Hi Don,=steido01;12563681]Wrong, friend.Jon has already explained that Lutherans condemn the error of Receptionism. Here’s more on why, and how, Lutherans ought to practice. From The Altar Guild Manual: Lutheran Service Book Edition, pertaining to the proper disposal of the elements, typically done via the traditional usage of a piscina and sacrarium:
If any of the Lord’s body and blood remains, they can be disposed of in a number of ways. The best way is to consume the remaining elements, since the Lord said, “Take and eat … Take and drink,” and did not provide for anything that was left over. There is historic precedent for reserving the remaining elements against the next communion. The hosts can be stored in a pyx or ciborium (apart from unconsecrated hosts), the blood of the Lord in a suitable cruet or flagon (apart from unconsecrated wine). What remains in the chalice, however, should either be consumed or poured into the piscine or onto the ground, since there may be crumbs or other foreign matter in it. The reserved elements may then be kept in the sacristy or placed on the altar or credence and covered with a white veil. It is un-Lutheran and irreverent to place unused elements in the trash or to pour the remainder of what is in the chalice or flagon into the common drain.
Significant to the heterodox teaching of receptionism is the very first sentence in your quote: If any of the Lord’s body and blood remains… * Note that it does not say, If any of the bread and wine remains.*
Jon