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Any Lutheran pastor worth his salt will tell you that Lutherans do not believe in consubstantiation, they would tell you that it is a mystery on how it happens and that Lutherans take Christ at His Word when he said “This Is…”. Also from the book The Conservative Reformation and Its Theology by Charles Porterfield Krauth stated In the " Wittenberg Concord," (1536,) prepared and signed by Luther and the other great leaders in the Church, it is said: " We deny the doctrine of transubstantiation, as we do also deny that the body and blood of Christ are locally included in the bread."* In the "Formula of Concord,“f our confessors say : " We utterly reject and condemn the doctrine of a Capernaitish eating of the body of Christ, which after so many protestations on our part, is maliciously imputed to us; the manducation is not a thing of the senses or of reason, but supernatural, mysterious, and incomprehensible. The presence of Christ in the supper is not of a physical nature, nor earthly, nor Capernaitish, and yet it is most true.” It would not be difficult to produce ample testimony of the same kind from intelligent men of other communions.Thanks Jon, I always enjoy reading your posts. Back in the late sixties I was taught in confirmation classes (MS) that we Lutherans believed in consubstantiation. I also recall discussing this as what we believed as an adult in the ELCA. Has that changed at some point that i’m not aware of? I’m just curious. As an adult I remember discussing the difference between that and transubstantiation in adult ed class at my ECLA church and I said about the Catholic belief “but that’s what Jesus said isn’t it?” I don’t recall anyone answering me and so began my journey back to the Catholic Church where I was baptized as an infant![]()
Krauth, Charles P. (Charles Porterfield), 1823-1883. The conservative reformation and its theology : as represented in the Augsburg Confession, and in the history and literature of the Evangelical Lutheran Church. Philadelphia : J.B. Lippincott.