December 7, 1997
    Bethlehem Baptist Church
    Second Sunday in Advent
    John Piper, Pastor
     

    THE LORD'S SUPPER AS WORSHIP
    (1 Corinthians 11:17-34)
     

    But in giving this instruction, I do not praise you, because you come together
    not for the better but for the worse. 18 For, in the first place, when you
    come together as a church, I hear that divisions exist among you; and in part
    I believe it. 19 For there must also be factions among you, so that those who
    are approved may become evident among you. 20 Therefore when you meet
    together, it is not to eat the Lord's Supper, 21 for in your eating each one
    takes his own supper first; and one is hungry and another is drunk. 22 What!
    Do you not have houses in which to eat and drink? Or do you despise the church
    of God and shame those who have nothing? What shall I say to you? Shall I
    praise you? In this I will not praise you. 23 For I received from the Lord
    that which I also delivered to you, that the Lord Jesus in the night in which
    He was betrayed took bread; 24 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." 25 In
    the same way He took the cup also after supper, saying, "This cup is the new
    covenant in My blood; do this, as often as you drink it, in remembrance of
    Me." 26 For as often as you eat this bread and drink the cup, you proclaim the
    Lord's death until He comes. 27 Therefore whoever eats the bread or drinks the
    cup of the Lord in an unworthy manner, shall be guilty of the body and the
    blood of the Lord. 28 But a man must examine himself, and in so doing he is to
    eat of the bread and drink of the cup. 29 For he who eats and drinks, eats and
    drinks judgment to himself if he does not judge the body rightly. 30 For this
    reason many among you are weak and sick, and a number sleep. 31 But if we
    judged ourselves rightly, we would not be judged. 32 But when we are judged,
    we are disciplined by the Lord so that we will not be condemned along with the
    world. 33 So then, my brethren, when you come together to eat, wait for one
    another. 34 If anyone is hungry, let him eat at home, so that you will not
    come together for judgment. The remaining matters I will arrange when I come.
     

    "Worship" is not Just What Happens on Sunday

    It is fitting in a series on worship that we deal with the place and meaning
    of the Lord's Supper in worship. This is true even though the eating of the
    Lord's supper is never called "worship" in the New Testament, and the
    gathering of the church where it happens is never called "worship" in the New
    Testament.

    The point of stressing this is to break us of the habit of equating worship
    mainly with what happens here on Sunday morning. This is worship. We should
    perhaps call it "congregational worship" or "corporate worship." Because if we
    fall into the habit of equating this with the worship of the church, we will
    miss the new and radical point of the New Testament: namely, that worship is
    driven into the heart as a matter of spirit and truth, and out from the heart,
    worship flows in all of life, not just in "worship services."
     

    The Essence of Worship

    The essence of worship is the inner experience of treasuring the true beauty
    and worth of God.  And the outward forms of worship are the acts that show how
    much we treasure the beauty and worth of God. Therefore God created all of
    life as worship because he has told  us, "whether you eat or drink or whatever
    you do, do all to the glory of God" (1 Corinthians 10:31).  Do everything you
    do in a way that expresses your treasuring of God.

    Now in the gathered (or "corporate") life of the church, one of the external
    acts of treasuring Christ that we should do is the Lord's Supper. You can see
    this in 1 Corinthians 11:18, 20: "For, in the first place, when you come
    together as a church . . . Therefore when you meet together, it is not to eat
    the Lord's Supper . . ." And he goes on to criticize the way they are making a
    mockery of the Lord's Supper by gorging themselves and even getting drunk on
    their own food at the church gathering.  So he tells them in verse 22 to eat
    at home.

    The implication is that "when you come together as a church" the spirit and
    demeanor of the gathering should be one of focus on the Lord and sensitivity
    to the needs of others, not careless eating and drinking.  This is one of the
    reasons that the way we do the Lord's Supper is so lean. Paul really did
    distinguish it from the eating and drinking we do for our ordinary needs.
    Verse 22: "What! Do you not have houses in which to eat and drink?"

