The Way of Salvation in the Lutheran Church by G. H. Gerberding
page 80 of 179 (44%)
page 80 of 179 (44%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
by the Evangelists and one by Paul, we have the same clear, plain
words concerning the bread and wine--words of the last will and testament of the Son of God, our Saviour--"_This is my body." "This is my blood of the New Testament_;" or "_the New Testament in my blood_." Note the language of Paul: _"Guilty of the body and blood of the Lord." "Not discerning the Lord's body."_ The cup is called _the communion of the blood_, and the bread, _the communion of the body_ of Christ. The word communion is made up of two Latin words, _con_ and _unio_, meaning union with, or connection with. The marginal reading in our family Bibles, as well as in the revised version, is "participation in." The plain English of the verse then is, the bread is a participation in, or a connection with Christ's body, and the wine with His blood. We are now ready to take all these passages together, to compare them one with another, and to ask, What do they teach? What is the Bible doctrine of the Lord's Supper? Is it transubstantiation? Is it consubstantiation? Is it that the bread and wine are mere representations or memorials of the absent body and blood of Christ? Or do these passages teach "That the body and blood of Christ are truly present under the form of bread and wine and are communicated to those that eat in the Lord's Supper?" (Augsburg Confession, Art. X.) CHAPTER XV. THE LORD'S SUPPER--CONCLUDED. |
|