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The Lord's Supper-by Rev. M.D.Rogers
The accounts in the Gospels show that the Christian ceremony of
the Lord's Supper has its roots in the Jewish Passover festival. This festival
was a ceremony observed by the Jewish people to remind them of the Exodus -
that awesome event when the Lord rescued them from 400 years of degradation and
slavery in Egypt.
Through great miracles and displays of power, God brought them
out of Egypt, rescued them from the cruel oppression of Pharaoh and brought
them into a beautiful land they could call their own. Although by definition
the Exodus was a non-repeatable event, its significance was preserved for
future generations of Israelites by the institution of the ceremony of the
Feast of Passover (Exod 12:24-27), celebrated every year at the Spring Equinox.
Just before Jesus was betrayed and handed over to the rulers to
be crucified, he celebrated this "freedom meal" with his 12
disciples. As he did so, he turned the symbolism of the meal in a new
direction.
He used the Passover festival to act out in symbolic drama the
meaning of his coming death at the hands of the Jewish and Roman rulers. The
unleavened bread and the wine were no longer symbols of deliverance from
slavery in Egypt, but pictured him as the Passover Lamb sacrificed so that his
people might be delivered from slavery to sin and death. As the leader of a new
exodus, he instituted a new ceremony to commemorate it.
The explanation given by the Apostle Paul in his letter to the
Corinthians (11:17-34) helps us to understand the meaning of the Lord's Supper.
His explanation of the Lord's Supper reveals six major themes.
1. Saving Sacrifice (This is my body)
On the night Jesus was arrested and betrayed by one of his close
followers to the Jewish and Roman authorities, he broke bread. And as he was
doing so, he said, "This is my body which is being given for you."
In the Jewish Passover feast, bread was eaten that was made
without yeast. It had been made in haste because they were leaving Egypt in a
hurry. In addition, a lamb was slaughtered to avert the angel of death.
The symbolism is now turned in a different direction. The bread
represents the death of Jesus for his people. The Apostle Peter says, "For
Christ died for sins once for all, the righteous for the unrighteous, to bring
you to God" (1 Pet 3:18). God was justly outraged by our moral rebellion
against him. We were under the sentence of death.
Christ died in our place. He was the Passover Lamb who was
sacrificed to avert the messenger of death so that we might have life. This is
the tradition handed down by Paul in the words, "This is my body which is
for you."
2. Covenant (This is my blood)
God had made a covenant with his people at Mount Sinai when he
brought them out of Egypt. A relationship of love, loyalty and trust had been
established. He would be their God, and they would be his people.
This covenant relationship, initiated by sacrifice, had been
broken by the people. They had not been faithful to the agreement; they had not
followed God's standards for the relationship.
The death of Jesus initiates a new covenant by a better
sacrifice - one that does not need to be repeated. The New Covenant is a better
agreement because now not only God, but also his people will be able to keep
the agreement.
The cup represents the fact that Jesus died to pay the penalty
due unto us for our sins and that through trust in him and in his death for us,
we are forgiven and completely pardoned. It speaks of a covenant relationship
with God in which he says, "I will be your God, and you shall be my
people."
3. Commemoration (Do this in remembrance of me)
Some Christians believe that when the minister or priest
pronounces the words, "This is my body" and "This is my
blood," the bread actually becomes the literal body of Christ, and the
wine actually becomes the literal blood of Christ. This teaching, known as
transubstantiation, is a misunderstanding of the text for four reasons:
a. The words "this is my body" and "this is my
blood" are to be understood figuratively. When King David says, "The
Lord is my Shepherd," he is using a figure of speech, a metaphor. He does
not mean that he is literally an animal or a sheep and that the Lord is a
sheepherder. He means that his relationship to the Lord is like that between a
sheep and the shepherd. If Jesus had meant that the wine becomes his blood, why
didn't he use the word "become"? This is exactly what we have in John
2 when Jesus and his mother were at the wedding in Cana, and the text says that
the water became wine.
b. Second, the Lord's Supper has its origins in the Jewish
Passover. This feast was a memorial - a reminder of the Exodus by the use of
symbols.
c. Third, the festivals in the pagan religions at this time were
also symbolic. It would have required a clear explanation if the Lord's Supper
was to be taken literally.
d. Fourth, Jesus said, "Do this in remembrance of me."
He said this carefully. He said it twice. We eat bread and drink wine as a
reminder, not as the literal or real thing.
This clearly disproves erroneous thinking. The Lord's Supper is
not a new offering of Christ's sacrifice. It is a remembering of the one
sacrifice for sin, done once for all.
Furthermore, there is no idea presented that by a physical
participation of the bread and the wine a person receives saving grace from
God. We receive saving grace by faith, by putting our trust in Jesus Christ.
John wrote his Gospel that we might believe, and that by believing we might
have life (John 20:31).
4. Participation (Community)
Paul says that the Lord's Supper is teaching given by Christ and
handed on to you (v. 23 plural). The commands "to eat" and "to drink"
are in the plural (v. 26). So, this instruction is given to a community, a
community of believers, those who are the followers of Jesus.
The covenant binding us to God through the death of Jesus
creates a community. By participating in the communal meal, we are bound not
only to the Lord Jesus, but also to one another. We have fellowship with Christ
in a deep and mysterious way (1 Cor 10:14-21).
5. Expectation (Future hope)
Paul commands the Corinthians to continue this ceremony until
the Lord Jesus comes. The celebration is one of hope - certain hope. Jesus
Christ will return to this earth bodily and physically.
When he returns, he will judge the earth. He will reward the
righteous and punish the wicked. Wrongs will be set right. We will no longer need
this reminder then.
6. Proclamation (Evangelism)
Finally, Paul says that by performing this ceremony, we proclaim
the death of the Lord Jesus. The Lord's Supper dramatizes in symbolic fashion
the central facts of the Christian faith and announces these facts to all who
observe. In a very simple way, those who do not belong to Jesus can see and
understand through these simple actions that the Lord Jesus gave his life for
us.
Since the Lord's Supper is an expression of continuing in the
faith, it follows logically that only baptized believers should participate. By
eating the bread and drinking the cup, we are identifying with Jesus Christ as
Lord. We are saying that when he died, he died for my sins. When he poured out
his blood, it was the sacrificial death which initiated a new covenant - a new
relationship between us and the Creator God.
We must recognize or distinguish the body of the Lord. By
participating in this celebration, we enjoy deep fellowship with the Lord
Jesus. Paul says that just as those who participate in pagan religious
festivals are actually participating with demonic spirits, so those who belong
to Jesus and who participate are actually involved in deep spiritual
participation with Jesus Christ.
We must examine and judge ourselves. The ceremony is a way of
saying, "I am continuing in my relationship with Jesus Christ." If
our behavior is contrary to our confession, we are lying.
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