Communion at Providence
Dec 20, 2007
Why have we stopped taking communion weekly?
I would like to take a couple of minutes and explain why we recently
stopped taking communion each week to close our services. From the
inception of Providence Church we have gathered together to sing to
Jesus (worship), hear about Jesus (preaching) and then join Jesus by
partaking of communion. We quickly found that our practice of
communion distinguished us as a church. Few had ever been to a church
that called husbands to pray over their wives before partaking of the
elements each week. For many of us this weekly practice acted as the
birthplace of familial spirituality. I can’t keep count of how many
men prayed with their wives for the first time sitting in one of our
services and I count this as one of the richest blessings I have ever
received in ministry. So why would we ever stop such a beautiful and
fruitful practice?
As the weeks, months and now years passed I noticed a dangerous trend
in our beloved times of communion. Over time, as tends to happen,
communion began to lose its meaning and depth and seemed to become a
weekly ritual that served to close our times of worship. There seemed
to be fewer times of fervent prayer and more people leaving early to
beat the rush in preschool pick up. As I thought and prayed about how
to restore the beauty of communion the passages of Scripture that
always gave weight to the act of communion haunted me. The Bible tells
us that communion is symbolic of the continuing work of the gospel in
our lives.
“Whoever, therefore, eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord in an
unworthy manner will be guilty of profaning the body and blood of the
Lord. Let a person examine himself, then, and so eat of the bread and
drink of the cup. For anyone who eats and drinks without discerning the
body eats and drinks judgment on himself. That is why many of you are
weak and ill, and some have died. But if we judged ourselves truly, we
would not be judged. But when we are judged by the Lord, we are
disciplined so that we may not be condemned along with the world. So
then, my brothers, when you come together to eat, wait for one another”
(1 Corinthians 11:27-33)
The Apostle Paul writes with such urgency about the act of communion
that any flippancy about it should be received with the gravest
sincerity. He says that spiritual disobedience (For anyone who eats
and drinks without discerning the body…) produces physical and mental
consequences (eats and drinks judgment on himself, that is why many of
you are weak and ill). Therefore we should do all we can to protect
not just the act of taking communion but also the purity of that act.
That purity is compromised by endless repetition.
While “how often” we took communion was an issue, it was not the only
consideration. The way we have traditionally practiced communion
needlessly excluded visitors. With little instruction given for
visitors to follow we found the exercise stressful and confusing for
those we invited to church with us. Correctly administering communion
is something every church should strive to do well and we are taking
steps to do better.
While I know this decision is hard for many because of what communion
represented in their personal life, it is necessary for our growth and
maturity as a family. After much prayer and discussion we decided to
protect the purity and beauty of the sacrament of communion by
providing the sacrament during a special service every other month.
Please continue to visit our website, insideprovidence.com, to find out
when the next Communion Service will be. You will find the date and
time of the next service at the bottom left hand corner of the home
page.


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