Yes. And, Lutherans do not dogmatize how the real presence happens as do Roman Catholics in their doctrine of Transubstantiation. That presence is left a mystery and Jesus' words are taken at face value. "This BREAD is my BODY..." According to formal Lutheran doctrine, the bread is there and so with it is the true body of Christ. Roman Catholics say that the bread is not there and is referred to as an "accident." Martin Luther used the formula "in, with and under." The body and blood are received in, with and under the elements of bread and wine. Communion, in Lutheran ideology, is type/antitpe of the incarnation. The divine is made tangible just as happens in Jesus. He is God, but can be seen and touched and sensed in common, earthly form.
Do Espiscopalians believe that bread and wine are transformed into the body and blood of Christ
Of course not, that is why they are protestants. Protestant means a "church" that was formed to protest the Catholic Church and its beliefs.
Only symbolically, unlike Catholics.
you must believe in jesus..
Methodists practice the Lord's Supper or Holy Communion. However, Methodists do not believe in transubstantiation; rather, they consider the bread and wine to be symbolic.
Every Sunday
The Lords Supper and Baptism
the Lords supper
One key difference is their views on baptism: Church of Christ typically practices believer's baptism by immersion for the remission of sins, while Methodists practice infant baptism as a symbol of God's grace. Additionally, Church of Christ emphasizes a cappella singing in worship, while Methodists may use a variety of musical instruments. The two denominations also differ on the structure of church leadership and governance.
the Eucharist; Holy Communion; the Lord's Supper
because that way the can remember him and remember who he was
Most churches observe the Lord's Supper or Communion as often as once a quarter.
The inner keeper wife fix the last supper but she did not know. Because Matthew paid the inner keeper.
It isn't. Some people think that the last supper was a Passover seder, however, the timing was wrong for that to have happened.
I don't see a question, only a statement. The Church of Christ does share in the Lord's supper each Sunday though.