H
hn160
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Lutherans along with Martin Luther do not believe in consubstantiation, rather we take it as a mystery. We take Christ at His Word when He said " This is …". Luther told Zwingli that he (Luther) would rather drink wine with the Pope because Zwingli was of a different spirit.Consubstantiation: during the sacrament, the “substance” of the body and blood of Christ, upon the words of consecration, become mystically present, alongside the substance of the bread and wine.
Transubstantiation is similar: during the sacrament, the “substance” of the body and blood of Christ, upon the words of consecration, is all that remains, mystically speaking, in spite of the fact that mere bread and wine is all that is perceptible to the senses.
I think ML embraced consubstantiation but perhaps JonNC is right. I am still not 100% sure.
What I do know, with certainty, is the fact that Martin Luther definitely came to reject the idea of the Eucharist being a genuine sacrifice of the Mass, which, in my opinion is difficult to reconcile with the fact that he believed that the Eucharist, upon the words of consecration, truly became Jesus’ Body and Blood.![]()