THE
LORD’S SUPPER: LAST SUPPER, FAMILY SUPPER, FUTURE/FINAL SUPPER
Jeremiah
31:31-34 1
Corinthians
11:23
-26 Matthew
26:20-29
Clergy
often assume that lay people understand everything that happens in
church life, especially everything that happens in Sunday services.
Once in a while, however, we clergy are reminded that this is not
the case. The reminder can
be jarring.
Following our monthly communion service in
Mississauga
(where I was pastor for 21 years) an 85-year old woman greeted me at the
door of the church. She
smiled sweetly (and kept on smiling) as she said, “Today was communion
Sunday. I didn’t
understand anything of what it was supposed to be about.
I never have. I’ve
been in the church all my life, and communion means as little to me now
as it did when I was a child. I
thought you’d want to know.”
For a few seconds despair lapped at me: all her life in the
church, communion services without number, and still no understanding?
Then instead of despair I found opportunity pressing itself upon
me. I chose opportunity
rather than despair and vowed that on at least one communion Sunday each
year I’d preach on the communion service itself.
And so I began a series of sermons, a series that spanned several
years. One Sunday I dealt
with the biblical meaning of bread and wine; another Sunday, with the
meaning of covenant or promise; another, with the names by which the
service is called (Lord’s Supper, Holy Communion, Eucharist); another
Sunday, with the place of sacrifice in scripture and our discipleship
(specifically, with the sacrifice we trust – our Lord’s, and the sacrifice we make – our own.)
Today I am going to discuss the service of Holy Communion in
terms of a biblical approach to supper: Last Supper, Family Supper, and
Future Supper/Final Supper.
I
(i) -- At
the Last Supper Jesus poured out wine and said (no doubt solemnly),
“...this is my blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many for
the forgiveness of sins….” Our
Hebrew ancestors knew that “blood” was shorthand for “life given
up sacrificially”. Now
unlike our Hebrew ancestors we are creatures of modernity; we are
fastidious; we like things clean and neat, always in good taste.
Our foreparents, on the other hand, weren’t concerned with good
taste at all; they were concerned with godliness; not concerned to see
something aesthetically polished, but preoccupied with knowing that
their sin had been pardoned. Therefore
they didn’t shrink from those vehicles of worship which they knew God
had appointed, such as the sacrifice of a lamb in the temple.
In the temple mystery of atonement (“atonement” means the
making “at one” of sinful people and holy God) worshippers brought
their best lamb to church; the priest cut the animal’s throat,
collected the blood in a basin, and threw the blood against the altar.
A well-known, popular New Testament commentator, more fastidious
than he should be and with more than a streak of anti-Judaism in him,
speaks of the repugnance of it all: odour, flies, unsightliness; the
slimy, slippery mess. He
praises Jesus for having got us beyond this bloody primitivism.
Alas, he overlooks one thing: Jesus endorsed the bloody
primitivism. Whenever Jesus
was in
Jerusalem
at Passover he worshipped at the temple too -- which is to say whenever
our Lord went to church in
Jerusalem
he showed up with his lamb under his arm.
Of course he knew something no one else knew: he knew that what
the temple liturgy pointed to would soon be gathered up in his own
poured-out blood, since he knew himself appointed the
lamb of God that renders animal sacrifice forever superfluous.
Repugnant? Our Hebrew
foreparents weren’t repelled by gore; they were repelled by their own
depravity. They weren’t
jarred by a spectacle that lacked refinement; they were jarred by a
spectacle that lacked righteousness -- the spectacle of themselves in
their systemic sinnership facing a Holy God who couldn’t be fooled and
whose truth couldn’t be “fudged”.
Fastidiousness is the farthest thing from the mind of anyone
whose condition is critical.
I admit that the category of sin (that is, the predicament of
disobedience to God, alienation from God and the spiritual perversity
arising from it all) isn’t a category in which people today think.
People today think instead in the categories of vice and
immorality and criminality. If
a deed violates what a particular society deems good, the deed is called
vice; if the same deed violates what is regarded as the universal human
good, it is called immorality; if the same deed violates a stated law,
it is called crime. What it
is called is determined entirely by the context which interprets it.
From a gospel-perspective the context which interprets us
(not merely our deed) and interprets us ultimately;
this context is the holy God himself.
Not only is the holy God the ultimate interpretative context;
this context is also unique in its profundity. So profound is it that
when we understand ourselves in it we also understand that what is
interpreted now is not deed
but being. In other words
the ultimate issue isn’t what we do
but what we are.
Our ancient foreparents knew this.
According to apostolic testimony our Lord, at the Last Supper,
poured wine and said, “This cup is the new covenant in my blood”;
that is, it is the one covenant of God renewed
by the blood of Christ. Why
is blood attached to God’s covenant or promise never to abandon us,
never to fail us, never to forsake us, never to quit on us in anger or
give up on us in disgust? Why
is blood attached to God’s covenant or promise not to let anything,
not even humankind’s outrageous insolence and ingratitude, loose him
from his bond with us? In
short, if God wants to promise himself to us, why doesn’t he simply
declare it and spare himself the expense of his Son?
