RamistThomist
Puritanboard Clerk
One of the standard arguments against Lutheran Christology and sacramental theory is that the right hand of God, the place to which Christ bodily ascended, is a local place. As such, Christ is not carnally present in the sacrament, nor is his human nature ubiquitous.
However, if "the right hand of God" is merely a metaphor--which Lutherans would argue because God the father is bodiless--then does the above argument work?
However, if "the right hand of God" is merely a metaphor--which Lutherans would argue because God the father is bodiless--then does the above argument work?