Comes from a Latin word meaning “everywhere” and applies to the unique Lutheran doctrineis derived from the Latin word for teaching, doctrina, and is an important aspect of Christianity more so than other world religions because Christian... more that Jesus’ human body is present everywhere and consequently is found inside the Eucharistrefers to both the bread and wine consumed in the sacrament of the Lord’s Supper and to this sacred rite itself. The term comes from the Greek word ... more. This doctrineis derived from the Latin word for teaching, doctrina, and is an important aspect of Christianity more so than other world religions because Christian... more is not the same as the traditional Christian doctrineis derived from the Latin word for teaching, doctrina, and is an important aspect of Christianity more so than other world religions because Christian... more that God is omnipresent, which Lutherans also affirm.
(See communicatio idiomatumA Latin term for “the sharing of characteristics or properties,” which refers to a doctrine introduced by Cyril of Alexandria, that through the in... more and extra Calvinisticumis a Latin term meaning "the Calvinist 'outside,'" and was used by Lutherans to describe the Calvinist doctrine that Christ's divinity exists outside ... more.)
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