Lutherans and "Receptionism"

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Some Lutheran congregations use the practice of placing unconsecrated hosts in a container on a small table just inside the nave. Those planning to take holy Communion place a host on a large paten with tongs as they enter the church. It provides the pastor with a pretty close number of how many are to be communed. Also a host can be divided into small portions if there are more communicants than expected.
 
Thanks for your comments, Bogey. I have just a few criticisms.
As for the sick and shut ins our priest takes a small amount of the elements and delivers a short homily and blesses the elements there and communes the sick and the shut ins there so that nothing is left over. But the purpose of this is not because the blessing may wear off but because the desire is that the holy will not be profaned by being placed with the common.
If, as you said earlier, mingling consecrated elements with unconsecrated elements is avoided to prevent blessing the elements twice, why would Lutheran ministers bless the elements again a second time for the sick?

Furthermore, treating consecrated elements after the service has ended as “holy” does not prove that Lutherans on either a synodal or confessional level believe that the Real Presence endures after the service.
OK first off Luther cut the knot about transubstantiation. There is no formula taught about trans or con substantiation in my synod (which is not WELS/LCMS/ELCA btw) but that since Christ has spoken these elements to be His Body and Blood they therefore are. The Lord has spoken and thus it is so.

So do not mix teaching against transubstantiation (which Lutherans do not teach) with teachings about the actual presence (which Lutherans do teach). So what is being said in 107-108 in the FOC is that those elements in the pyx which have not been blessed on the Altar are not the Body and the Blood. That is what they mean when they are speaking of those elements being apart from the Sacrament. They don’t mean once they are carried out the Church the blessed elements cease to be the Body and Blood they mean that simply adding more elements to the blessed elements apart from the Sacrament does not automatically make those elements also blessed.

In other words it the words of institution spoken by Christ that makes the Sacrament the Sacrament not the mere presence of bread and wine. But no orthodox Lutheran that I know of (and again my Synod is small) would teach that once consecrated the elements lose their blessing or cease to be holy because they have left the building of the Church.
Let me clarify that I am not teaching that Lutherans deny the Real Presence during the service. That said, Lutherans teach a doctrine of “sacramental union” which is contrary to transubstantiation. Sacramental union, defined in the Formula of Concord, is the belief that the bread an wine are not transformed into the body and blood of Christ (as Catholics believe), but rather the body and blood of Christ are united sacramentally to the bread and wine, which do not lose the essence of bread and wine. The FOC teaches that Christ is substantially present but that it is in a “sacramental union” with the substance of bread and wine.

For the reason why, in addition to the expressions of Christ and St. Paul (the bread in the Supper is the body of Christ or the communion of the body of Christ), also the forms: under the bread, with the bread, in the bread [the body of Christ is present and offered], are employed, is that by means of them the papistical transubstantiation may be rejected and the sacramental union of the unchanged essence of the bread and of the body of Christ indicated; just as the expression, Verbum caro factum est, The Word was made flesh John 1:14 ], is repeated and explained by the equivalent expressions: The Word dwelt among us; likewise Col 2:9 ]: In Him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily; likewise Acts 10:38 ]: God was with Him; likewise 2 Cor. 5:19 ]: God was in Christ, and the like; namely, that the divine essence is not changed into the human nature, but the two natures, unchanged, are personally united. [These phrases repeat and declare the expression of John, above mentioned, namely, that by the incarnation the divine essence is not changed into the human nature, but that the two natures without confusion are personally united.] Even as many eminent ancient teachers, Justin, Cyprian, Augustine, Leo, Gelasius, Chrysostom and others, use this simile concerning the words of Christ’s testament: This is My body, that just as in Christ two distinct, unchanged natures are inseparably united, so in the Holy Supper the two substances, the natural bread and the true natural body of Christ, are present together here upon earth in the appointed administration of the Sacrament.
-Solid Declaration of the Formula of Concord vii.35-37

This is why the Lutheran doctrine has been called “consubstantiation” or “impanation” by others, although Lutherans do not call it that. I agree with you that Lutherans do not deny the Real Presence in the sacrament.

I don’t think your reading of FOC 7.108 is correct. Remember that this passage is condemning Catholic (or “papistic”) doctrine. Catholics do not enclose unconsecrated bread in a pyx, nor do they carry unconsecrated bread about for display and adoration. Neither do Catholics believe that mingling unconsecrated bread with consecrated bread consecrated the unconsecrated bread or that bread becomes the Body of Christ by virtue of inhabiting a pyx or monstrance. Because this is a rejection of Catholic doctrine, it must be understood as a rejection of the Catholic belief that the Christ is present in the Eucharist apart from the administration of the Holy Supper, which the FOC seems to confine to a single service. Refer back to my first post where I have the full paragraph excerpted.
 
