2 May, 2024

When Jesus Missed Communion

by | 30 November, 2005 | 0 comments

Have you ever missed Communion?


Since ancient times Christians have not wanted to miss Communion. In ad 152, Justin Martyr, in describing a Christian worship service, noted the deacons took the elements of Communion to those who were too sick to attend.


As unfortunate as it is when we miss Communion, can you imagine how much worse it would be if Jesus decided not to be there? The bread would be there and it would taste no different than usual. Same with the cup. The prayers would sound the same. In fact, an outside observer might notice little difference. But, tragically, it would be a meal in which the host declined to be present.


“Impossible,” you might say. “Jesus would never miss Communion.”


I”m not so sure.


In his last letter dictated to the apostle John, the one written to the church at Laodicea (Revelation 3:14-21), Jesus appears to suggest such was exactly the case. This church, which seemed to have quite a positive image of itself as a congregation, receives the harshest of Jesus” criticisms in these brief letters (Revelation 2 and 3).


Their central failure was not gross immorality or crass idolatry, but self-satisfied complacency. “You say, “˜I am rich; I have acquired wealth and do not need a thing.” But you do not realize that you are wretched, pitiful, poor, blind, and naked” (Revelation 3:17).


Then Jesus urges them to acknowledge their true condition. If they do, he promises, he will bring healing and renewal. It is in this context that he speaks the familiar appeal that he is standing at the door knocking. “If anyone hears my voice and opens the door I will come in.”


If Jesus” words ended there, it would be a powerful promise. But carefully read the end of his sentence: “. . . and eat with him, and he with me” (Revelation 3:20).


Any believer in the ancient church would have understood this as a picture of breaking bread with Jesus. This was the very heart of Communion. The church “at table” with Jesus. These words spoken, not to a wayward sinner, but to a church that had, somehow, managed to close the door and leave Jesus himself on the outside.


“Open the door,” he pleads. “Acknowledge your spiritual poverty and hunger, and I will not miss Communion with you any more.”


Did anyone hear someone knocking?


 


Tom Lawson teaches worship, Old Testament, and New Testament at Ozark Christian College, Joplin, Missouri.


 

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