COMMUNION: Does "is" mean "is?" Catholic, Lutheran, Evangelical

Josiah

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You have told me that bread and wine acquire something else or are accompanied by or joined to something else (Christ's real presence), so there must be a change that takes place


AGAIN, although Lutherans don't user the term "change," there is a sense in which there is a change in what is present because Christ becomes present. Wine and bread to begin. Then added to it are Body and Blood. I guess you can say a change happened, but not in the Catholic sense.



Well, you carefully explained a formula (four parts, with two being added to the two we start with, plus a certain relationship of two of them to the other two, etc.) so that seems much like the mechanics of Transubstantiation, although clearly not identical to Transubstantiation. And there must be a point at which it is believed the change occurs. Is that when the minister pronounces the Words of Institution?


No, I've not explained any mechanics AT ALL. Catholic-like or otherwise. I've not denied ANYTHING in the texts - as Catholics do OR as Zwinglians do.

No, Lutherans don't use the word "change" at all. But yes, God performs a divine miracle and becomes present (what is present changes) - all aspects of that are mystery.

No. Lutherans have no dogma as to exactly WHEN or HOW or for HOW LONG Christ is present.


Let me try again..... The Lutheran view is simply the ancient one... and one that simply believes what is said: "Is" = is (it has to do with being, existing, presence, reality).... "body" = body..... "blood" = blood..... "forgiveness" = forgiveness. That's it, that's all. It's called Real Presence and that IS the Lutheran teaching. Lutherans do not dogmatically deny the (full) existence of the Bread and Wine after the Consecration (technically we receive FOUR things) we just give the bread and wine no significance and thus typically don't mention them... last Sunday, as the Pastor placed the Host on my tongue, his literal words were: "Josiah, this is the Body of Christ, broken for you."


I hope that helps.



.
 
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MennoSota

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If Jesus was being literal, why didn't he just cut off a section of his body and tell the boys to eat it? Why didn't he just slash open a vein and bleed out a pint for the boys to drink?
At some point (I think sooner than later) you have to realize that Jesus was not speaking literally at the last supper.
Carry on with your denominationalism and keep ignoring scripture...
 

Albion

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AGAIN, although Lutherans don't user the term "change," there is a sense in which there is a change in what is present because Christ becomes present. Wine and bread to begin. Then added to it are Body and Blood. I guess you can say a change happened.
Then there was nothing wrong with me using that word myself.

but not in the Catholic sense.
Not the same change, no. But that was never my contention.


Let me try again..... The Lutheran view is simply the ancient one... and one that simply believes what is said: "Is" = is (it has to do with being, existing, presence, reality).... "body" = body..... "blood" = blood..... "forgiveness" = forgiveness. That's it, that's all.
I'm sorry, but that isn't all. You, Lammchen, the Augsburg Confession, the Wikipedia article I cited, and the information coming from Lutheran churches themselves say something else.

All referred to this Transubstantiation-Lite transformation that involves four parts, two of which we start with, then united at some point in time with the literal, carnal body of Christ, etc. etc, etc. It is, to me, a halfway house of a Eucharistic concept that is fairly described as involved and mechanical, probably even moreso than Transubstantiation itself. What you have been insisting on to me in reply sounds more like the Eastern Orthodox belief.

That, at least, is my take on the matter.
 

Josiah

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IMO, adding the word "NOT" after the word "is" is worse than ignoring Scripture.

Yes, Zwingli and the RCC had their denominational spins (both dogmatized in the 16th Century) and some do a good job of parroting those new denominational traditions. What I'm embrace is "the no spin zone" (lol) ... no telling Jesus and Paul what CANNOT be the case (cuz it makes no sense to self) but believing. Is = is. Body = body. Blood = blood. Forgiveness = forgiveness. And NOT inserting words not there like: NOT, symbolizes, represents, cannot, change, from, into, alchemy, Aristotle, transubstantiation, accidents. These are words of limitation that come from denominational tradition from the 16th Century. Again, you may CHOOSE to spin works, deny words, replace words, add words - but then the "ignoring" is on your end.
 