Bogey, what synod do you belong to? Are you in the US? Also, does your synod hold to a “quia” view of the Book of Concord (a belief that everything in the BC is true because the BC faithfully expounds Scripture in every point) or a “quatenus” view (a belief that the BC is correct inasmuch as it reflects Scripture, which leaves room to disagree with points in the confessions)?
Some Lutheran congregations use the practice of placing unconsecrated hosts in a container on a small table just inside the nave. Those planning to take holy Communion place a host on a large paten with tongs as they enter the church. It provides the pastor with a pretty close number of how many are to be communed. Also a host can be divided into small portions if there are more communicants than expected.
I have heard of this practiced in Catholic Churches as well, but I have never seen it in person.
 
Let me clarify that I am not teaching that Lutherans deny the Real Presence during the service. That said, Lutherans teach a doctrine of “sacramental union” which is contrary to transubstantiation. Sacramental union, defined in the Formula of Concord, is the belief that the bread an wine are not transformed into the body and blood of Christ (as Catholics believe), but rather the body and blood of Christ are united sacramentally to the bread and wine, which do not lose the essence of bread and wine. The FOC teaches that Christ is substantially present but that it is in a “sacramental union” with the substance of bread and wine.
*
For the reason why, in addition to the expressions of Christ and St. Paul (the bread in the Supper is the body of Christ or the communion of the body of Christ), also the forms: under the bread, with the bread, in the bread [the body of Christ is present and offered], are employed, is that by means of them the papistical transubstantiation may be rejected and the sacramental union of the unchanged essence of the bread and of the body of Christ indicated*; just as the expression, Verbum caro factum est, The Word was made flesh John 1:14 ], is repeated and explained by the equivalent expressions: The Word dwelt among us; likewise Col 2:9 ]: In Him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily; likewise Acts 10:38 ]: God was with Him; likewise 2 Cor. 5:19 ]: God was in Christ, and the like; namely, that the divine essence is not changed into the human nature, but the two natures, unchanged, are personally united. [These phrases repeat and declare the expression of John, above mentioned, namely, that by the incarnation the divine essence is not changed into the human nature, but that the two natures without confusion are personally united.] Even as many eminent ancient teachers, Justin, Cyprian, Augustine, Leo, Gelasius, Chrysostom and others, use this simile concerning the words of Christ’s testament: This is My body, that just as in Christ two distinct, unchanged natures are inseparably united, so in the Holy Supper the two substances, the natural bread and the true natural body of Christ, are present together here upon earth in the appointed administration of the Sacrament.
-Solid Declaration of the Formula of Concord vii.35-37

This is why the Lutheran doctrine has been called “consubstantiation” or “impanation” by others, although Lutherans do not call it that. I agree with you that Lutherans do not deny the Real Presence in the sacrament.

I don’t think your reading of FOC 7.108 is correct. Remember that this passage is condemning Catholic (or “papistic”) doctrine. Catholics do not enclose unconsecrated bread in a pyx, nor do they carry unconsecrated bread about for display and adoration. Neither do Catholics believe that mingling unconsecrated bread with consecrated bread consecrated the unconsecrated bread or that bread becomes the Body of Christ by virtue of inhabiting a pyx or monstrance. Because this is a rejection of Catholic doctrine, it must be understood as a rejection of the Catholic belief that the Christ is present in the Eucharist apart from the administration of the Holy Supper, which the FOC seems to confine to a single service. Refer back to my first post where I have the full paragraph excerpted.
Don’t stop at 37, though. Continuing:
  • Although this union of the body and blood of Christ with the bread and wine is not a personal union, as that of the two natures in Christ, but as Dr. Luther and our theologians, in the frequently mentioned Articles of Agreement [Formula of Concord] in the year 1536 and in other places call it sacramentatem unionem, that is, a sacramental union, by which they wish to indicate that, although they also employ the formas: in pane, sub pane, cum pane, that is, these distinctive modes of speech: in the bread, under the bread, with the bread, yet they have received the words of Christ properly and as they read, and have understood the proposition, that is, the words of Christ’s testament: Hoc est corpus meum, This is My body, not as a figuratam propositionem, but inusitatam (that is, not as a figurative, allegorical expression or comment, but as an unusual expression). 39] For thus Justin says: This we receive not as common bread and common drink; but as Jesus Christ, our Savior, through the Word of God became flesh, and on account of our salvation also had flesh and blood, so we believe that the food blessed by Him through the Word and prayer is the body and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ. 40] Likewise Dr. Luther also in his Large and especially in his last Confession concerning the Lord’s Supper with great earnestness and zeal defends the very form of expression which Christ used at the first Supper. *
The intention of Sacramental Union is never to express something metaphysical. the clarification is clear: we receive and accept Christ’s words, that the bread is His body, and the wine is His blood, not next to, or mixed with, or becoming a third substance from the two, as consubstantiation teaches in a metaphysical construct. From my recollection of reading the confessions, everywhere where it is mentioned regarding the presence of bread and wine, it is clarified that the bread and wine are the body and blood. And referencing Justin adds even greater clarity.
We speak of bread and wine, body and blood in the same way Paul does. No would would accuse St. Paul of teaching consubstantiation. We don’t teach it either.