Because everywhere in life where promises are made to people of
perverse hearts (which is to say, everywhere in life where promises are
made), the same promises can be kept only at enormous cost. It
costs nothing to make a promise, nothing to declare a promise (talk is
cheap); but it costs everything to keep a promise.
We promise not to
forsake spouse or friend. The
promise made costs nothing; but as soon as that person provides
incontrovertible grounds for giving up on him, the same promise kept
costs everything. God has
promised forever to be God-for-us. In
the Garden of Eden his promise cost him nothing; but when humankind
found itself in the “far country”; i.e., when God’s promise meets
our rebellious hearts, his promise kept
-- still to be God-for-us -- wraps him in anguish.
Then what mood pertains to the Last Supper aspect of our
communion service? Surely a
mood of solemnity; a mood of sober reflection, of realistic
self-assessment; which is to say, a mood of penitence.
(ii):
-- But
the Last Supper isn’t the only aspect of our communion service; there
is also what I have called the family supper aspect, the ordinary,
everyday meals Jesus shared with people in the course of his public
ministry. The written
gospels tell us on page after page that Jesus spent a great deal of time
in kitchens and restaurants. Why
did he spend so much time in such places when he knew he had so little
time for his public ministry? Because
he wanted his meal-companions to know
peace with God. In first
century
Palestine
to eat with someone was a public declaration of amnesty; to eat with
someone meant you harboured no enmity toward that person; you were
plotting nothing malicious; you intended, rather, only that person’s
well-being and blessing.
A sign of amnesty (supposedly) in our culture is the handshake.
When we shake with our right hand, the person with whom we are
shaking hands knows that our hand holds no weapon and therefore we
aren’t going to attack. Boy
Scouts and Girl Guides shake with their left hand.
In the pre-firearm days of sword and spear the left hand held
one’s shield. To shake
with our left hand means we have discarded our shield; we have renounced
self-protection. What would
it mean to shake hands with both
hands? It could only mean
that we had foresworn both attacking someone else and defending
ourselves; it could only mean, in other words, that we were giving
ourselves totally to another person without condition or hesitation.
Surely shaking hands with both hands is what we do, in effect, whenever we hug or embrace
another human being. To hug someone, embrace someone is simply to shake
hands with both hands. Our
affection, our intention, our concern, our heart’s unarticulated
welcome; it’s all poured out on this other person at the same time
that there is nothing held back to plot either manipulation of him or
armour-plating of ourselves. When
Jesus ate with people in first century
Palestine
he embraced them -- both hands. He
cherished those people and visited upon them that amnesty with God
which was nothing less than their salvation.
They sponged it up with the heart-hunger that every last one of
us has.
It sounds so wonderful that we couldn’t imagine a downside to
it. But there was.
Our Lord’s eating habits “did him in.”
Those he ate with loved him, while those who refused to eat with
him savaged him. We must
never forget that Jesus uttered many of his parables in reply to those
who faulted him for his table manners.
We must never forget that the best-loved parables -- lost sheep,
lost coin, lost son -- Jesus spoke when those who were to savage him
hissed, “This man receives sinners and
eats with them.”
Nonetheless our Lord never backed down.
He knew that the provision in the cross, while sufficient to
grant people access to God, wouldn’t of itself induce them to suspend
their suspicion and abandon their assorted safe “tree perches”, like
Zacchaeus. He knew
that because of the cross sinners could approach the holy One. But
would they?
Would they want to? Only if through
the holy One Incarnate they knew a welcome beyond anything they had
found anywhere else. They
found such a welcome in the one from
Nazareth
and loved him for it.
Then why did others attack him on account of his
dinner-companions? Because
he broke down all the conventions by which they, his enemies, had always
ordered their lives, all the conventions by which they assigned
themselves a superior place in the “pecking order” and credited
themselves with a superior righteousness.
It is a social convention to classify people as moral or immoral
(and no one this morning is arguing the difference between moral and
immoral). It is a social
convention to classify people as successful or dismissible, religious or
irreligious. Social conventions have their place.
Nevertheless, when Jesus Christ appears, social conventions are
exposed as less than ultimate; decidedly less than ultimate.
Jesus eats with the immoral and they know themselves cherished;
he would be every bit as happy to eat with the moral too, but moral
people won’t eat with him as long as he insists on eating with those
who are regularly regarded as socially inferior.
Jesus eats with the dismissible, those deemed unimportant.
He would gladly eat with the successful, the powerful, too, but
they don’t want to rub shoulders with the dismissible.
He eats as well with the irreligious.
He would gladly eat with the religious too, but they can’t
stomach the thought that their reward is no greater than the reward of
those who have made no religious effort at all.
Social conventions are a way of ordering society.