Albion

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Are we becoming a bit testy over this? I don't really care what you believe about the Eucharist; I just wanted to know if what everyone says is the Lutheran belief actually is that.
 

Josiah

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All referred to this Transubstantiation-Lite transformation


No.


There is no transformation - via alchemy or any other insisted upon, dogmatized means.

Again, while Lutherans don't use the word "change" I agree, techically if EVERYTHING now present wasn't always present, then there is a change in what is present. If I put a jacket on, that doesn't change my shirt but it does change what I have on (follow me?). Yes, in the sense of what is PRESENT changes (Christ is now present), in THAT sense, there is a change. But that's not a transformation..... and unlike Transubstantiation, no mechanics is dogmatized, Lutherans do not teach HOW Chirst becomes present, we regard it purely as a divine miracle, purely as mystery, NOT limited to Aristotelian philosophy or the wrong pre-science ideas of alchemy.



That, at least, is my take on the matter.


I think you are NOT being debative or argumentive.... but I do think you are misunderstanding the Lutheran position. I HOPE I'm helping!



Thank you.



- Josiah




.
 

Albion

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If I add milk to my coffee, there's a change (although the coffee is exactly the same - something just got ADDED to what is present). Yes, in the sense of what is PRESENT changes (Christ is now present), in THAT sense, there is a change.
Isn't that almost exactly what Luther was saying when using the poker in the furnace analogy? Yet you took pains to say that it is not authoritative, not the official Lutheran perspective, etc.

And what about this: The Lutheran belief is that the Real Presence is a presence of the literal, carnal, physical essence of Christs body and blood, which is also the Catholic belief. But if so, we cannot just say what you have said about it--

The Lutheran view is simply the ancient one... and one that simply believes what is said: "Is" = is (it has to do with being, existing, presence, reality).... "body" = body..... "blood" = blood..... "forgiveness" = forgiveness. That's it, that's all. It's called Real Presence
You are indeed qualifying the presence, ruling in the physical reality and ruling out a purely spiritual (not symbolic) one.
 
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Arsenios

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In the Divine Services the bread and wine BECOME the Body and Blood of our Lord...

At that point, the Bread and Wine ARE the Body and Blood of Christ...

Which we consume...

No more needs be said...

The Mystery is ENTERED, not spoken...

It is Christ Who CONSECRATES the MYSTERY...

Just as He did at the Last Supper that condemned Judas...


Arsenios
 

MennoSota

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In the Divine Services the bread and wine BECOME the Body and Blood of our Lord...

At that point, the Bread and Wine ARE the Body and Blood of Christ...

Which we consume...

No more needs be said...

The Mystery is ENTERED, not spoken...

It is Christ Who CONSECRATES the MYSTERY...

Just as He did at the Last Supper that condemned Judas...


Arsenios
Alchemy
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Sean611

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A fascinating discussion thus far! When I was an Anglican (Episcopal), I was taught that we received the spiritual body and blood of our Lord. However, I also came to understand that a spiritual body is a real body and not something to think of as being less.

As a Lutheran, as I understand it, the body and blood is taken in a physical and literal sense. It is actually very close to the Catholic understanding. What I like about the Lutheran POV is that it takes Christ at his word and doesn't attempt to use human logic to try and understand it. Christ said this "is", so it must be so.
 

Albion

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As a Lutheran, as I understand it, the body and blood is taken in a physical and literal sense. It is actually very close to the Catholic understanding. What I like about the Lutheran POV is that it takes Christ at his word and doesn't attempt to use human logic to try and understand it. Christ said this "is", so it must be so.
Here's why I think someone is fooling himself with that argument, Sean. If we say "this is" --just is, and that's all-- we cannot simultaneously insist that the presence is carnal rather than spiritual. Obviously, both of those meet the definition of is, of real. Once you stipulate that the body and blood are real in a physical sense and also joined to bread and wine that has not changed its nature in the process, etc. etc. you have abandoned the "doesn't attempt to use human logic to try to understand it" concept.
 

Josiah

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Here's why I think someone is fooling himself with that argument, Sean. If we say "this is" --just is, and that's all-- we cannot simultaneously insist that the presence is carnal rather than spiritual. Obviously, both of those meet the definition of is, of real. Once you stipulate that the body and blood are real in a physical sense and also joined to bread and wine that has not changed its nature in the process, etc. etc. you have abandoned the "doesn't attempt to use human logic to try to understand it" concept.