Jon
 
The Lutheran-Catholic Commission on Unity proclaims that Lutherans and Catholics believe in the Real Presence as non-church dividing.
  1. Thus, Lutherans and Catholics are able jointly to conclude, »Therefore
    regarding Scripture and tradition, Lutherans and Catholics are in such
    an extensive agreement that their different emphases do not of them-
    selves require maintaining the present division of the churches. In this
    area, there is unity in reconciled diversity« (ApC 448).82
    76 Chapter IV
 
Thanks for your comments, Bogey. I have just a few criticisms.

If, as you said earlier, mingling consecrated elements with unconsecrated elements is avoided to prevent blessing the elements twice, why would Lutheran ministers bless the elements again a second time for the sick?
OK just to answer this question first. What is done in my synod is all the bread and wine which is blessed is consumed. And so when the priest goes to shut ins or the sick he takes with him unconsecrated wine and bread (just a very small amount and two wafers) and blessed the elements there by the words institution. So that no elements are ever blessed twice.

As to the blending of elements I have personally seen the Catholic Priest take the elements from the pyx bless them and distribute the sacrament and then return what is unused to the pyx so that I cannot imagine it would be avoidable to not bless the same elements twice. Before I responded I read the paragraphs in question in my BOC and viewed them based on the practice I have witnessed in the Latin Rite Church that my wife attends. Again, I freely admit I am a sample of one and maybe I did not see what I thought I saw or misunderstood what I did see, I am not perfect or all knowing certainly.

The synod to which I currently belong is called the Evangelical Lutheran Diocese of North America. I do not however think I will be a part of it much longer as they have a much narrower understanding of those to whom the Gospel should be preached than I do. I understand they want to preserve the faithfulness of Christ’s Sacrament but they tend to extend this to a legalistic understanding of who can even hear the preached word of the Gospel. And “How shall they believe if they do not hear?”

God Bless
 
Don’t stop at 37, though. Continuing:
  • Although this union of the body and blood of Christ with the bread and wine is not a personal union, as that of the two natures in Christ, but as Dr. Luther and our theologians, in the frequently mentioned Articles of Agreement [Formula of Concord] in the year 1536 and in other places call it sacramentatem unionem, that is, a sacramental union, by which they wish to indicate that, although they also employ the formas: in pane, sub pane, cum pane, that is, these distinctive modes of speech: in the bread, under the bread, with the bread, yet they have received the words of Christ properly and as they read, and have understood the proposition, that is, the words of Christ’s testament: Hoc est corpus meum, This is My body, not as a figuratam propositionem, but inusitatam (that is, not as a figurative, allegorical expression or comment, but as an unusual expression).* 39] For thus Justin says: This we receive not as common bread and common drink; but as Jesus Christ, our Savior, through the Word of God became flesh, and on account of our salvation also had flesh and blood, so we believe that the food blessed by Him through the Word and prayer is the body and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ. 40] Likewise Dr. Luther also in his Large and especially in his last Confession concerning the Lord’s Supper with great earnestness and zeal defends the very form of expression which Christ used at the first Supper.
The intention of Sacramental Union is never to express something metaphysical. the clarification is clear: we receive and accept Christ’s words, that the bread is His body, and the wine is His blood, not next to, or mixed with, or becoming a third substance from the two, as consubstantiation teaches in a metaphysical construct. From my recollection of reading the confessions, everywhere where it is mentioned regarding the presence of bread and wine, it is clarified that the bread and wine are the body and blood. And referencing Justin adds even greater clarity.
We speak of bread and wine, body and blood in the same way Paul does. No would would accuse St. Paul of teaching consubstantiation. We don’t teach it either.
Jon, that is a summary, not a clarification. The FOC is very clear that it is trying to make a metaphysical statement. The point of the term sacramental union is that there is a union of Christ’s body with the bread in opposition to the Catholic teaching that the bread is transformed into the body of Christ. When the confessions speak of bread after consecration, they mean the true substance of bread bread (with which, in which and under which is Christ’s body), not Christ’s body under the appearance of bread. This is what Luther wrote in the Smalcald Articles (3.6.5).

