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steido01
Guest
This is a charitable view for Roman Catholics to hold – certainly more than outright dismissing any possibility of Christ’s presence in an Anglican or Lutheran Lord’s Supper. It reminds me of what then-Cardinal Ratzinger wrote to a Lutheran friend:I would grant that in the Anglican and Lutheran Eucharist that Christ is mysteriously present.
I count among the most important results of the ecumenical dialogues the insight that the issue of the eucharist cannot be narrowed to the problem of ‘validity.’ Even a theology oriented to the concept of succession, such as that which holds in the Catholic and in the Orthodox church, need not in any way deny the salvation-granting presence of the Lord in a Lutheran Lord’s Supper.
Dear friend, your former pastor taught you wrong. Sadly, this is not surprising, coming from the ELCA. Lutherans do not and never have taught Consubstantiation. Any Lutheran who says so is confused. They believe in ‘Sacramental Union.’ This post and this post and should help clarify.As a Lutheran pastor once explained it to me, con is the Latin for with, so Jesus’s body and blood are present WITH the bread and wine.
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