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Certainly, when Paul talks about taking the Lord's Supper to oneself unworthily, thereby eating and drinking judgment upon oneself (1 Cor. 11:27-30), he implies a negative as well as a positive effectiveness of the sacrament.

n. d.; rev. 23 August 2003; 19 July 2006unmigrated-wiki-markup

Equally certain is that Luther, for one, entirely agrees with Paul's position. A wicked priest, he says, may set forth the promise of the sacrmnent sacrament of the bread "and administer it to those who partake, and even partake himself, as did Judas the traitor at the supper of the Lord. It still remains the smne same sacrament and testament, which works its own work in the believer but \ [works\] an 'alien work' in the unbeliever" (_LW_ 36: 56). A footnote to this passage adds, significantly: "Its own work is salvation. The 'alien work' is condemnation. The expression \ [_sc_. "alien work"\] derives from Isa. 28:21."

6 February 2008