As regards transubstantiation, we care nothing about the sophistical subtlety by which they teach that bread and wine leave or lose their own natural substance, and that there remain only the appearance and color of bread, and not true bread. For it is in perfect agreement with Holy Scriptures that there is, and remains, bread, as Paul himself calls it, 1 Cor. 10:16: The bread which we break. And 1 Cor. 11:28: Let him so eat of that bread.

It is clear from the context that Luther is saying there remains the substance of bread in the Lord’s Supper. The Formula of Concord pounds in this point in greater detail, not only affirming that the essence of bread remains, but attacking the idea of “accidents without a subject” as a philosophical absurdity and making other clear metaphysical statements.

The Justin quotation is not incompatible with the idea that the substance of bread remains. In fact, Calvinists and others who deny the real presence often seize upon this to defend their own doctrine. They interpret the phrase “common bread” as indicating that it is consecrated (as in set apart for a holy use) bread, but still just bread. A Calvinist could say they receive the bread as Jesus Christ because they teach that they feast on Christ “spiritually” in the sacrament. The fact that it says “is the body and blood” immediately following is no matter because Christ’s own words of institution in the Gospels had no sway over them either. I’m not saying that Justin was a Calvinist, only offering a different perspective. You can see how Justin’s words (such as “common bread”) could be used to support a position of sacramental union rather than transubstantiation, although transubstantiation is another possible reading of his words.

Also, consubstantiation is not usually the conceived of as the union of Christ and bread in one substance, which I guess would be a proper “impanation.” Usually, it is used to describe the teaching that the substance of Christ exists together with (or “in, with and under” if you will) the substance of the bread.
The Lutheran-Catholic Commission on Unity proclaims that Lutherans and Catholics believe in the Real Presence as non-church dividing.
You’re quoting from the wrong section (the relation of Scripture and Tradition, which is a topic for a different thread), although it does say something similar about the real presence: “The question of the reality of the presence of Jesus Christ in the Lord’s Supper is not a matter of controversy between Catholics and Lutherans.” All this is saying that Lutherans and Catholics believe in the real presence (i.e. a substantial presence), but the way in which they believe that Christ is “really present” is different.
 
OK just to answer this question first. What is done in my synod is all the bread and wine which is blessed is consumed. And so when the priest goes to shut ins or the sick he takes with him unconsecrated wine and bread (just a very small amount and two wafers) and blessed the elements there by the words institution. So that no elements are ever blessed twice.

As to the blending of elements I have personally seen the Catholic Priest take the elements from the pyx bless them and distribute the sacrament and then return what is unused to the pyx so that I cannot imagine it would be avoidable to not bless the same elements twice. Before I responded I read the paragraphs in question in my BOC and viewed them based on the practice I have witnessed in the Latin Rite Church that my wife attends. Again, I freely admit I am a sample of one and maybe I did not see what I thought I saw or misunderstood what I did see, I am not perfect or all knowing certainly.

The synod to which I currently belong is called the Evangelical Lutheran Diocese of North America. I do not however think I will be a part of it much longer as they have a much narrower understanding of those to whom the Gospel should be preached than I do. I understand they want to preserve the faithfulness of Christ’s Sacrament but they tend to extend this to a legalistic understanding of who can even hear the preached word of the Gospel. And “How shall they believe if they do not hear?”

God Bless
Your synod’s practice sounds in line with traditional Lutheran practice.

I think I can explain the Catholic practice you saw. After the communion of the faithful, the consecrated (transubstantiated) leftovers from the mass are stored in the pyx (in this case, called a tabernacle) and reserved for later use. At the consecration during a later mass, the consecrated bread is still present in the tabernacle, but this does not mean the priest is consecrating the bread twice. The words of institution don’t operate indiscriminately over some determinate area of effect; rather, they operate according to the intention of the celebrant. The priest does not intend to consecrate the Eucharist twice, just because it is in the vicinity (just as if I had a piece of bread in my pocket at mass, it would not fall under the object of consecration). The reason Catholics reserve the Eucharist in the tabernacle is for use in later communions and for the adoration of the faithful.

Going back to Formula of Concord 7.108, it is denying that the real presence persists when Catholics reserve the Eucharist in their tabernacles. Unless, the authors believe there is something different when Lutherans reserve their sacrament from when Catholics do it, this would also apply to Lutheran reservation.
 