[MENTION=389]Albion[/MENTION] [MENTION=653]Sean611[/MENTION]



My theology teacher commented that error is nearly always the case of "over-thinking".... of essentially subjecting what Scripture says to all the processing of their brain, to their concepts and philosophies.... My Greek Orthodox friend says that error is nearly always the case of people not being willing to "leave well enough alone" and "not knowing how to shut up."


In my heart, Christianity is pretty simple. Now, I'm not a stupid man.... I have a brain and it does tend to zip along pretty well.... but one of the things that appeals to me about Lutheranism is that it seems to embrace Luther's comment that "Humility is the foundation of all good theology." Luther's emphasis that we are STEWARDS (caretakers) of the MYSTERIES of God (Lutherans use that word "mystery" a lot). Now, Lutherans don't press that to an extreme.... they aren't opposed to thinking or theorizing per se, but there is an unmistakable attitude, a humility that underpins everything.... there is a respect, an AWE as we bow before God (and to a lesser extent, historic/ecumenical Tradition)... and even a bit of caution as we approach some NEW, individual thing (from a singular person acor denomination) seeking to correct God. As a convert from Catholicism to Lutheranism, this was probably the first thing that stunned me. My wife is a convert from very conservative Reformed to Lutheranism and she (altogether on her own) noted the same thing. There is a respect, a humility, an awe.... willingness to accept our puny brains may not be able to wrap around the things of God. And that's okay.... AND THAT'S OKAY. One of the reasons why my Greek Orthodox friend (whom I met as a undergrad) and I found "theological soulmates" and enjoyed discussing together is that we share a bit of this attitude... we come at all this from different directions (I'll forever have Catholic roots, as does Lutheranism - we are Western, for better or worse) but with much the same spirit.


Lutherans embrace Real Presence. It's really very simple. "Is" = is (real, being, existing, present) ... "Body" = body. "Blood" = blood. "Forgiveness" = forgiveness (funny how that last part seems forgotten by so many). That's it. That's all. True - Christians have rejected since the Second Century that this makes us canibles BUT we accept that "is" means "is" and not "sort of is." There is MYSTERY here.... we don't get into the physics here (not even me, and I have a Ph.D. in physics)... we don't deny anything... this isn't about denial and doubt and limiting, it's about believing an celebrating and blessing. Now.... I admit.... at least for several centuries before Trent and Zwingli, people asked questions.... even proposed human theories formed out of the philosophies and prescience ideas of the day... but these weren't dogmas, these didn't displace Real Presence.... they were just possible ways of looking at the mystery, of addressing questions people have that God didn't address.


For 1500 years, no Christian had any "problem" in Real Presence. It was even typically referred to as "The MYSTERY of Real Presence" (by the way, people referred to the Trinity as "The MYSTERY of the Trinity", as well - another doctrine that has some physics loose-ends). Then came along Zwingli and the RCC's meeting at Trent and their dogmas of "Real Absence" and dogmatically insistences about what is NOT there and their dogmatic "science" declarations about what "is" isn't. Lutherans are pretty uncomfortable with such.... both the attitude that seeks this and the resulting new dogmas.



As for the Anglican pov.... all this is new to me.... I thought the Anglians had ONE dogma: "Transubstantiation is wrong" but that informally, some Anglicans accepted and taught Real Presence and some taught Calvin's view and the majority followed Zwingli's invention - but all those unofficially. At least that's what the Anglicans/Episcopalians I know have told me. The "SPIRITUAL" view you are conveying is... well.... suspect. Is this the same as "Jesus rose from the dead SPIRITUALLY?" "Jesus was SPIRITUALLY God but only a man?" Or is it denouncing the Mystery of the Two Natures by saying that the Divine Nature is present but not the Human nature (a problem of some of Calvin's followers, as well... a view that leads to Zwingli's invention)? Ah.... probably another discussion. Lutherans - like Catholics - accept that Christ ALWAYS has TWO inseparable natures - He always is 100% God and 100% man - although that is MYSTERY. Destroying the Doctrine of the Two Natures of Christ in order to substantiate doubting what Jesus said and Paul penned seems to ME (ex-Catholic, now Lutheran) making a bad situation much, much worse.... if you remove Christ from the Eucharist, you just have an empty Eucharist..... remove the Two Natures from Jesus and you have an empty Savior. But again, maybe that's a discussion for another day.


