I believe it is bread and water these days.
Thanks for the correction…pulled the attached from
WIKI for the sake of speed. Interesting how again, Jesus command in the Written Word (Bible) contradicts LDS teaching, revealing a contradictory God in LDS theology. A theology that once practiced the use of wine in the Lord’s Supper…a Church that once owned wineries…a God that changes his mind and contradicts himself.
The use of wine as a symbol of the blood of Christ
As originally practiced by the Latter Day Saint prophet Joseph Smith, Jr. and other early Latter Day Saints,
the sacrament included the use of fermented wine, though the Church now uses water in each congregation’s weekly sacrament meeting.
Commanded in an 1830 revelation (LDS D&C 27:2-4) not to purchase alcohol from enemies,
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints focused on producing its own wine, eventually owning and operating vineyards and wineries in Utah and California (including Napa Valley) during the 19th century.
In 1833 Joseph Smith received the revelation known as the Word of Wisdom, part of which states that alcohol consumption is harmful to a person’s health and well-being. Initially the Word of Wisdom was treated simply as counsel, and the
early saints would still drink alcohol on occasion. During the late 19th century, church leaders slowly started to take the Word of Wisdom as a commandment. This increased respect for the Word of Wisdom, combined with the scripture in Doctrine and Covenants 27: “**
t mattereth not what ye shall eat or what ye shall drink when ye partake of the Sacrament, if it so be that ye do it with an eye single to my glory,” led congregations to begin substituting water for the Sacramental wine. (Water has also been used as a symbol of Christ and his mission at various times, including Jesus’s ‘living water’ sermon.) The practice was officially adopted church-wide in 1912.[citation needed]
Occasionally circumstances permit various other food substitutes as well. Crackers and tortillas are sometimes used in outdoor, rugged settings, such as church sponsored Boy Scout camping trips.[citation needed] The Church’s official policy, however, is that Boy Scout troops not camp or hike on Sundays. Stories abound of WWII impoverished European congregations using potato slices.[citation needed] In the above situations, however, the word “bread” (in English) is typically used in the prayers.**