=QNDNNDQDCE;11634026]Jon, that is a summary, not a clarification. The FOC is very clear that it is trying to make a metaphysical statement. The point of the term sacramental union is that there is a union of Christ’s body with the bread in opposition to the Catholic teaching that the bread is transformed into the body of Christ. When the confessions speak of bread after consecration, they mean the true substance of bread bread (with which, in which and under which is Christ’s body), not Christ’s body under the appearance of bread. This is what Luther wrote in the Smalcald Articles (3.6.5).
Its both a summary and a clarification. The intention is not to express a metaphysical construct, but to refute the metaphysical construct, Transubstantiation in particular.
As regards transubstantiation, we care nothing about the sophistical subtlety by which they teach that bread and wine leave or lose their own natural substance, and that there remain only the appearance and color of bread, and not true bread. For it is in perfect agreement with Holy Scriptures that there is, and remains, bread, as Paul himself calls it, 1 Cor. 10:16: The bread which we break. And 1 Cor. 11:28: Let him so eat of that bread.
Again, always spoken with the reference that, as Luther says at the beginning of this article: Of the Sacrament of the Altar we hold that bread and wine in the Supper are the true body and blood of Christ, and are given and received not only by the godly, but also by wicked Christians.

We don’t speak of bread and wine inc any way different than St. Paul does, as Luther references. It is not an attempt to place the presence of absence of bread and wine in metaphysical terms, but instead to refute the metaphysical construct.
It is clear from the context that Luther is saying there remains the substance of bread in the Lord’s Supper. The Formula of Concord pounds in this point in greater detail, not only affirming that the essence of bread remains, but attacking the idea of “accidents without a subject” as a philosophical absurdity and making other clear metaphysical statements.
He is only saying it in the same way Paul does. He even makes reference to Paul in this regard. why should we deny bread and wine when Paul does not, is the point. Every where bread and wine are mentioned, it is always in the context of bread and wine ARE body and blood, and usually referencing Paul’s use of the two sets of terms interchangeably.
The Justin quotation is not incompatible with the idea that the substance of bread remains. In fact, Calvinists and others who deny the real presence often seize upon this to defend their own doctrine. They interpret the phrase “common bread” as indicating that it is consecrated (as in set apart for a holy use) bread, but still just bread. A Calvinist could say they receive the bread as Jesus Christ because they teach that they feast on Christ “spiritually” in the sacrament. The fact that it says “is the body and blood” immediately following is no matter because Christ’s own words of institution in the Gospels had no sway over them either. I’m not saying that Justin was a Calvinist, only offering a different perspective. You can see how Justin’s words (such as “common bread”) could be used to support a position of sacramental union rather than transubstantiation, although transubstantiation is another possible reading of his words.
I agree that Justin’s words are not compatible with substance and accidents. The Fathers didn’t speak in Aristotelian terms He is saying that the bread and wine are the body and blood. And through every part of the confessions, from Augsburg and the Apology to the FofC, this is the point; we believe teach and confess that, as Melanchthon writes: *in the Lord’s Supper the body and blood of Christ are truly and substantially present, and are truly tendered, with those things which are seen, bread and wine, to those who receive the Sacrament. *
Also, consubstantiation is not usually the conceived of as the union of Christ and bread in one substance, which I guess would be a proper “impanation.” Usually, it is used to describe the teaching that the substance of Christ exists together with (or “in, with and under” if you will) the substance of the bread.
Both, but we don’t teach a local co-presence, which is what is required under consubstantiation: From RofC
They confess, according to the words of Irenaeus, that in this Sacrament there are two things, a heavenly and an earthly. Accordingly, they hold and teach that with the bread and wine the body and blood of Christ are truly and essentially present, offered, and received. And although they believe in no transubstantiation, that is, an essential transformation of the bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ, nor hold that the body and blood of Christ are included in the bread localiter, that is, locally, or are otherwise permanently united therewith apart from the use of the Sacrament, yet they concede that through the sacramental union the bread is the body of Christ, etc. [that when the bread is offered, the body of Christ is at the same time present, and is truly tendered]. 15]For apart from the use, when the bread is laid aside and preserved in the sacramental vessel [the pyx], or is carried about in the procession and exhibited, as is done in popery, they do not hold that the body of Christ is present.
the bread IS the body of Christ. It isn’t next to, or mixed with, etc. Clearly, there is no consubstantiation, Transubstantiation, or Impanation here.