You and I may or may not agree on Real Presence.... but I hope you better understand the perspective and perhaps a bit more why Lutherans embrace and continue it. IF so, my hope is fulfilled. I don't seek to convince or convert, just to improve understanding.



Thank you!


- Josiah




.
 
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MennoSota

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A fascinating discussion thus far! When I was an Anglican (Episcopal), I was taught that we received the spiritual body and blood of our Lord. However, I also came to understand that a spiritual body is a real body and not something to think of as being less.

As a Lutheran, as I understand it, the body and blood is taken in a physical and literal sense. It is actually very close to the Catholic understanding. What I like about the Lutheran POV is that it takes Christ at his word and doesn't attempt to use human logic to try and understand it. Christ said this "is", so it must be so.
Galatians 4:25 says:
Now Hagar is Mount Sinai in Arabia; she corresponds to the present Jerusalem, for she is in slavery with her children.
Do you take that literally?
Is Hagar actually Mount Sinai? Is she in slavery with her children?
Now, look at what Jesus said. Did he cut up his actual body and have his disciples eat? Did Jesus open up a vein and actually have his disciples drink his blood?
The answer is obvious. No, Jesus did not do this. Nor is Hagar actually Mt Sinai. Both are figurative. This is especially true when we recognize that Jesus was pointing toward the Passover in the supper.
 

Sean611

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Here's why I think someone is fooling himself with that argument, Sean. If we say "this is" --just is, and that's all-- we cannot simultaneously insist that the presence is carnal rather than spiritual. Obviously, both of those meet the definition of is, of real. Once you stipulate that the body and blood are real in a physical sense and also joined to bread and wine that has not changed its nature in the process, etc. etc. you have abandoned the "doesn't attempt to use human logic to try to understand it" concept.

I certainly understand where you are coming from Albion, as I was one of those Episcopalians who actually tried to understand what the Episcopal Church officially believed lol (sometimes a lonely position to be in!!). That said, I think that if "is" is meant to be something different than what it literally means, why wouldn't Christ make it clear that "is" doesn't mean "is my body" and "is my blood" in a literal sense? Why not say "this is my spiritual body" or something to that effect? For those who don't believe in any sort of presence, why couldn't Christ just say this "represents my body" and avoid a lot of confusion?

I think Christianity has its mysteries, as Josiah pointed out. For my part, I struggle understanding election (sometimes called predestination) and I am not always fully comfortable with it. That said, I sometimes put too much trust in my own logic, when I should be looking to Christ and trusting his promises.
 

Albion

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I certainly understand where you are coming from Albion, as I was one of those Episcopalians who actually tried to understand what the Episcopal Church officially believed lol (sometimes a lonely position to be in!!).
Ironically, what Anglicanism believes and has long believed is what the Lutherans here have tried to explain to me is the Lutheran POV--is means is, and that's it. The problem is that the Lutheran belief as expounded here by several Lutherans isn't that at all.


That said, I think that if "is" is meant to be something different than what it literally means, why wouldn't Christ make it clear that "is" doesn't mean "is my body" and "is my blood" in a literal sense? Why not say "this is my spiritual body" or something to that effect? For those who don't believe in any sort of presence, why couldn't Christ just say this "represents my body" and avoid a lot of confusion?
I can sympathize with those thoughts, but you know that quite a few things Jesus said to his disciples and others left them mystified. It is not just this issue concerning the nature of the Supper.

But BTW, if we decided that we would take Christ strictly at face value (This IS my body), we wouldn't have any of that four-way stuff of a real physical change or entrance into the elements, which nevertheless doesn't look like that is what happened, but, at the same time, not a change since the bread and wine are still bread and wine, etc, etc. It--the Lutheran POV--is as convoluted and speculative as the Roman theory is.
 