They have their place. But when Christ the King appears they are
exposed as pre-ultimate; they
have now been superseded by a new
order, the
Kingdom
of
God
.
Social convention and the
Kingdom
of
God
are simply not the same. Then
it’s quite plain that either we cling to social conventions, assuming
that the social order they point to is ultimate, or
in the presence of Jesus Christ we look beyond social convention to
embrace ardently the King who has embraced us already.
Either we regard social convention as ultimate or
we abandon ourselves to the rule of God exemplified in a welcome we are
never going to find anywhere else. It
is not the case that Jesus exalts immorality above morality or failure
above success or irreligion above religion (as some left-wing preachers
try to tell us.) It is
rather the case that all such
distinctions and categories and evaluations and pigeonholes are left
behind as we forget them in favour of a kingdom which transcends them.
Yet we must always remember that men and women are persuaded to
forget them and leave them behind, are free to forget them and leave
them behind, only as they find both hands shaken, only as they know
themselves embraced and want above all to hug forever the one who has
first hugged them.
Jesus welcomed his dinner-companions to a new family, what Paul
calls “the household and family of God.”
His family meals landed our Lord in much trouble, but he refused
to give them up. Those who
joined the family and ate at its table rejoiced and exulted in their
new-found exhilaration. Not
even the pouting and the sulking and the petulance of those who
wouldn’t sit down with them could diminish their joy.
The mood of exultation, then, the mood of joy, is another mood we
should bring to the communion service.
(iii):
-- There
is yet another aspect to the Lord’s Supper, the anticipation of the
Messianic Banquet. There is
a supper to come, a future supper which will also be the final supper
which never ends. The
Messianic Banquet will celebrate one glorious truth: the final
dispersion of all that opposes God’s kingdom and violates his rule and
disputes his sovereignty. Christians
are convinced that Jesus is the Messiah, God’s agent in restoring a
creation warped, a creation disfigured, a creation significantly
disabled and occasionally grotesque; a creation rendered all this
through the multi-tentacled grip of evil.
At the same time, as our Jewish friends remind us, the
Hebrew-schooled mind knows that when Messiah appears he brings the
Messianic Age with him. Without
the Messianic Age it is absurd to speak of the Messiah himself.
In the Messianic Age swords will be beaten into ploughshares and
spears into pruning hooks; war will no longer preoccupy us even as
poverty, disease and injustice no longer afflict us.
Have swords been beaten into ploughshares?
Not only does war (terrorism is war by another name) rage
throughout the world; at this moment there are approximately fifty civil
wars raging throughout the world: fellow-citizens are slaying each
other. Have poverty, disease
and injustice ceased to afflict us?
Let us be sure to admit this much: those who dispute the
sovereignty of Jesus Christ have a case.
Unquestionably they have a case.
Nevertheless Christians may and must say this much: in the
resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead the Messianic Age has dawned.
To be sure, it is not yet fully manifest (if it were it
wouldn’t be disputed); but it dawned as the risen one himself
triumphed over every principality and power, over every human sin and
cosmic evil, even the powers and the evil they embody are bent on
denying their defeat and molesting whom they can with their last gasp.
In his resurrection from the dead our Lord has guaranteed the
healing of the creation’s gaping wounds.
When the Messianic Age is made fully manifest every evil which
besets and bedevils, warps and wounds will be banished.
Thinking pictorially as they were trained to do, the earliest
Christians depicted this God-ordained event as a feast that never ends.
The bedraggled of the world, a bedraggled world itself, will
shine forth resplendently as a creation restored redounds to the glory
of the God who made it, who sustained it through its afflictions, who
wrested it out of the hands of the molester who warped it, and who has
freed it for the blessing of his people who in turn will praise him
everlastingly for it. Then
the mood we must bring to this aspect of Holy Communion is the mood of
eager anticipation and steadfast confidence.
III:
-- The
service of Holy Communion or the Lord’s Supper gathers up three
distinct but related meals:
-
the Last Supper, where Jesus signed in his own blood the promise of God
that there will always be more mercy in God than there is sin in us;
-
the everyday meals our Lord ate with those whom he gathered into his
household and family as he embraced and welcomed all who craved him and
his rule more than they clung to social convention;
-
the messianic banquet, the final supper of the future where all that
contradicts the
kingdom
of
God
will be dispersed.
The
mood of the communion service should reflect all three aspects: sober
penitence, unrestrained joy, confident anticipation.
Today,
in our worship service, we have already tasted the Word of God in
scripture and sermon. Now we
are to taste the selfsame Word in sacrament.
Our Lord Jesus invites us to his table. Soberly
let us renew our repentance in the wake of his astounding mercy.
Joyfully let us embrace
again him who always delights in embracing us.
Confidently let us
anticipate that glorious Day when together we behold the holy city, the
New Jerusalem, the creation healed; for on that Day there will be
neither mourning nor crying nor pain any more, for the former things
will have passed away.
Rev.
Victor Shepherd
May 2006