I wrote a piece a number of years ago that eventually made its way into the FL, recounting my experience with the local ministerial group (of which I was president at the time--the Roman Catholic priest serving as secretary). There was also a Methodist, 2 UCC pastors, 1 PCUSA pastor, 2 Christian Reform pastors, and 2 PCA pastors. We had one of our monthly meetings. Father Birch was gone. After we had conducted our business and were engaged in "small talk" someone made a comment about "how different" Catholic services were, remarking on a Catholic wedding in which he had taken part as the pastor of the groom. The PCUSA pastor said something about the strangeness of the Catholics believing that Holy Communion was really about receiving the actual body and blood of Christ. When I countered that Lutherans believe the same thing about Holy Communion, all the Calvinist tongues started to wag, "You can't really mean that!" The elderly and deeply pious Christian Reformed pastor of the town church pulled out his wallet and pulled out a picture. "This is my family," he said, and then added, "Well actually it's just a picture of my family. That's what you mean that you Lutherans believe about Holy Communion, isn't it? It's just a picture of Christ, just a representation?" The others, including the United Methodist, the PCUSA and one of the UCC pastors nodded in agreement, looking at me curiously. I felt like an object in a museum. "No," I said, "We go by what the Bible says. Jesus said, 'This is My Body...This is My Blood.' He didn't say 'This represents or this symbolizes'. He said, 'This IS my body, this IS my blood.'" The other UCC pastor had a bemused look and said, "Actually my theological forebear is Zwingli. I don't agree with either Calvin or Luther." This was at a time when the theological discussions between the ELCA and the RCA, PCUSA, and UCC that Pastor Austin refers to were taking place. Whatever the muckety-mucks were saying at the "high level" conferences, it was not filtering down to the local level and it left me with a profound distrust for what was supposedly taking place between the leaders and representatives of the church bodies. I'm NALC now, but I'm with Pastor Bohler and other LCMS pastors here. When Lutherans accept Calvinist (no matter how much they say they eschew or have moved beyond Calvin or Zwingli) claims about Holy Communion, they are holding positions that are no longer Lutheran.