00:00
00:00
00:01
Transcript
1/0
Let us pray together, our gracious
God and Father, as we come to you with joy and anticipation
today to be nourished by your Word and fed together by the
hand of our Lord Jesus Christ at the table. We pray that you
would come to us in the grace and power of your Holy Spirit
and speak to us now through your Word that we may be drawn closer
to Jesus Christ. and filled with faith and joy
and love. And this we pray together for
His great namesake. Amen. 1 Corinthians chapter 10 where
we read verses 16 through 22 and chapter 11 verses 23 through
26 and these readings begin on page 957 of the Pew Bible. Let
us hear the Word of God. The cup of blessing that we bless Is it not a participation in
the blood of Christ? The bread that we break, is it
not a participation in the body of Christ? Because there is one
bread, we who are many are one body, for we all partake of the
one bread. Consider the people of Israel. Are not those who eat the sacrifices
participants on the altar What do I imply then, that food offered
to idols is anything, or that an idol is anything? No, I imply
that what pagan sacrifice they offer to demons and not to God. I do not want you to be participants
with demons. You cannot drink the cup of the
Lord and the cup of demons. You cannot partake of the table
of the Lord and the table of demons. Shall we provoke the
Lord to jealousy? Are we stronger than he? And in chapter 11 verse 23, For
I received from the Lord what I also delivered to you, that
the Lord Jesus, on the night when he was betrayed, took bread
And when he had given thanks, he broke it and said, This is
my body, which is for you. Do this in remembrance of me. In the same way also, he took
the cup after supper, saying, This cup is the new covenant
in my blood. Do this as often as you drink
it in remembrance of me. For as often as you eat this
bread and drink the cup, you proclaim the Lord's death. until he comes. I'm sure perhaps like some of
you, when you were younger, you exasperated your mother, as I
suspect I rather too often did, by asking her the question, is
there something special for supper today? I suppose that was the
product of a child who had been brought up in Scotland vaguely
remembering days when there was food rationing and the diet seemed
to be the same. Every Monday was the same as
every other Monday and every Wednesday was as predictable
as the previous Wednesday and it must have been difficult under
those circumstances for my mother to hear the words of her much-beloved
son saying, is there anything special for supper today? That question haunts me in many
ways, not because I realize now how irritating it must have been,
but because every time we have the Lord's Supper, I find myself
asking the same question. Is there something special for
supper today? There is something about this
day in our tradition, a communion Sunday, the table spread before
us, the tablecloth covering the elements, oftentimes the sense
of solemnity that there is at these occasions. And yet, we
ask the question, what is it that is so special, if anything,
about this occasion? What do we mean when we come
to the Lord's table? What should be in my mind as
I take the bread and as I take the wine? Well, it is this very
theme that the Apostle Paul is addressing to this congregation
in Corinth in 1 Corinthians chapters 10 and 11. And he gives us many
important clues as to what it means for us to come to take
the Lord's Supper. We cannot, obviously, today,
you will be glad to hear, focus attention on all of these clues.
But there are three words that I want to focus down upon briefly
today, that if they are fixed in our minds and are in our hearts,
help us, I think, so much to benefit from what it means to
come to the Lord's Table. The first of the words is the
word proclamation. Says Paul, you notice in verse
26 of chapter 11, as often as you eat this bread and drink
this cup, you proclaim the Lord's death. There is, in the Lord's
Supper, a proclamation that Jesus Christ has died for our sins,
that His body has been broken and His blood has been shed for
us. But the wonderful thing about
the Lord's Supper, of course, is that this message comes to
us now not in the form of a sermon that we hear, but in the form
of a sermon, a little drama that we see. as though God in His
grace, Christ in His love for us, is saying to us as His little
children, I want you to understand what I am saying and so I am
going to have it acted out before you every time you meet in this
particular way. There will be a visible proclamation
before your eyes in the breaking of bread and the giving of wine
of what I have done for you on the cross of Calvary. And so as our eyes are fixed
upon the table and the bread and the wine, we understand that
this is a message, a drama from Christ reminding us of all that
He has done for us in His passion and in His death. I have often wondered if perhaps
it is in part to this that the Apostle Paul is referring when
he says to the Galatians who were drifting away from true
faith in Christ, how can you be so foolish? You before whose
eyes Jesus Christ was placarded as crucified. And this is the
great message of the Lord's Table. One of the great Scottish theologians
of the early 20th century, James Denny, used to say that there
was only one way in which he ever envied a Roman Catholic
priest, and that was in the opportunity it would have given him to hold
up a crucifix before the congregation and say, God loves you like that. But you see, Christ has already
given us, in a sense, a crucifix. As the bread is broken, the wine
is shared, Jesus is saying to us, I love you like this. And so, as we share it together,
we have proclaimed before our eyes the dying love of our Lord
Jesus Christ for us as sinners. This is a drama to tell us about
Jesus. It's a proclamation. But you
notice that the Apostle says something else about it. It is
not only proclamation. He says it is participation. Chapter 10, verse 16. In our older versions, we are
much more accustomed to the word communion being used there. The
cup of blessing that we bless, is it not a participation or
a communion in the blood of Christ? The bread that we break, is it
not a communion in the body of Christ? Earlier on, in 1 Corinthians,
Paul had said, Christ, our Passover lamb, is sacrificed for us. Let us keep the feast. And he's
thinking about the way in which the Passover lamb was sacrificed
for the salvation of the children of Israel. And then that Passover
lamb having saved the children of Israel, the children of Israel
would participate in the nourishment and the strength they would receive
for their journey as they sat down and they ate the Passover
lamb together. The very thing that Jesus reminds
us of when He says in John's Gospel, unless you eat the flesh
and drink the blood of the Son of Man, there is no life in you.
