Honoring Christ In The MealSample
Meals as Mission
In the first three centuries, largely up until the time that Constantine politicalized Christianity as the state religion, the whole of the Christian worship service (the gathering) was referred to as “the Lord’s Supper.” It wasn’t a wafer and a sip from a plastic throwaway cup that was in Paul’s mind in 1 Corinthians 10:17–34, when he spoke of the Supper. The context of Paul’s argument in 1 Corinthians clearly is regarding a full meal that was substantial enough to satisfy hunger. It was clearly a meal in which everyone had a part, and it was a meal weighty enough in length of time to where the rich and poor were allowed enough leeway to develop considerable relational issues.
Imagine how our churches today would change dramatically and be more effective if we would consider the Lord’s Supper more deeply?
Paul cautions the believers in Corinth at the table to discern the body rightly. Normally, when someone teaches on this passage, they do so to encourage each believer to individually assess their own sin and salvation in self-reflection during the Supper. However, this approach and drastic individualism does not fit Paul’s argument as he goes almost directly into talking about Christ’s Body as “us and we.” Paul has a particular intent in causing us to discern the body. Paul is primarily concerned with communal relations, not individual piety. At the meal, a meal substantial enough to allow people to get drunk and rowdy, the rich were being gluttons and were ignoring the poor. They were eating in a manner just like the Greeks of that day. The meal for them was more about prestige than actual community.
This is HUGE! Did you catch it? The meal in Paul’s mind was a place for believers to remember Jesus but also to remember their responsibility to the least of these and the unbelievers. All were at the Lord’s Supper. Today, we separate believers into Sunday mornings to observe Communion, and we “minister” to the less fortunate in the evening suppers. It’s divided. It’s us and them. It’s us over them. However, to Paul, the meal was missional and spiritual. How does this effect how we view ministry, Evangelism, and The Lord’s Supper and define what real community is and should be?
This changes everything!
Learn to do Mission Around Meals:
Accompanying this study is over 300 hours of video footage from 150 of today's top Christian thinkers on culture, creativity, innovation, and invention at www.makejesusculture.com and www.gardencityproject.com. We aim to help churches develop grass roots culture formation for their contexts. Go now!
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About this Plan
This 7-Day Bible study is one in a series of 19 others related to Making Jesus Culture. We look at how to honor and worship God through all elements of culture, including the home, family, church, business, media/arts, government, and education. Accompanying these studies is over 300 hours of video footage from 150 of today's top Christian thinkers on creativity, innovation, and invention at www.makejesusculture.com.
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