Why Are Christianity's "Communion Services" Idolatrous?
"How much more shall the blood of Christ...purge your conscience
from dead works to serve the living God?" - Hebrews 9:14
Many of us at one time or another, have participated in a ceremony called "communion".
Traditionally, it is when believers pass out some manner of bread and grape juice (or
wine) to share among themselves, supposedly, "in remembrance of Jesus". As beautiful
as this sounds and looks, and as lovely as this appears to carnal men, it is now nothing
more than "idolatry" - revival of a "shadow" that has already been chased away by the
true light. Jesus did not come to institute ANY "ceremonies", but rather came to set the
saints at liberty from all "dead works", that we might worship the living God "in spirit
and in truth". Let us look at "communion" and see why this Christian tradition should
NOT be practiced among the saints who have been baptized with the holy Ghost (with
the evidence of speaking in other tongues).
The life of the human body is in the blood (Lev.17:11). Where blood ceases to flow in
the body, life quickly ends. So, because the life of the body of Christ is in
the Holy Spirit (Jn.6:63; Rom.8:10), the Spirit is often called the "blood of Christ".
Where the Spirit ceases to flow freely among the saints, spiritual atrophy is certain.
The Law of Moses forbade the imbibing of any kind of blood. The most dreadful
punishment allowed under the Law was reserved for the person who committed the
gravest offenses, including the consuming of "any manner of blood"
(Lev.17:10). However, in John 6, Jesus told a crowd of followers that unless
they drank his blood, they had no hope of eternal life. This statement angered many and
confused all who heard it, and as a result "many of his disciples went back, and
walked no more with him" (Jn.6: 66). They did this despite Jesus' attempt to
explain that he was speaking of the Spirit, which gave him his life. "The words
that I speak unto you," he told them, "They are spirit and they are
life" (Jn.6:63).
Just as Jesus' natural blood was shed on Calvary, his spiritual blood was shed on the
day of Pentecost in Acts 2. Hebrews 9:22 tells us, "without the shedding of
blood, there is no remission of sin." So, it was necessary that Jesus die, that
his blood be shed, in order that his spiritual life - his true "blood" that we must drink -
could be given to us. To the amazed multitude in Jerusalem that pentecost morning who
beheld the disciples reel under the power of God like drunk men, Peter preached his
first sermon as a new creature in Christ, and he told them that Christ "hath
shed forth this, that you now see and hear!" (Acts 2:33). This Spirit, sent
from heaven upon these humble disciples, is the true blood of Christ which we must
drink if we hope to live forever with God.
It is the true blood of Christ which still is flowing and cleansing souls from sin. We
are taught that we are justified, sanctified, and washed from our sins by the (true) blood
of Christ (Rom.5:9; Heb.10:29; Rev.1:5). At the same time, we are told that we are
justified, sanctified, and washed from sin by the Spirit of God (1Cor.6:11). Obviously, we
are not justified, sanctified, and washed from sin twice - once by the blood and later by
the Spirit. Moreover, the resurrection from the dead is accomplished, according to
Paul, by the power of God's Spirit (Rom.1:4; 8:11), while in Hebrews 13:20 the
resurrection is said to be by "the blood of the everlasting covenant." We all know that
anything washed in natural blood turns red; however, saints in Revelation 7:14 "washed
their robes and made them WHITE in the blood of the Lamb." By that same blood we
are brought near to God (Eph.2:13), but as Paul himself restates it five verses later, "by
one Spirit we have access to the Father." This is the Holy Ghost, the cleansing blood of
Jesus Christ.
As a result of ignorance of this truth concerning the blood of Christ, many believe that
the blood of Christ washed their sins away before they received, or were baptized with,
the Holy Ghost. But sin cannot be washed away before one receives the Spirit, because
the Spirit is the blood that washes sin away.
True Communion
Communion is fellowship. It is harmony of heart and mind. It is "that ye all
speak the same thing, and that there be no divisions among you; but that ye be perfectly
joined together in the same mind and in the same judgment" (1Cor.1:10).
