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steido01
Guest
I know that there is a range of practice within the ELCA; I meant no offense and I was careful to use the qualifier “some.” I have personally attended two, and know of at least two more ELCA churches where the Eucharist is regularly offered not just to confirmed members, not just to baptized Christians, but also to non-ChristiansContrary to what Don posted, the ELCA invites all baptized Christians who believe Christ is fully Presence in the Eucharist to commune in our parishes. Like children who are baptized but have not yet received their first holy communion, non-Christians are invited to come up during the distribution of the Sacrament to receive a blessing from the pastor.
I can PM the parishes to you, if you’d like to contact the pastors there. I presume they will be candid about their beliefs.
I stand by my last paragraph; churches that practice open communion should encourage visitors to follow their own church body’s guidelines regarding Eucharistic sharing. Roman Catholics who partake in a Lutheran Eucharist do so against the teachings of their own church. This fact should not be hushed.