Saturday, July 13, 2024

Steven Nemes on the Eucharistic Theology of Ignatius of Antioch

Re. Epistle to the Smyrnaeans 6:2

 

It would make sense in such a context for Ignatius to appeal to the Eucharist as an evidence of Christ’s true humanity. This is because the Eucharist has to do with Jesus’s body and blood. But there is nothing about this sort of argument that demands a commitment to the Real Presence paradigm rather than to Memoralism. The denier of the true humanity of Christ and of his real sufferings would have just as much reason not to participate in the Eucharist whether Christ’s body and blood are understood to be really present in the bread and wine or they are thought to be represented by them as symbols. It is the reality of the bodily suffering and death that is being contested and not a purported eucharistic presence. This is why Ignatius could have argued just as strongly against his opponents by appealing to the symbolism of the Eucharist. (Steven Nemes, Eating Christ’s Flesh: A Case for Memorialism [Eugene, Oreg.: Cascade Books, 2023], 106)

 

Re. Epistle to the Romans 7:3:

 

Ignatius writes to the Romans in light of his imminent arrival in Rome for the sake of being martyred. He asks from the beginning that his audience not interfere and try to prevent his impending death (1;2). He considers that by dying he will reach God and become a “word of God” (2;1). He will be poured out as an offering and set to the world in hopes of rising toward God (2:2). In death he will actually be a Christian rather than merely calling himself one so long as they pray that he has the strength to submit to death (3:2). He admits that he writes “to all the churches . . . insisting to everyone that I die for God of my own free will” (4:1). He embraces death “Let me be food for the wild beasts, through whom I can reach God . . . Then I will truly be a disciple of Jesus Christ, when the world will no longer see my body” (4:1-2). His present mistreatment at the hands of his guards makes him more of a disciple (5:2). He also calls out, “May nothing visible or invisible envy me, so that I may reach Jesus Christ” (5:3). This attitude makes him lose all interest in the present order of things: “Neither the ends of the earth nor the kingdom of this age are of any use to me . . . him I seek, who died on our behalf” (6:1). He even says that to prevent his martyrdom would be to bring death upon him and to prevent him from living (6:2). Ignatius considers rather than upon death he will “receive the pure light, for when I arrive there I will be a human being” (6:2).

 

It is in the context of such remarks that he writes [Epistle to the Romans 7:1-3].

 

Klawiter argues persuasively that Ignatius interpreted in context should be understood as referring to his own martyrdom in eucharistic terms. (Klawiter, “Eucharist and Sacramental Realism,” 134) To die as a martyr is for him to gain “the bread of God, which is the flesh of Christ” and “his blood, which is incorruptible love.” Ignatius would seem to be referring by this phrase to the inheritance of the resurrected body, “the flesh of Christ.” This body is spiritual in nature (cf. 1 Cor 15:42-49) and thus incorruptible in its love for God. His martyrdom is therefore a ”Eucharist” in the sense that it will confer upon him in a very literal way a renewed and perfected bodily condition like that of Christ who also died for God. It is also possible that Ignatius means that dying for God like Christ did is “eating Christ’s flesh” as one does in the eucharistic meal. It is a way of appropriating Christ to oneself by imitating his example in hope of receiving the same reward. Faithful martyrdom and the hope of resurrection therefore seem to be what Ignatius has in mind when he speaks of the food of Christ’s flesh and the drink of his blood in the context of his Epistle to the Romans.

 

It is also possible to argue that Ignatius is very likely not referring to the Eucharist celebrated by the churches in the world. There are a few reasons for thinking. First, he would have to remain in the world in order to celebrate that Eucharist. But he has thus far in the epistle been insistent that he wishes to depart from the world. Second, it would also be entirely discontinuous with his argument both before and after this passage to interpret him as referring to the eucharistic meal of the churches. He was not speaking about Eucharist but rather about his impending death. It would therefore constitute an inexplicable change of subject, as though in his frenzy Ignatius suddenly and without warning could not stay on topic. This frenzy Ignatius suddenly and without warning could not stay on topic. This would be to attribute instability of mind to the author. It is more coherent to understand Ignatius as referring to his own martyrdom as a Eucharist of sorts which will confer immortality upon him. (Steven Nemes, Eating Christ’s Flesh: A Case for Memorialism [Eugene, Oreg.: Cascade Books, 2023], 112-13, comment in square brackets added for clarification)

