I take Paul as the Word of God, and he says "bread" and "body" are synonyms. You, contrarily, are trying to tell me that they're not synonymous. There are two groups. Those telling me they're synonyms, and those telling me they're Not synonyms. The Catholics and the Orthodox are telling me they're synonyms, and everybody else is telling me they're not synonyms. Curious perhaps relevant note, those are the oldest churches, period. So I examined the other side of the tracks, as I myself was over there with all of you for most of my life. I examined it honestly.
Neither Paul, nor any other part of God's Word, teaches that the word 'bread' is a synonym for the word 'body', nor that the word 'body' is a synonym for the word 'bread'.
Now, you have been understandably silent, in post #284, as to the Thomas Aquinas quote contained in the quote which I displayed in post #283:
"As St. Thomas Aquinas observed, Christ is not quoted as saying, "This bread is my body," but "This is my body" (Summa Theologiae, III q. 78, a. 5)."
Like Christ, Paul, and the rest of Scripture, even
Aquinas, here, clearly didn't agree with your asinine, and false, claim that the words 'bread' and 'body' are
synonyms of one another. But, you have just claimed that "the Catholics and the Orthodox are telling me they're synonyms." So, now, why don't you just quote for us the exact statement(s) given by Rome's
Magisterium in which (as
you claim) Rome is telling you that the words 'bread' and 'body' are synonyms of one another? Quote, and give us the bibliographical documentation necessary to refer to it, ourselves.
Remember your meltdown when I asked you for ancient historical documentation to back up your claim that early Christians were accused of cannibalizing somebody named 'Chrestus'. Remember how you had nothing rational, whatsoever, to say in response to that simple request. Well, your claim
I can academically meet your challenge
was false, as regards your asinine, and (also) false, claim that early Christians were accused of cannibalizing somebody named 'Chrestus'. Instead of academically meeting my challenge, you had to turn around and say that, when you had claimed that early Christians were accused of cannibalizing someone by the name of 'Chrestus'
I wasn't even being serious with you.
So, obviously, there's no reason, whatsoever, for anybody to take you seriously, here, when you say that somebody has told you that the words 'bread' and 'body' are synonyms of one another.
Um, OK.
Wait a second, there.
Why'd you capitalize the three initial G's in that silly expression? They kinda resemble three instances of the numeral 6, don't they? Capital G and numeral 6 look quite similar as glyphs: "these
Guys
Got
Grapes"/"these
6uys
6ot
6rapes". Are you trying to hint at an association between Rome and the number, 666?