Reading Time: 2 minutes
At Communion, we remember the journey that Jesus traveled on our behalf and the mission he successfully completed. We anticipate our own “launch” into our eternal home.
Reading Time: 2 minutes
At Communion, we remember the journey that Jesus traveled on our behalf and the mission he successfully completed. We anticipate our own “launch” into our eternal home.
Reading Time: 2 minutes
Communion reminds us that the Lion of Judah (Revelation 5:5) has conquered the roaring lion (1 Peter 5:8) and freed us from his grip.
Reading Time: 2 minutes
The Communion table may be considered a “peace table,” for by these symbols of the bread and the juice we remember what the Prince of Peace accomplished, “making peace through his blood, shed on the cross” (Colossians 1:20).
Reading Time: 2 minutes
At Communion, we are given another tremendous view: to look at and remember Jesus’ body and blood, represented by the symbols of the bread and the juice.
Reading Time: 2 minutes
The message of Christmas is that God has indeed used his “A” material with the arrival of Jesus to rescue our broken world.
Reading Time: 2 minutes
The Lord’s presence will sustain us whenever the “gates of Hades” and their leader (Satan) pose a threat.
Reading Time: 2 minutes
There is much to remember about Jesus as we reflect upon the variety of tasks and titles given to him in Scripture and that he himself used to describe the work he faithfully accomplished.
Reading Time: 2 minutes
Before the cross, Jesus had seen death’s impact and he had heard the cries of those who had lost friends and loved ones, but at the cross, Jesus experienced the full measure of its indescribable pain and horror.
Reading Time: 2 minutes
The emblems of Communion remind us that Jesus came, not on a mission of revenge but of rescue.