What was He talking about? He was talking about Himself
as being the Passover Lamb. Not that we are saved by eating
and drinking, but that we are saved by participation, by communion
through faith. in all that Jesus Christ has
done for us. But in what special way is this
a communion? In the preaching of the Word,
the Lord Jesus communes with us. He speaks to us. And we respond
to His Word. We dialogue with Him. But the
Lord's Supper, it is a different kind of sign. It is a sign in
many ways more like the signs we use when we express our love
for each other and our devotion to one another. We shake hands
with one another, or more intimately we may hug each other, or yet
more intimately we may kiss each other. What are we doing when
we do these things? We are using signs that can actually
communicate the love, the trust, that the signs signify. If people
say these signs are, I can live the Christian life without signs,
I sometimes say to them if they are married, try living your
married life without ever embracing your wife or kissing your wife.
Try that for a year or two. And she will say to you, don't
you love me anymore? Because she understands that
love naturally wants to find ways of communicating itself,
expressing itself. Here, as we sit at the Lord's
table, we have these signs, bread and wine, brought to us and we
pass them to one another. What are we doing? We are receiving
from the hands of the Lord Jesus the signs that communicate His
love to us. And we are proclaiming this to
one another. You, my friend, in the pew beside
me, you receive the signs of Jesus' dying love for you and
respond to Him in the love of faith as He has given Himself
for you. Reach out and take His embrace
of grace today and know that He has died for you and that
He loves you. And so, this Lord's Supper is
a proclamation. This Lord's Supper is a means
of communion. And yes, as the Apostle Paul,
the Lord's Supper is also a moment of anticipation. As often as
you eat this bread, chapter 11, verse 26, and drink the cup,
you proclaim the Lord's death until He comes. There is this consciousness that
we share at the Lord's table that this is not everything. This can be for us a most glorious,
intimate, sweet, comforting, joyful communion with the Lord
Jesus Christ. But it is not yet everything. And so as we sit at the Lord's
table, we have an eye, as it were, to what He has done for
us in the past. We have our hearts reaching out
to Him because He is present and showing His love to us in
the present. But we also have an eye to the
future when He will come again in majesty and glory and reunite
His people together for what the Bible calls the marriage
supper of the Lamb. Here we see Him in the fragments
of bread and the sips of wine. And it's a reminder to us that
we do not yet see Him or know Him as we one day, by grace and
faith, undoubtedly shall. And it fixes our minds on the
glory that is yet to be. One of the traditions of life
in the United States that I don't know if it exists anywhere else,
but because it's a tradition you may imagine it exists in
every part of the world. One of these American traditions
that I've observed and rather like is the evening before a
wedding, the rehearsal dinner. The rehearsal dinner when the
family gathers, when the family shares its memories, when the
love of the family is expressed, sometimes in a way it's never
been expressed before. Those occasions when we celebrate
the goodness and blessing of God if we are Christian families.
But we understand it's only an anticipation of the great day
that is soon to come. And that's what the Lord's Supper
is, my friends. It's a wedding rehearsal dinner
and an anticipation of the great day that is yet to come when
the people of Christ who trust in Him will sit together at the
marriage feast of the Lamb and see Him face to face and be like
Him forevermore. And that's why the operative
words at the Lord's Supper are these. Take. Take. Take not merely the bread,
take not merely the wine, but take Christ by faith. And find the assurance of the
forgiveness of sins flooding through your heart. Find the
joy of knowing His presence captivating your life. Find the anticipation
of an indescribable glory yet to be, as it were, flooding over
your life from heaven's future. And rejoice in the privilege
of knowing Jesus Christ. I wonder if you have taken Him. And if you haven't, if you would
take Him today. Our Heavenly Father, we praise
You for the way in which You come to us as little children
and not only speak to us in Your Word, But give us this visible
expression of the dying love of our Lord Jesus Christ. Help
us, we pray today, to take Him by faith. We pray it in His name. Amen.
The Church Around the Table
Series The Church
| Sermon ID | fpc-030506am |
| Duration | 18:38 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - AM |
| Bible Text | 1 Corinthians 10:16-22 |
| Language | English |
Documents
Add a Comment
Comments
© Copyright
2026 SermonAudio.