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Arsenios

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I certainly understand where you are coming from Albion, as I was one of those Episcopalians who actually tried to understand what the Episcopal Church officially believed lol (sometimes a lonely position to be in!!). That said, I think that if "is" is meant to be something different than what it literally means, why wouldn't Christ make it clear that "is" doesn't mean "is my body" and "is my blood" in a literal sense? Why not say "this is my spiritual body" or something to that effect? For those who don't believe in any sort of presence, why couldn't Christ just say this "represents my body" and avoid a lot of confusion?

I think Christianity has its mysteries, as Josiah pointed out. For my part, I struggle understanding election (sometimes called predestination) and I am not always fully comfortable with it. That said, I sometimes put too much trust in my own logic, when I should be looking to Christ and trusting his promises.

1Cor 11:25
After the same manner also He took the cup,
after He had supped, saying,
"This Cup is the New Covenant in My Blood:
this do ye,
as oft as ye drink it,
in remembrance of me."


So Christ takes the Cup and Blesses it, and tells His disciples:
"This Cup is the New Covenant in My Blood - Be ye doing this..."

The Cup is the New Covenant in His Blood... It does not mean his present blood prior to His Passion, Resurrection, and Ascension... Indeed, the Church has always taught that the Wine IS the Blood of His Glorified Body... The very Body which passed through walls, ate honey and fish, appeared and disappeared on the Road to Emmaeus, and into Which Thomas thrust his hand and then believed in Christ... THAT Body, you see... Not His fleshly flesh and blood of His Incarnation, but of His Body which had ascended as human flesh unto His Father, and then returned to the earth for awhile, appearing to many... That Body is NOT the Body that first came to Mary Magdalene when He said to her: "Touch me not, for I have not yet ascended to My Father..."

Which explains why He was not taking slices off His arm and opening a vein for the disciples... He was establishing for them the New Covenant in His Body and His Blood, right there, at that supper, and the Disciples on the Road to Emmaeus did not know Him, until they SAW Him blessing and breaking the Bread at Table... THEN they knew Him... And then He disappeared from their sight...

Arsenios
 

Arsenios

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Ironically, what Anglicanism believes and has long believed is what the Lutherans here have tried to explain to me is the Lutheran POV--is means is, and that's it. The problem is that the Lutheran belief as expounded here by several Lutherans isn't that at all.


I can sympathize with those thoughts, but you know that quite a few things Jesus said to his disciples and others left them mystified. It is not just this issue concerning the nature of the Supper.

But BTW, if we decided that we would take Christ strictly at face value (This IS my body), we wouldn't have any of that four-way stuff of a real physical change or entrance into the elements, which nevertheless doesn't look like that is what happened, but, at the same time, not a change since the bread and wine are still bread and wine, etc, etc. It--the Lutheran POV--is as convoluted and speculative as the Roman theory is.

When Christ Takes, Blesses, and Breaks the Bread as He did at that Supper, the Bread and the Wine become and then ARE the Body and Blood of the Risen Lord - He had not yet been crucified and arisen when He established this Mystery... Nor are we arisen when we so do as He did and as He commanded us to do...

Arsenios
 
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RichWh1

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If bread and cup become the actual body and blood that would mean Jesus is being offered up over and over. Breaking the bread would be equal to breaking the body, which is a violation of Scripture.

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Josiah

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If bread and cup become the actual body and blood that would mean Jesus is being offered up over and over. Breaking the bread would be equal to breaking the body, which is a violation of Scripture.



Your "issue" would be exclusively with post Trent Catholics, with the dogma of Transubstantiation - at most (and I don't think it would apply even there).

No breaking bread is breaking bread. I know of no law regarding breaking bread.


"Is" means "is." Not becomes. "Is" means that body and blood are PRESENT - not that anything converted into anything via the precise physics mechanism of an alchemic transubstantiation leaving behind a unknowable mixture of reality and Aristotelian Accidents. And it seems to ME that if Jesus said to do it, it likely is not wrong to to do it. I don't think He was wrong to say "IS" or to say "DO it." I don't think Jesus was wrong about anything. But that's just my opinion.





.
 
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Josiah

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