continued
 
You’re quoting from the wrong section (the relation of Scripture and Tradition, which is a topic for a different thread), although it does say something similar about the real presence: “The question of the reality of the presence of Jesus Christ in the Lord’s Supper is not a matter of controversy between Catholics and Lutherans.” All this is saying that Lutherans and Catholics believe in the real presence (i.e. a substantial presence), but the way in which they believe that Christ is “really present” is different.
I would agree. The 1978 dialogue statement says it better, regarding whether or not our different expressions constitute a Church-dividing difference.
Catholic and Lutheran Christians together confess the real and true presence of the Lord in the Eucharist. There are differences, however, in theological statements on the mode and therefore duration of the real presence.
In order to confess the reality of the eucharistic presence without reserve the Catholic Church teaches that "Christ whole and entire"34 becomes present through the transformation of the whole substance of the bread and the wine into the substance of the body and blood of Christ while the empirically accessible appearances of bread and wine (accidentia) continue to exist unchanged. This “wonderful and singular change” is “most aptly” called transsubstantiation by the Catholic Church.35 This terminology has widely been considered by Lutherans as an attempt rationalistically to explain the mystery of Christ’s presence in the sacrament; further, many suppose also that in this approach the present Lord is not seen as a person and naturalistic misunderstandings become easy.
The Lutherans have given expression to the reality of the Eucharistic presence by speaking of presence of Christ’s body and blood in, with and under bread and wine�but not of transsubstantiation. Here they see real analogy to the Lord’s incarnation: as God and man become one in Jesus Christ, Christ’s body and blood, on the one hand, and the bread and wine, on the other, give rise to a sacramental unity. Catholics, in turn, find that this does not do sufficient justice to this very unity and to the force of Christ’s word “This is my body”.
The ecumenical discussion has shown that these two positions must no longer be regarded as opposed in a way that leads to separation. The Lutheran tradition agrees with the Catholic tradition that the consecrated elements do not simply remain bread and wine but by the power of the creative Word are bestowed as the body and blood of Christ. In this sense it also could occasionally speak, as does the Greek tradition of a “change”.36 The concept of transsubstantiation for its part is intended as a confession and preservation of the mystery character of the Eucharistic presence; it is not intended as an explanation of how this change occurs37 (see the appendices on “Real Presence” and “Christ’s Presence in the Eucharist”).
Jon
 
I would also add that the Roman Catholic thinking on this matter tends toward insisting that the only way that the Body and Blood of the Lord may be present in with and under the Bread and Wine is by the substance and the accidents, and since the Lutherans claim to believe to believe in the presence of the Lord’s Body and Blood without affirming a change in the substance they view the Lutheran position as difficult at best and absurd at worst.

And of course you are correct that Zwingli, Calvin, the Anabaptists, Wesley and the other radical reformers took this notion of a nonsubstantial change in the elements and spiritualized it so as to make the participant in the Supper the active party who raises himself up to Heaven where the Body of Christ is and so Christ is passive and thus grace is taken and not received. This is heresy and Rome is right to call it such.

But both groups look at the Lutheran teaching without a proper consideration that it arises from an Augustinian understanding, or from a misunderstanding of what Augustine meant.

For the radical reformers they took Augustine’s understanding of the sign and the thing signified and decided that the bread was a sign and thus was not the thing signified. Of course this misunderstands what Augustine meant in that the sign and the thing signified could not be separated. Of course the bread and wine are less in one sense than to see Christ as He is face to face. Never the less, in another sense, as the sign and by the word of Christ they are the thing signified upon which the faith of the believer is to actually be placed. In which the physical eating and drinking is not the symbolic reception of the forgiveness of Christ in his Body and Blood but the actual reception of the forgiveness of Christ in His actual Body and Blood.

In this Augustine spoke in Platonic and not Aristotelian terms about the Supper, And herein lies the confusion with Rome.

For Luther the reception of the Lord’s Body and Blood rested not in the substance of the bread but in the words of Christ. That is, when the Apostles sat with the Lord at the Last Supper and He broke the bread the bread and spoke the words, “Take eat this is my body,” the One speaking is the same One who said, “Let there be light and there was light.” This was what Augustine called the Divine Fiat. The word creates what it speaks. So when Christ says this is my body, it is. It is not a symbolic eating because the Lord was present with the Apostles, no they were receiving what He said they were receiving and so do we. In the same way when He said, “Those you forgive in my Name are forgiven” we receive that forgiveness not because of the authority of the Pope but because we are receiving the words spoken by Christ. When we are Baptized into the Name we are receiving the death, burial and resurrection of Christ and the Name is placed upon as a covenantal seal for the forgiveness of all our sins, because commanded the forgiveness of sin through Baptism.

In this there is the combining of the true Augustinian understanding of the the sign and the thing signified and the understanding of the Divine Fiat. We accept on faith that what Christ speaks He creates, and we believe that the faith by which we believe, was created by the command to believe in the Law and promise of forgiveness in the Gospel. And so Christ gives to us His own precious Faith and raises us to new life and keeps us in it by Word and Sacrament which are both trustworthy not because of rational constructs by which we may explain how it may be so, but because we can rest in the knowledge thet Christ has spoken it and He has not lied.

