How to
Defend the Real
âYou actually believe that Jesus is really present in bread and wine?â A couple of issues back, we noted that a lot of our fellow Christians donât understand why we baptize babies, so we provided a few answers to their arguments. Another topic of contention is our doctrine of the Real Presence, that in the Lordâs Supper Jesus gives us His Body and Blood in, with, and under the bread and wine.Thatâs what makes Holy Communion a holy communion after all. But along the way, youâre likely to be challenged for this doctrine, so here are a few of the common criticisms and suggestions on how to respond. Tedious Grammatical Arguments Made Funner. Oops. I Mean, More Funner. 1.âWhen Jesus said,âThis is My body,â He meant,âThis represents My body.ââ Response:âAh. So when Jesus said,âThis is My body,â He really meant,âThis is not My body?ââ Reason: Can âisâ really mean âis not?âThey sure sound like opposites to me. In fact, while Iâve often heard that ââisâ doesnât always mean âis,â my quick check of online dictionaries couldnât find a definition where thatâs true.This clarifies how bad the argument against you isâit turns the word âisâ into its opposite.You could always follow up with,âWhen God said,âLet there be light,â did He mean âLet there not be lightâ?â
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2.âWhen Jesus said,âThis is My body,â He meant,âThis symbolizes My body.âThe bread and wine are just symbols or signs.â Response #1: Same as above. Response #2:âIf youâre at the mall, and you see a sign with a fire extinguisher on it, what else do you find?â Reason:You find a fire extinguisherânot a poster that tells you that the extinguisher is with you in spirit.This may sound dumb, but itâs important.This argument is that the bread and wine are symbols because Jesusâ Body and Blood arenât there. But signs and symbols are
often found exactly where things areâto announce a presence! Lutherans have sometimes referred to the bread and wine as signs, but only because they announce the Savior who is present but unseen. Response #3: Why didnât Jesus just say what He meant? Reason: The arguments against the Real Presence must always try to change the simple words,âThis is my bodyâ into what Jesus âreally meant.â So why didnât the Savior say what He really meant? Why allow centuries of strife among Christians when He could have prevented it in the first place? Unless, of course, Jesus really meant what He said, which is âThis is My body!â 3.âJesus said,âI am the doorâ (John 10:9). But Jesus obviously isnât a door. Therefore,âisâ doesnât always mean âis.ââ Response:âSo Jesus symbolizes some door?â Reason: This one is tedious, but be ready anyway.The argument so far has been that âisâ means ârepresentsâ or âsymbolizes.â In this case, it should mean that when Jesus says,âI am the door,â He really means,âI symbolize the door.â Except that it doesnât make sense: the door symbolizes Jesus, not the other way around.Therefore, Jesus must really mean,âI am
symbolized by the door.â He really meant to use a passive verb, but He used an active one instead. Logically,âamâ hasnât changed its meaning in âI am the door.â It still means âam,â not âam symbolized by.â âDoorâ can also mean âdoorwayâ or âentry.â Jesus is saying,âI am the entry [into the sheepfold],â just like He says elsewhere,âI am the Way, the Truth and the Lifeâ (John 14:6). (We could even say that Jesus is the Door and sets the standard for all doorsâand every door you ever use should remind you of Him.) 4.âJesus canât be present in all that bread and wine, because His body was a finite thing, and His body is at the right hand of God. Arenât you denying that Jesus was human?â Response:âWhen Jesus walked on water, was He wearing pontoons?â Reason: Human bodies canât walk on water, but Jesus did. He walked on water even though He was fully man because He was also the Son of God. The risen Jesus appeared to His disciples in a locked room (John 20:19): human bodies canât just materialize like that either.The Lord can do whatever He wants.The Real Presence doesnât deny that Jesus is human. Rather, it affirms that He is also God.