Monday, March 5, 2012

Thoughts on Communion - Brina

If you actually plan on reading all this, please do so with an open mind. These are just my thoughts in general, regarding communion, so they may not make complete sense to you. So I'm relying on the Holy Spirit to work through me despite my confusing words :) I really encourage you to spend time thinking about communion for yourself, and how communion relates to you... maybe share those thoughts as a separate post, or in the comments. Love you all, and here we go ;)

1 Corinthians 11:23-2623 For I received from the Lord what I also passed on to you: The Lord Jesus, on the night 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, after supper he took the cup, saying, “This cup is the new covenant in my blood; do this, whenever you drink it, in remembrance of me.” 26 For whenever you eat this bread and drink this cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes.

Taking communion; we do it in remembrance of Jesus and to "proclaim the LORD's death until he comes". There is so much symbolism in communion; taking his blood and body "gives us new life". It stands for his death, his suffering, and his forgiveness. When we take it, you could say it signifies our acceptance. We accept the fact that we killed Jesus, with our sin, and we accept the forgiveness he gave. It is our time to remember all this.

But oftentimes his body, his blood, are consumed to flippantly. Its something we've all done a million times--thus it can easily lose feeling. Do you realize that when that happens, when you take communion without truly considering it, you are forgetting what Jesus did? His noble death and precious life deserve more than that. And if you don't examine yourself beforehand, as well as recognize the body of the LORD--that's a sin. That's scorning all that communion stands for. (See 1 Corinthians 11:27-29)

For me, communion is a time of confession and gratitude. And the words "body" and "blood" mean much, much more to me now than they did a year ago.

The way I see it, the body is his teachings. When I eat a cracker at church, I remember how Jesus traveled endlessly to carry his teaching to ALL that would listen. his body his his hardship. Think of how many steps each foot took, how calloused, blistered, and dirty they would be. Imagine his rough hands, scarred from his years as a carpenter. Picture his excited, enlightened, animated face, as he explained God's love and rejoiced with the helpless. This is his body--this is what he did in his life for all of us!

And his blood. This is his suffering, his pain. Mocked--scorned by those he loved, and ignored. The Son of God does not deserve to be ignored. He was beaten--countless times. Nails driven through his skin--do you imagine this when you drink your grape juice or your wine? Can you hear his screams of agony, or see the blood pouring from him? That juice may taste sweet... but his agony was not. Don't you see? This was all for YOU--dirty, rotten, you. But you know what? Jesus really loves you. So much that he'd experience THAT, because he wants to spend eternity with you.

Communion. Its a serious thing. It is you remembering what he did, and accepting his forgiveness. Don't let his death go in vain, accept his forgiveness!

I've described the turmoil in Jesus' life. The beatings his body took. So understand now that I don't believe you're only accepting forgiveness. You're accepting Jesus himself. Serious communion, to me, is asking Christ to enter into myself. It is proclaiming that you want to be just like Jesus.

And Jesus didn't have it easy. Remember his suffering?

All real Christians want to be like Christ. That's why we're called Christians. And when you get scared of that commitment--of that suffering--remember that Jesus... Jesus had God.

Here it is: his body came to serve, and his body gave us life. Through his teachings, Jesus rejuvenated the hearts of those who accepted. But that wasn't it--he died. His sufferings, his blood, gave us a way to survive. His body gave us a new heart; his blood gave us the capability to sustain it. As we are, a Holy heart would whither immediately. But with his blood... my heart will never stop beating.

Communion: the dictionary calls it "a Christian sacrament in which bread and wine are consumed as the substance or symbols of the death of Christ." I call it the full remembrance of Christ's life and death, and the acceptance of his forgiveness and Holy Spirit.

To accept the Holy Spirit, you need to lean on the LORD's understanding. To give him your full faith and trust. It may seem hard, but if you let yourself fall in love with him.... He will become your shield. Your foundation. Your refuge.

Jesus died horribly. We are called to follow his example and live fully for God--even if that means being mocked, scorned, ignored, beaten. But after his death, Jesus got God.

With God for eternity.

Doesn't that sound beautiful?

Communion. Beautiful, but incomprehensible.

4 comments:

  1. So cool! I agree with you! Communion isn't a time for your sin though. You get right before you take it, so you can honor the remembrance of Jesus' death. I liked a lot of what you said and it reminded me of Romans 13:14, "But put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no provision for the flesh in regard to its lusts." Hear that? PUT ON THE LORD JESUS CHRIST!

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  2. I want to say something about when Jesus got on the cross. When He died.
    Opposite to contrary belief, Jesus didn't get on the cross for us.

    It says in Matthew 26:39,
    39 And He went a little beyond them, and fell on His face and prayed, saying, “My Father, if it is possible, let this cup pass from Me; yet not as I will, but as You will.”

    Jesus didn't want to die. He didn't want to sacrifice himself for us. But you know why He did? Because it was the Father's will.

    He did it because the Father wished to save us from our sins. Jesus made it possible, but it was the Father's will. And because they are One, Jesus' will was the Father's will and He did as the Father asked.

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