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Romans, Chapter 14 (from The Bible)


celiac3270

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celiac3270 Collaborator

I know very little about the Bible, but this passage seems to defend our right to a gluten-free communion. Look at 14... "But if anyone regards something as unclean, then for him it is unclean" (i.e. wheat, rye, barley). I am not trying to offend anyone, not trying to spark more sharp disagreement. I understand that the Catholic Church has adopted its own doctrine and has no theoretical obligation to change this. I'm just saying that if we interpret this passage, it seems to defend our choice in food. Thought it was interesting:

Romans, chapter 14

13 Therefore let us stop passing judgment on one another. Instead, make up your mind not to put any stumbling block or obstacle in your brother's way.

14 As one who is in the Lord Jesus, I am fully convinced that no food is unclean in itself. But if anyone regards something as unclean, then for him it is unclean.

15 If your brother is distressed because of what you eat, you are no longer acting in love. Do not by your eating destroy your brother for whom Christ died.

16 Do not allow what you consider good to be spoken of as evil.

17 For the kingdom of God is not a matter of eating and drinking, but of righteousness, peace and joy in the Holy Spirit,

18 because anyone who serves Christ in this way is pleasing to God and approved by men.

This seems to say: no food is bad or unclean, but if someone thinks it is (i.e. through an allergy or intolerance) then for that person it isn't okay. Then at the end, it says that God and piety doesn't revolve around eating or drinking, but about who you are as a person. And that even if you aren't eating gluten or a gluten-containing Communion, if you're being a good person, that's all that matters.

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Guest gfinnebraska

This passage refers back to the eating of "clean" and "unclean" animals in the Old Testament, under the "old law"... but, hey, if it will work to help Catholics... go for it! :)

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jenvan Collaborator

I especially love verse 17...

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celiac3270 Collaborator
This passage refers back to the eating of "clean" and "unclean" animals in the Old Testament, under the "old law"...

Oh, shucks. I knew there must be a catch.... <_<

I especially love verse 17...

Me, too ;)

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Carriefaith Enthusiast

Good work celiac3270! and great topic.

I personally don't think that God would want us to damage ourselves by eating gluten bread at communion. I believe that it does say somewhere in the bible not to hurt your body. The whole purpose of communion is to take the bread and wine/grapejuice as a symbol of the body and blood to remember that Jesus died for our sins so that we could have eternal life. I personally don't think God cares if the bread we take as a symbol has gluten or not. I mean we don't actually drink the actual blood or eat the actual body right? We drink wine or grape juice and eat bread as a symbol.

Just my two cents :D

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Jnkmnky Collaborator

Thanks! This is what I told a group of moms just the other day when we were discussing communion. Now I can print out what you took the time to post! ;)

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KaitiUSA Enthusiast
Good work celiac3270! and great topic.

I personally don't think that God would want us to damage ourselves by eating gluten bread at communion. I believe that it does say somewhere in the bible not to hurt your body. The whole purpose of communion is to take the bread and wine/grapejuice as a symbol of the body and blood to remember that Jesus died for our sins so that we could have eternal life. I personally don't think God cares if the bread we take as a symbol has gluten or not. I mean we don't actually drink the actual blood or eat the actual body right? We drink wine or grape juice and eat bread as a symbol.

Just my two cents :D

I ditto that!

Thanks for posting this celiac3270

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Jnkmnky Collaborator

Just want to say....without wanting to start any awkward controvery.... :) , that Catholics actually do believe that the bread and wine do, infact, become the body and blood of Jesus. I know, I know...then why does the gluten matter...It's all part of the "mystery", I guess! ;) In my experience, God's shown himself to be a rather ironic and humorous entitiy. :blink:

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KaitiUSA Enthusiast

I have a question then:

If Catholics believe that it is truly transformed to the body and blood of Christ then why can't a wafer made of rice be transformed to the body and blood of Christ too? Why does it have to be that particular ingredient? Christ did not command that it must have a certain ingredient. He did NOT say take this wheat bread in remembrance of me. I don't think He would even want you to take something that would make you sick.

Theres a verse in the Bible where it says people look on the outside but God looks at the heart...I think that applies with this because it doesn't matter what you can and can't have or anything like that. God knows the condition of the heart and I think that should be the meaning of communion. I don't think that the ingredient of what you take should overshadow that meaning.

I know people who get reactions because they take communion...and I know some people who take communion with rice wafers even if its rejected. God doesn't reject it....we live for an audience of one and that one person is God.

That's the thing that seems to confuse me..I understand it is tradition and know that tradition will not be changed...I am just trying to understand the logic of it so I hope none of you take offense because thats not my objective.

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Guest gfinnebraska

I agree 100% Carriefaith & Kaiti ~ :)

I know, for me, I just take the "grape juice" during communion. I know God understands why I don't take the bread 1/2 of the ceremony. That is the final line, for me. Did God give me celiac? No. Does He understand my limitations? YES! :) That is called grace...

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Carriefaith Enthusiast
I know people who get reactions because they take communion

I've heard of someone who got put in the hospital because the gluten they ingested at each communion made them very sick.

I am not Catholoc, but I think that they believe that the bread must be unleavened, meaning that it has to contain wheat. That is why there is so many issues with celiacs that are catholic.

