towards satisfying one's physical hunger, but it would not touch a spiritual hunger in the same way that partaking in Holy Communion does for many believers.
Humour is fine in the right place but also be careful in making fun that you do not mock something you may not fully understand.