(...) and when the initial molaric conc. of reactants and products are 1M each.
I don't know the exact paraphrasing Lehninger uses in the book, but I see the source for your misunderstanding of the "per mole" bit in it...
o, let's say we had a reaction 1 A + 2 B
2,5 C + energy
how much energy would that be?
let's say, we gain X kJ here if the total consumption of A was 1 mole A
so, at standard conditions, our ΔG
0 would be X kJ/mole (A consumption)
likewise, it follows that there would be another ΔG
0 related to the consumption of B:
ΔG
0 would be Y kJ/mole (B consumption)
with Y being half of X , of course
...and a third one referring to the formation of C:
ΔG
0 would be Z kJ/mole (C formation)
with Z being 0.4 of X
...and last not least a more general one referring to a general equation of conversion:
x*A + 2x*B
2,5*x C
where
one mole of conversion of the above type would result in ΔG
0 = x*X kJ/mole "conversion as shown by equation"
now, you could choose x to be "1 mole" ...
... and that's what Lehninger must have meant, I take it
regards
Ingo