God Bless
 
Jon, the problem I am seeing with your approach is that you are attempting to use statements that are less precise to clarify statements that are more precise. For example, we could not take the simple statement of the Augsburg Confession, which says “the Body and Blood of Christ are truly present” (compatible with transubstantiation), and use that to nullify the statements of the Formula of Concord that the substance of bread remains in a union with the substance of Christ’s body (incompatible with transubstantiation).
Both, but we don’t teach a local co-presence, which is what is required under consubstantiation…

the bread IS the body of Christ. It isn’t next to, or mixed with, etc. Clearly, there is no consubstantiation, Transubstantiation, or Impanation here.
The doctrine of “consubstantiation” does not necessitate a local presence (which both Lutherans and Catholics reject). Taken most broadly, it is simply the doctrine the substance of the bread exists together with the substance of the body of Christ. The Catholic Encyclopedia notes in its article on consubstantiation, “How the two substances can coexist is variously explained.” Consubstantiation need not imply that the two substances exist together in identical modes.

As for what Lutherans do not believe, they do not believe that Christ’s body is present in the bread like water in a sponge (as I have heard Calvinists allege), which I suppose would be a kind of local presence. Nor is Christ united hypostatically with the bread, which would be absurd, and is contradictory to the Lutheran confessions. Nonetheless, the Formula of Concord does state the the distinct substance of bread and the substance of Christ’s body are simultaneously present in the Lord’s Supper. That is why sacramental union has been (not wrongly, in my opinion) referred to by non-Lutherans as a form of consubstantiation.

One problem with this is that this doctrine is justified in opposition to transubstantiation by analogy to the Incarnation. However, it is evident that the Eucharist is not perfectly analogous to the Incarnation. Even Lutherans acknowledge that the Lord’s Supper is not a hypostatic union. According to sacramental union, the substances exist together. If, therefore, Lutherans insisted on the analogy to the Incarnation, this would lead to the conclusion that Lutherans held to a Nestorian christology. However, since Nestorianism is repudiated at length in the Formula of Concord (in the section immediately following the section on the Holy Supper no less), this is an absurd conclusion, suggesting that the premise is flawed.
 
Bogeydogg, that is an interesting perspective, and both sides would agree to what you are saying, but I don’t think it has any bearing on the question of transubstantiation vs. sacramental union. The problem from the Catholic perspective is that the Lutherans did formulate their doctrine according to an Aristotelian construct, and a problematic one. The dispute is over what Christ meant when he said, “This is my body.” Did he mean it simply as transubstantiation holds? Or did he mean “this is not merely bread, but also my body?”
 
Bogeydogg, that is an interesting perspective, and both sides would agree to what you are saying, but I don’t think it has any bearing on the question of transubstantiation vs. sacramental union. The problem from the Catholic perspective is that the Lutherans did formulate their doctrine according to an Aristotelian construct, and a problematic one. The dispute is over what Christ meant when he said, “This is my body.” Did he mean it simply as transubstantiation holds? Or did he mean “this is not merely bread, but also my body?”
I agree that if your were to look at the confessions by themselves that it looks like we Lutherans are playing at the same word-smithing that we pretend makes us so upset with the Catholic Dogma of Transubstantiation.

However, we Lutheran hold that the confessions are a right reflection of scripture - so form a Lutheran standpoint if our understanding of the confessions leads us to anything but “This is my Body.” then the problem would be in our understanding of the confessions.

We also have to consider that the Confesions are instructive - limited to logical and rational words. And as well written at the books are, there are mere vague whispers as to what it really going on in Communion.



Perhaps In order to bolster by assertion that Lutherans understand that this is a Mystery - if you look at the historical debate within Lutheranism about the Body and Blood, it’s typically about timing and cessation and not about ‘what.’ The ‘what’ is as He instructed.
 
We are in post-Dialogue. The Commission left Lutherans no other choice but accept total responsibly of the Real Presence.
 
