K
KjetilK
Guest
From the article: “Just as Christ’s unchanged human and divine natures are inseparably united, so the natural bread and Christ’s true natural body are united (likewise the wine and the blood). This is not a personal union (as that of the two natures of Christ), or a mystical union (as that between Christ and the believer), but a unique and incomprehensible sacramental union; not a natural or spatial combination, mixture, or fusion, but a supernatural union.”Try this, Bill, remembering that just as Lutherans should listen to what Catholics say about their faith, so too, Catholics should listen to Lutherans about ours. From there, it seems, fruitful dialogue can grow.
stand-firm.blogspot.com/2012/06/lutheran-view-on-consubstantiation-and.html
This seems confused. The reason Christ’s unchanged human and divine natures are inseparably united is that they have the same subject, the person of Christ. What is the subject of the unity of the natural bread and Christ’s true natural body (and likewise for the wine and the blood)? If it is Christ, then this is impanation, even if one chooses to call it a sacramental union.
It seems to me that to avoid impanation, one either have to say that it is one form of consubstanbtiation (where the body and blood of Christ is, somehow, given with the bread and wine, but not due to some kind of inseparatable union), or, better, just go with trabsubstantiation.