    So we learn that the "Lord's Supper" (notice, that is what it is called in
    verse 20) is something that is to happen in the gathered church, within the
    congregational life of the church. And it is something different from other
    meals that we eat at home to meet our physical needs.

    So the question for us is: If the Lord's Supper is worship, how does it
    express our inner treasuring of Christ's beauty and worth? Let me mention
    three things from the text. We express the value of Christ by "remembering,"
    by "proclaiming," and by "nourishing."
     

    Reminding

    First, the Lord's Supper expresses the value of Christ by reminding us of him.
    Notice the word "remembrance" twice.  Once in relation to the bread in verse
    24 and once in relation to the cup in verse 25. Begin reading in verse 23
    where Paul gives the words of the Lord on the institution of the Supper:

    For I received from the Lord that which I also delivered to you, that the Lord
    Jesus in the night in which He was betrayed took bread; (24) 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." (25) In the same way He took the cup also after
    supper, saying, "This cup is the new covenant in My blood; do this, as often
    as you drink it, in remembrance of Me."

    In other words, Christ gave us this simple "Lord's Supper" to help us keep him
    in memory, especially his blood and body given up in death.  This is worship
    if in the doing of it there is an authentic heart experience which says: "We
    must remember him because he is the most valuable Person in the universe.  We
    must remember his death because it is the most important death in history."
    Setting out this tangible reminder of Christ time after time in the life of
    the church will be worship if our hearts feel the preciousness of remembering
    Christ and tremble at the prospect of forgetting him.
     

    Proclaiming

    Second, the Lord's Supper expresses the value of Christ by proclaiming his
    death. Verse 26: "For as often as you eat this bread and drink the cup, you
    proclaim the Lord's death until He comes." If "remembering" means calling to
    mind what Christ did by his death, then "proclaiming" means calling to each
    other what Christ did by his death. This is the normal movement of worship:
    the preciousness of Christ presses itself on our memory, and then that inner
    remembering breaks out in proclaiming the worth of what we remember. If you
    really value something that is relevant for others as well as yourself - if it
    moves you and delights you - you will speak of it. You will declare it. So the
    Lord's Supper is worship if in doing it there is an authentic heart experience
    which says: this death and all it achieved is so valuable that it must not
    only be remembered; it must be proclaimed."

    These two meanings of the Lord's Supper support each other.  Remembering
    enables us to proclaim, since you can't proclaim what you don't remember. And
    proclaiming helps us remember, because not everyone remembers at the same time
    and with the same intensity, and we need his death to be proclaimed with word
    and bread and cup lest we forget the preciousness of his death.
     

    Being Nourished

    Finally, the Lord's Supper expresses the value of Christ by nourishing our
    life in Christ. If we come to Christ over and over and say, "By this, O
    Christ, I feed on you.  By this, O Jesus Christ, I nourish my life in you.  By
    this I share in all the grace you bought for me with your own blood and body"
    (1 Corinthians 10:16) - if we come to Christ over and over with this longing
    and this conviction in our heart: that here he nourishes us by faith, then the
    Lord's Supper will be a deep and wonderful act of worship. Nothing shows the
    worth and preciousness of Christ so much as when we come to him to feed our
    hungry souls.

    Where do we see this in the text?  We see it in the fact that the Lord's
    Supper is a supper. We are eating and drinking. Why are we eating and
    drinking? Eating and drinking are for nourishing and sustaining life. And here
    Jesus tells us that the bread we are eating is his body, and the cup we are
    drinking is the new covenant in his blood. So the eating and drinking are no
    ordinary eating and drinking. The nourishment that is in the Lord's Supper
    comes not from bread and wine (or juice).  Paul already said in verse 22 that
    we should take care of our bodily needs by eating at home before we come.
    This supper is not about physical nourishment. It is about spiritual
    nourishment.
     