=QNDNNDQDCE;11636865]Jon, the problem I am seeing with your approach is that you are attempting to use statements that are less precise to clarify statements that are more precise. For example, we could not take the simple statement of the Augsburg Confession, which says “the Body and Blood of Christ are truly present” (compatible with transubstantiation), and use that to nullify the statements of the Formula of Concord that the substance of bread remains in a union with the substance of Christ’s body (incompatible with transubstantiation).
I entirely disagree. The most precise, clearest statements on the real presence are Christ’s own words, “This is my body…”
The doctrine of “consubstantiation” does not necessitate a local presence (which both Lutherans and Catholics reject). Taken most broadly, it is simply the doctrine the substance of the bread exists together with the substance of the body of Christ. The Catholic Encyclopedia notes in its article on consubstantiation, “How the two substances can coexist is variously explained.” Consubstantiation need not imply that the two substances exist together in identical modes.
Perhaps, but the issue of the existence or not of "substances or accidents is what the confessions specifically refers to as “sophistical”. Separating the refutation of Transub. from a declaring what we believe needs to be done.
As for what Lutherans do not believe, they do not believe that Christ’s body is present in the bread like water in a sponge (as I have heard Calvinists allege), which I suppose would be a kind of local presence. Nor is Christ united hypostatically with the bread, which would be absurd, and is contradictory to the Lutheran confessions. Nonetheless, the Formula of Concord does state the the distinct substance of bread and the substance of Christ’s body are simultaneously present in the Lord’s Supper. That is why sacramental union has been (not wrongly, in my opinion) referred to by non-Lutherans as a form of consubstantiation.
Well, it is wrong because to say so, again, requires the use of the metaphysical construct, which is not the Lutheran approach.
One problem with this is that this doctrine is justified in opposition to transubstantiation by analogy to the Incarnation. However, it is evident that the Eucharist is not perfectly analogous to the Incarnation. Even Lutherans acknowledge that the Lord’s Supper is not a hypostatic union. According to sacramental union, the substances exist together. If, therefore, Lutherans insisted on the analogy to the Incarnation, this would lead to the conclusion that Lutherans held to a Nestorian christology. However, since Nestorianism is repudiated at length in the Formula of Concord (in the section immediately following the section on the Holy Supper no less), this is an absurd conclusion, suggesting that the premise is flawed.
The only premise presented, the only intention meant by Sacramental Union is “this is my body”. This, the confessions clearly say and confess.

From the Epitome:
We believe, teach, and confess that the words of the testament of Christ are not to be understood otherwise than as they read, according to the letter, so that the bread does not signify the absent body and the wine the absent blood of Christ, but that, on account of the sacramental union, they [the bread and wine] are truly the body and blood of Christ.
The Large Catechism:
Now, what is the Sacrament of the Altar?

Answer: It is the true body and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ, in and under the bread and wine which we Christians are commanded by the Word of Christ to eat and to drink. 9] And as we have said of Baptism that it is not simple water, so here also we say the Sacrament is bread and wine, but not mere bread and wine, such as are ordinarily served at the table, but bread and wine comprehended in, and connected with, the Word of God.

10] It is the Word (I say) which makes and distinguishes this Sacrament, so that it is not mere bread and wine, but is, and is called, the body and blood of Christ. For it is said: Accedat verbum ad elementum, et fit sacramentum. If the Word be joined to the element, it becomes a Sacrament. This saying of St. Augustine is so properly and so well put that he has scarcely said anything better. The Word must make a Sacrament of the element, else it remains a mere element.

continued
 
Lutheran theologians:

Hermann Sasse:
It is impossible to define Luther’s doctrine as consubstantiation. Even the words ‘in the bread’, ‘with the bread’, ‘under the bread’, or ‘in, with, and under the bread’, were never regarded by Luther as more than attempts to express in these old, popular terms inherited from the Middle Ages the great mystery that the bread is the body, the wine is the blood, as the Words of Institution say.

And again Sasse, whose statement Nothing else is Lutheran doctrine rings of the finality that is and has been Lutheran doctrine since Augsburg:

*This miracle can be stated only as an article of faith, as Luther does at the beginning of the Article quoted:

Of the Sacrament of the Altar we hold that bread and wine in the Supper are the true body and blood of Christ, and are given and received not only by the godly, but also by wicked Christians. [Smalcald Articles III VI 1]

Nothing else is Lutheran doctrine: The consecrated bread is the body; the consecrated wine is the blood of Christ. How that is possible, no person on earth can say. What we know is that Christ himself gave this explanation by saying: ‘This is my body… This is my blood of the new covenant’. On the basis of these words of Christ, Luther believes in the Real Presence without trying to build up a theory comparable to the theories of impanation, transubstantiation, consubstantiation, or whatever else the subtle minds of philosophers and theologians may have devised in order to answer the question: How could the Real Presence be possible? *

And Krauth"
The charge that the Lutheran Church holds this monstrous doctrine [consubstantiation] has been repeated times without number. In the face of her solemn protestations the falsehood is still circulated. It would be easy to fill many pages with the declarations of the Confessions of the Evangelical Lutheran Church, and of her great theologians, who, without a dissenting voice, repudiate this doctrine, the name and the thing, in whole and in every one of its parts.

Jon
 
As a small aside, thanks JonNC for helping me understand my Lutheran faith so much better, and that you good Catholics for putting up with us Lutherans on your forum - and for also helping my grow in faith.
 
As a small aside, thanks JonNC for helping me understand my Lutheran faith so much better, and that you good Catholics for putting up with us Lutherans on your forum - and for also helping my grow in faith.
On the first, you are too kind, one the second you are quite right!

Jon
 
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