 

Re. Epistle to the Ephesians 20:2 and the Eucharist being the medicine of immortality:

 

A real union of a robust metaphysical sort is accomplished between Christ and the believer such that the latter is ontologically predestined toward resurrection and immortality. But this idea has problems. With the highly disreputable exception of John 6, there is no clear biblical basis for believing that the food of the Eucharist makes a person capable of immortality and the life of the world to come. (Against Pitre, Jesus and the Jewish Roots, 112) The bread of life discourse rather ascribes this effect to faith in Jesus. The Pauline doctrine is that the reception of the Holy Spirit at conversion sets a person on the trajectory to resurrection and eternal life (2 Cor 1:22; Eph 1:14). As the canonical Epistle to the Ephesians says: “Do not grieve the Holy Spirit of God, with which you were marked with a seal for the day of redemption” (Eph 4:30). If Ignatius does mean to say that the Eucharist itself makes a person capable of immortality, there would seem to be no clear context for such an idea to have come to him.

 

It is also worth noting that the Real Presence interpretation of this passage does not adhere to it very closely and actually makes it to be false. Experience teaches that a person is not necessarily made especially resistant to death, whether this be understood physically or spiritually, simply because he or she has partaken of the Eucharist, even with a clear conscience. One can often sin just as easily after the consumption of the Eucharist as before. If that is the case, then what Ignatius says is false: the Eucharist apparently does not function as an antidote in that sense. But it is also clear from experience that what does in fact make a person resistant to spiritual death is one’s state of spirit. What prevents death is specifically ardent love for God and for Jesus in the Holy Spirit. Such love is the possible effect of the Eucharist even apart from the commitments of the Real Presence paradigm insofar as the Eucharist is the symbolic self-offering of Christ to the believer for that person: “We love because he first loved us” (1 John 4:19). The Eucharist has the purpose of strengthening the union between Jesus and the believer by increasing their mutual love. It does this by making Jesus’s person and work as savior of the world present-to believers through the use of bread and wine as symbols. It is likely preaching the gospel in a manner that engages more of the senses. This is the sense in which the proponent of Memorialism can affirm that the Eucharist is a “medicine of immortality.” It brings immortality in just the same way that ordinary evangelization does, namely because it fosters love for God and for Jesus.

 

The Eucharist is the medicine of immortality because it fosters the love for God and for Jesus that will be rewarded with resurrection. This interpretation coheres with the rest of the epistle in context. Earlier Ignatius says that the cross or sacrifice of Christ “is a stumbling block to unbelievers but salvation and eternal life to us” (18:1). If the cross of Christ is salvation and eternal life to Christians, then the Eucharist can be the medicine of immortality insofar as it symbolically presents believers with that cross and its salvific significance. He also says that “faith and love toward Jesus Christ” are “the beginning and the end of life,” so that “everything else that contributes to excellence follows from them” (14:1). If the orientation of the person toward Jesus Christ in faith and love is the beginning and end of life, then it would be perfectly natural to say that the Eucharist is the medicine of immortality. It presents the Christian with the symbols of the cross or sacrifice of Jesus and invites him or her personally to appropriate its promise of eternal life in faith and love by consuming them. Making the sacrifice of Christ present-to believers cultivates their faith and love toward him in this way leads them to eternal life. There is consequently neither need nor obvious benefit in complicating matters with the speculative metaphysics of Real Presence when Ignatius is clear: “faith and love toward Jesus Christ . . . are the beginning and the end of life” (14:1). It is contextually more appropriate to understand Ignatius as saying that the Eucharist is the medicine of immortality in the sense that it cultivates love for Jesus Christ in believers by making his person and work present-to them. (Steven Nemes, Eating Christ’s Flesh: A Case for Memorialism [Eugene, Oreg.: Cascade Books, 2023], 114-15)

 

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