    Roman Catholic View

    How does this work? Roman Catholics speak of transubstantiation and teach
    that, at the consecration by the priest, the bread and wine are actually and
    miraculously transformed into the literal body and blood of Jesus. Eating this
    transubstantiated bread and drinking this transubstantiated wine brings saving
    grace to the soul.
     

    Lutheran View

    Lutherans speak of consubstantiation and teach that the bread and wine don't
    cease to be bread and wine, but that the real, literal presence of the
    physical body and blood of Christ is present along with the natural elements
    when they are consecrated in worship.
     

    Reformed View

    Our view (call it the Reformed view) is that the bread and wine are emblems or
    symbols of the real, literal body of Christ that was crucified in history and
    today is in heaven at the Father's right hand. But we believe that there is a
    real feeding on Christ spiritually by faith - not on his physical body, but on
    his real, spiritual presence. And even though a believer can nourish himself
    any time and anywhere on the presence of Christ in his word, there is a
    special nourishing offered in eating the Lord's Supper and hearing the
    preaching of God's word.
     

    Luther Versus Zwingli - John 6

    The place to see this most clearly perhaps is in John 6. Here is where Martin
    Luther and Ulrich Zwingli locked horns at the Marburg Colloquy in 1529.
    Luther quoted verse 53, "So Jesus said to them, 'Truly, truly, I say to you,
    unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink His blood, you have no
    life in yourselves.'" And then he would quote 1 Corinthians 11:24, "This is my
    body," and he even wrote it with chalk on the big conference table during the
    debate.

    His claim was that we are tampering with the Word of God to say that "This is
    my body" means "This symbolizes my body." He would go back to John 6:53 - we
    must "eat the flesh of the Son of Man!"

    But Zwingli, on the other hand, who took the view that we embrace, pointed to
    John 6:63 as an explanation of Jesus' words. There Jesus said, "It is the
    Spirit who gives life; the flesh profits nothing; the words that I have spoken
    to you are spirit and are life." He became exasperated at Luther's repetition
    of "This is my body," and said, "I remain firm at this text, 'The flesh
    profits nothing.' I shall oblige you to return to it.  You will have to sing a
    different tune with me" (Reformers in Profile, ed. B.A. Gerrish, p. 139).

    We believe that Zwingli was closer to the truth here. "It is the Spirit who
    gives life; the flesh profits nothing; the words that I have spoken to you are
    spirit and are life." In other words, when Jesus said in John 6:53 that we
    must "eat the flesh of the Son of Man," he did not mean to say that literal
    flesh profits anything, even if it were possible.  He meant to say that his
    words were spirit and life. We feed on the flesh and blood of Jesus
    spiritually, not physically.

    One last pointer to this way of seeing the Lord's Supper.  In 1 Corinthians
    11:25 Paul said, "He took the cup also after supper, saying, 'This cup is the
    new covenant in My blood.'" I am not aware of anyone who says that the cup is
    literally the covenant. Nor is the wine in the cup the covenant. The new
    covenant is God's commitment to save to the uttermost those who trust in
    Jesus. The cup of wine (or juice) represents this covenant because the blood
    of Christ bought the covenant for us. It doesn't become this covenant.

    So I conclude that, in a few minutes, when we eat the bread and drink the cup,
    we may nourish our souls by faith on the spiritual presence of Christ. When we
    remember and proclaim his death, he manifests himself to us as infinitely
    precious.  He shows us all that God promises to be for us in Christ. This is
    the food of our souls. With this we are nourished and find strength to live as
    Christians.

    The Lord's Supper is worship because it expresses the infinite worth of
    Christ. No one is more worthy to be remembered.  No one is more worthy to be
    proclaimed. And no one can nourish our souls with eternal life but Christ.  So
    let us come and remember, and proclaim and eat.

    Copyright 1997 John Piper