This was presented before Communion on Sunday, November 12, 2006.
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On
About 500 years later, in 1529, Martin Luther and Ulrich Zwingli met at
We go forward about another 400 years and we find
Then He took the cup, gave thanks and offered it to them saying, “Drink from it, all of you. This is my blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins. I tell you, I will not drink of this fruit of the vine from now on until that day when I drink it anew with you in my Father’s Kingdom.” What did he say? He’s going to drink it with us in His Father’s Kingdom! Well, the
Much has been made throughout history of the nature of communion. Are the bread and wine mysteriously transformed into the body and blood of Christ? Or is Christ, as Luther thought, just somehow spiritually present in the emblems? Or is it just a ceremony of remembrance? Perhaps, though, the important question is not as much about what’s for dinner as it is about who is at the table. We were not there on the night Jesus was betrayed. We didn’t see His miracles with our own eyes, we didn’t see His resurrected body, and we didn’t have the opportunity to share a last meal with our Lord and Savior. But the institution of the Lord’s Supper is a work of divine genius instituted by Christ Himself. Although separated chronologically by a span of about 2000 years, we can still share a meal with our Lord and Savior. Jesus really does take His seat at the table in some mysterious way.
But that’s not even the genius of it. The real genius of the Lord’s Supper is the logical conclusion that those who take a seat at the table with Christ are taking a seat with each other. “There is one body and one Spirit—just as you were called to one hope when you were called— one Lord, one faith, one baptism; one God and Father of all, who is over all and through all and in all.” Because there is one Lord, there is one table and one supper. And those who wish to commune with the Lord, whether they like it or not, are communing with each other. I like to imagine one huge table at which every follower of Christ who has ever lived takes his seat to share the same meal. And Cardinal Humbert back in 1054 may think he excommunicated the patriarch of
And Luther and Zwingli may disagree about what’s for dinner, but it seems that doesn’t matter a whole lot because if they want to eat with Jesus, it’s just a logical necessity that they’ve got to sit at the same table. And those French and German soldiers locked in mortal combat may be a little uncomfortable with the fact the guy they were just shooting at is now rubbing elbows with them at the Lord’s Table, but that is the reality of the communion. Those who wish to commune with Lord, commune with each other.
We can close our eyes and pretend that people with disagree with or dislike are not at the table with us, but that doesn’t change the reality. We are all broken, sinful people who at some level are ignorant about fundamental truths of the gospel and the nature of God, and if Jesus wants to turn us away from His table who can blame Him. But from looking at the types of people Jesus ate with during His time on earth, I would be very surprised if he suddenly got pickier about the type of company he keeps.
Whether we forgive each other or not, whether we agree with each other or not, whether we even love each other or not, we all sit at the same table and we drink the same cup and we serve the same Lord.
When we come to the Lord’s table we participate in a divine feast of Christian unity. It is not a unity that God humbly pleas for, it is a unity that God mandates by divine fiat. We are the Body of Christ. There is only one Christ and He has only one Body. And all the members of that timeless Body from every nation and every continent who have ever lived or who ever will live, take their place at one gigantic table and share one meal presided over by our one Lord.
And the Christian man and his Christian wife who has just left him may each come to the table with anger and bitterness in their hearts and hatred for one another, but they both sit at the same table and they drink the same cup.
And the Christian father and his children who he has physically or emotionally abused may bring to the table a mixed bag of anger and love and forgiveness and hatred, but they all sit at the same table and they drink the same cup.
And the Christian business partners who have argued and bickered or who have been cheated and defrauded by one another during the week, may retreat on Sunday to the safety of their different congregations, but whether they like to think about it or not, when they partake of the Lord’s Supper they both sit at the same table and they drink the same cup.
And the members of churches that have bitterly split over issues of doctrine or leadership may worship from different buildings, but when they partake of the Lord’s Supper they all sit at that same table and they all drink the same cup.
And when all of God’s children take our places at that one timeless and universal table in order to participate with our Lord in this sacred feast, then the nature of Christ’s Church is seen and felt for what it truly is: the most powerful force the world has ever known, blessed with God’s divine power and guidance to heal and to save this broken world. When we raise our cups with Christ, we raise our cups with each other, and our disagreements and differences melt away as Christ’s Church proclaims together that universal truth that we all agree on: Jesus Christ is Lord.