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Jnkmnky Collaborator

I realize other branches of the Christian faith view the communion host and wine as a symbol of the body and blood of Christ. Catholics believe that the host and the wine actually DO become the body and blood of Christ. SOOOOO, I am Catholic and I DO believe that the communion host and wine are transformed into the actual body and blood of Jesus (a little cannabalism with your religion, anyone??) ;) Ha-ha..just kidding! Ok. Seriously, I think that sometimes the guys in charge get a little hung up on tradition and lose sight of the purpose. As I recall from my bible reading and years of church attendence, Jesus did NOT hand down a recipe for the bread we were to use. He handed down the commandment to "do this in memory of me"..... I think you can safely imply from that, that we can do this in memory of him with a wheat cracker, a rice cracker or even a potato chip if that's ALL you have handy.

There are many mysteries tied up into this controversy, including...have the guys making these rules lost their minds?? To deny a Catholic the opportunity to partake in the most sacred part of their religion based on a supposed necessary RECIPE for the body of Christ, just blows me away. It's like persecuting your own kind due to an unseemly disability. If they weren't so nervous about admitting the gluten was still in the host when it's SUPPOSED to be transformed, then they might see that a little gluten doesn't shake the belief of the faithful who still believe it's actually transformed into Jesus's body.

I guess this is why it's so important to put your faith in God and not a bunch of humans who, no matter how hard they try, are still flawed just like the rest of us.

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Guest gfinnebraska

"I guess this is why it's so important to put your faith in God and not a bunch of humans who, no matter how hard they try, are still flawed just like the rest of us. "

Well said!! :lol:

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VydorScope Proficient

The problem with using this in the Catholic Church is they do not hold up the Bible the same way the Prostants do. Protestants maintain that the Bible is the final and complete authority. Catholics believe that the Bible by itself is insufficient, and that tradition and the teaching authority of the church must be added to the Bible.

This is not the place for me to argue why I extremly disagree with the Catholic Church on this, just place to point out why the above passage is not sufficent to convice the Catholic Church of anything. Since the Catholic Chuch teaches that the bread must contian wheat, then for them thats the same as if it was stated that way in the Bible.

As far as my studies tell me, theres no reason at all the "bread" has to have wheat in it. The important fact here is your are NOT saved by comunine, its a response to being saved. Theres a big differnce there, and those here that take a non-wheat comunine need to understand that, and not worry about what the world says. Salvation is by faith alone, not works or cermony.

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Guest BERNESES

I have a cousin with Celiac's who is very religious. When she goes to church, she informs the priest of her condition and he allows her to sip from the cup of wine BEFORE anyone else does (so she doesn't get contaminated). She almost became a nun and this seems sufficient for her. She also believes that God wouldn't want her to eat anything that might hurt her. I don't believe in that kind of a God either. Your body is a temple.

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psawyer Proficient

In Romans 14:14-17, the link to Leviticus 11 is obvious, but Paul the apostle does not restrict his message solely to that. A much broader interpretation is, I believe, equally valid: You are not judged by what you do or do not eat; judge not another by what they do or do not eat.

In the King James version, Romans 14:14 reads:

"I know, and am persuaded by the Lord Jesus, that there is nothing unclean of itself: but to him that esteemeth any thing to be unclean, to him it is unclean."

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plantime Contributor

"Unleavened" means no yeast or baking powder, nothing to make it light and fluffy. Leavening is not in regards to what grain is used for flour. I do not believe that God wants me to make myself ill. I believe that the purpose of the Lord's Supper (communion) is to actually sit still and remember the sacrifice that Christ made for my soul. The bread and wine are symbols, and meant to remind me to be still and remember. So many people, not just Catholics, place too much meaning in the taking of the bread and wine, in my opinion, when it is the condition of the heart that matters the most.

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  • 6 months later...
ms-sillyak-screwed Enthusiast

Anyone read da vinci code? -- catch the part about food alergy death?

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skoki-mom Explorer

I tend to oversimplify things, but I believe that God made me, I have celiac disease, and God doesn't make mistakes. I think there is a reason for everything in our lives, even if we aren't quite sure what it is.

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nettiebeads Apprentice
I think there is a reason for everything in our lives, even if we aren't quite sure what it is.

That's my philosophy, too. We're mere mortals and so who are we to question the whys?

Annette

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Mango04 Enthusiast
Anyone read da vinci code? -- catch the part about food alergy death?

No where was that part? I totally missed it....

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debmidge Rising Star

It's funny that someone mentioned canabalism in prior post. One of the early church father councils, I don't recall which one (like Nicene) the men on the council split over the concept over transubstantiation. One group regarded it was canabalism and rejected it. But the group who promoted it obviously won.

Culturally, in Jesus' time his companions would have been grossed out at the Last Supper if they thought he meant his REAL body and blood; one can extract this from the passage of the Last Supper in the Bible as his disciples knew he was speaking in figurative terms as canabalism was sinful (taboo) and prohibited in the Jewish faith. If they felt he was speaking literally they would have thought he was crazy.

Unfortunately, the communion wafer still contains wheat after it is sanctified during the Mass and that proof is made by the celiacs themselves.

My contention is that God created all grains and who are we to reject rice over wheat. We are simple men and women and do not have the knowledge of God. Who then is like God? Christians remain obedient to God not men. God is our creator not men. So what God has made through that first mystery called "creation" is good and perfect for our consumption. The common thread between wheat and other grains is that they are all from the earth made by God and that should be good enough for any Christian denomination.

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domineske Apprentice

As Catholics, we've found communion to be tricky. When possible, my daughter receives just the precious blood, but not from the priest's chalice. When they have mass at her school, we bring up the approved, low gluten hosts from the benedictine sisters.

If they are not offering communion under both species, my daughter makes a spiritual communion, a simple prayer for those who CANNOT receive communion. Our priest spent time teaching her the prayer, and for us it's an elegant way for her to always be able to participate in communion.

I pray that they change the rules, but until then this works for us.

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