Such communion with God is only possible in the Holy Spirit, and it is just such a
fellowship which Jesus died for us to enjoy. When Jesus prayed that we would be made
one as he and the Father were one (Jn.17), this communion was his desire. They were
perfectly joined together, and he made the way for us to share his unity with God, in
spirit and in truth. When one receives the holy Ghost, only then can he share in this
blessed communion!
Because he had not yet been slain, and therefore his true blood was not yet shed upon
his disciples, Jesus occasionally provided for his disciples symbols of this communion in
spirit which they would only later experience. On the night before his crucifixion, for
example, "he took the cup, and gave thanks, and gave it to them, saying, `Drink
ye all of it, for this is my blood of the New Testament, which is shed for many for the
remission of sins'" (Mt.26:27-28). And lest his disciples misunderstand him
and think that he was instituting a ceremony for them to observe, he quickly added that
HE would "not drink of the fruit of the vine, until that day when I drink it new
in the kingdom of God" (Mt.26:29). The very last thing on Jesus' mind was to
institute another dead ceremony for us to keep. The last supper was a prophetic symbol
of something they could not understand until the Spirit came.
Jesus spoke of drinking in a new way in the "kingdom of God". For us now, wrote
Paul, the kingdom of God is "righteousness, peace, and joy, in the Holy Ghost" (Rom.
14:17). And since the day the Spirit came, believers have enjoyed that fruit of the true
Vine, "drinking" of the Spirit which he serves (1Cor.12:13) and breaking the bread of
fellowship which he creates among us (1Cor.10:16-17).
The only reason Jesus served the cup and bread to his disciples at the "last
supper" was that the communion in spirit which he wanted them to have was not
available. Jesus hadn't died yet, and so the Spirit hadn't come. Had the Spirit been
available, the ceremony would have been pointless. If Jesus could have had fellowship
with his disciples, as he did with his Father, there would have been no point in passing
around a cup of wine saying, "This is my blood....drink ye all of it."
When true communion, or fellowship with the Father, became a reality in Christ, there
was no longer any need for a symbol of it.
The truth concerning Christianity's "communion services" is that they are useless. The
true blood of Christ, the blood which Jesus told us we must drink, has been poured out,
and the symbols of the Holy Ghost, whether they be symbols given to Israel by Moses or
symbols given by Jesus, have served their wonderful purpose. To continue in them is to
deny the reality of their fulfillment. Our communion in the blood of Christ is our unity
of heart and spirit, and the bread which we break is our receiving of one another's
testimony. This, my friend, is not vain philosophy; this is the gospel. The "communion
service" of Christianity is nothing at all but a dead work, a godless tradition that misses
the whole point of Jesus' actions and words at his last supper. And it is from such dead
works that the blood of Christ purges our conscience, that our faith may undividedly rest
upon Christ Jesus and his power. The way of Christ is not a way of symbols, rituals, or
ceremony. Symbolism was the Old Covenant manner of service to God. Now, the true
light shines, and the marvelous Old Covenant shadows of that light should be discarded.
To cling to them as if they still provided some spiritual benefit is for us to imply that
Jesus alone is not sufficient to save us, and it betrays a lack of faith and understanding
on our part.
It is tragic that so many are still acting out the last supper meal, as if the Spirit had
not come. Worshipping with symbols, we behave as Old Testament servants of God,
who were required to carry on symbolic rituals while they waited for a Christ who had
not come. When we drink deeply of the Spirit and break the bread of fellowship in the
body of Christ, we do, as Paul said, "show forth the Lord's death until he come"
(1Cor.11:26). We prove that our conscience has been purged from dead
works. But when we continue worshipping in symbols instead of in the life and power of
the Spirit, we merely show forth our own deadness to the things of God.
Jesus came, suffered and died and was raised again, that we might now serve God
"in the newness of life". The Father, said Jesus, is looking for those
who will worship Him, not in dead works, but "in spirit and in truth." If you are such a
person, longing to please God, but uncertain as to how to do it, God is looking for you
and calling you to Himself. Heed that comforting call and be filled with the knowledge
of God in Christ Jesus the Lord. And "The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and
the love of God, and the communion of the Holy Ghost, be with you all.
Amen."
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