ARCHIVE DEPTH: 36 DOSSIERS EXAMINED: 00 ECCLESIOLOGY: ORDINANCE [ STATUS: SCANNING ]
THEOLOGICAL INVESTIGATION // ECCLESIOLOGY

COMMUNION EXPLAINED

The annihilation of Transubstantiation, the rebuke of evangelical casualness, and the terrifying weight of the Lord’s Table.
PROLOGUE [ PENDING ]

THE DESECRATION OF THE TABLE

“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.” (1 Corinthians 11:27, LSB)

The modern ecclesiastical landscape has committed a double desecration against the ordinance of Communion. On the extreme liturgical left stands the Roman Catholic dogma of Transubstantiation, a blasphemous system that claims the priest possesses the ontological power to pull Jesus Christ down from heaven, mutate His physical flesh into a wafer, and resacrifice Him upon an altar. On the extreme evangelical right stands a flippant, bare-memorialism where congregants casually consume a cracker and thimble of grape juice while checking their cell phones, utterly devoid of reverence or holy dread.

Both extremes are abhorrent to the biblical text. The Lord’s Table is not a magic ritual that dispenses inherent grace to unregenerate sinners, nor is it a meaningless, sterile snack. It is a severe, blood-bought covenant renewal ceremony. It is the visible boundary line of the true Church.

We are subjecting the Eucharist to the unrelenting scrutiny of the Apostolic canon. To participate in the Table without theological precision is to invite the direct, physical judgment of God Almighty.

SECTION 01 [ PENDING ]

THE ORDINANCE OF PARTICIPATION

To correct the modern flippancy regarding Communion, we must recover the Apostle Paul’s vocabulary in 1 Corinthians 10:16. He does not describe the Table as a mere mental exercise of remembering a past event; he describes it as a profound, spiritual reality.

ROMAN CATHOLIC ERROR Transubstantiation (Physical Mutation)
THEOLOGICAL DOMAIN Ecclesiology / Sacramental Theology

“Is not the cup of blessing which we bless a sharing in the blood of Christ? Is not the bread which we break a sharing in the body of Christ?”

The Greek word translated as “sharing” or “communion” is κοινωνία (koinōnia). It denotes an intense, active participation and fellowship. While the elements remain strictly physical bread and physical fruit of the vine, the Holy Spirit uses this physical ordinance to grant the true, regenerate believer a unique, spiritual communion with the resurrected Christ. It is a means of sanctifying grace, reinforcing the believer’s objective union with the Savior. You are not merely eating bread; you are testifying to the cosmos that your life is inextricably fused to the slaughtered Lamb of God.

SECTION 02 [ PENDING ]

THE EPHAPAX DESTRUCTION OF ROME

The Roman Catholic Mass is built entirely on the premise that the Eucharist is a propitiatory sacrifice. The Council of Trent anathematized anyone who denies that the Mass is a true and proper sacrifice of Christ offered to God to appease His wrath for the sins of the living and the dead. This dogma is an explicit assault on the Book of Hebrews.

THE ROMAN CATHOLIC SACRIFICE

“The sacrifice of Christ and the sacrifice of the Eucharist are one single sacrifice: The victim is one and the same… In this divine sacrifice which is celebrated in the Mass, the same Christ who offered himself once in a bloody manner on the altar of the cross is contained and is offered in an unbloody manner.”

CATECHISM OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH (CCC 1367)
THE APOSTOLIC VERDICT

“But He, having offered one sacrifice for sins for all time, sat down at the right hand of God… for by one offering He has perfected for all time those who are being sanctified.”

HEBREWS 10:12, 14 (LSB)

The writer of Hebrews uses the Greek adverb ἐφάπαξ (ephapax), which means “once for all time.” The Old Testament priests stood daily offering the same sacrifices because animal blood could never actually remove sin. But Jesus Christ offered Himself ephapax, and then He sat down. To sit down in the presence of God means the work of atonement is utterly, flawlessly finished.

To suggest that Christ must be continually offered on thousands of Catholic altars every Sunday is to declare that His cry of “Tetelestai” (It is finished) on the cross was a lie. The Mass is not biblical Communion; it is a theological abomination that denies the sufficiency of the cross.

SECTION 03 [ PENDING ]

THE DANGER OF ANAXIŌS

If the Roman Catholic extreme is blasphemy, the modern evangelical extreme of flippancy is functionally suicidal. In 1 Corinthians 11, the Apostle Paul issues the most terrifying warning regarding church conduct found anywhere in the New Testament.

“We have reduced the Lord’s Table to a sentimental afterthought tacked onto the end of a worship service. But Paul tells the Corinthians that because they treated the bread and the cup with arrogant flippancy, God literally executed members of their congregation. The Table is a place of life for the repentant, but it is an execution block for the hypocrite.” HISTORICAL THEOLOGY CONSENSUS // The Puritan Tradition

“For this reason many among you are weak and sick, and a number sleep.” (1 Cor 11:30, LSB). The word “sleep” is a Christian euphemism for death. God physically killed members of the Corinthian church because they partook of Communion in an ἀναξίως (anaxiōs) an unworthy manner.

Taking the elements “unworthily” does not mean you must achieve moral perfection before taking Communion (for the Table is meant for sinners who need a Savior). To partake anaxiōs means to take the elements while harboring unrepentant, deliberate sin, holding bitter unforgiveness against a brother, or failing to recognize the severe holiness of the body of Christ. To do so is to drink damnation upon your own head.

SECTION 04 [ PENDING ]

THE FULFILLMENT OF THE PASCHA

Communion cannot be understood in a vacuum; it is the New Covenant fulfillment of the Old Covenant Passover. During the Last Supper, Jesus was presiding over a traditional Seder meal.

When Christ took the bread, broke it, and said, “This is My body,” He was fundamentally altering thousands of years of Jewish liturgy. He was identifying Himself as the Afikomen the piece of unleavened bread that is broken, hidden away, and later brought back out. He is the sinless (unleavened) bread, broken for our transgressions, hidden in the tomb, and brought forth in resurrection.

When He took the cup after supper, it was the third cup of the Passover Seder: The Cup of Redemption. Christ held up the Cup of Redemption and declared, “This cup is the new covenant in My blood, which is poured out for you” (Luke 22:20). He is the definitive, eschatological Passover Lamb. His blood does not merely cover the doorposts of a wooden house in Egypt; it eternally shields the soul from the unmitigated wrath of God.

THE EPILOGUE [ PENDING ]

UNTIL HE COMES

The Lord’s Table is a visceral, physical confrontation with the agony of Golgotha. It demands rigorous self-examination, desperate repentance, and profound, staggering gratitude. It is restricted exclusively to the baptized, regenerate saints of God who have been justified by faith alone. To invite the unregenerate world to partake of the elements is to hand them a cup of judgment.

As often as you eat this bread and drink this cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death until He comes. It is an act of militant eschatology. We eat the broken bread looking backward to the violence of the cross, and we drink the cup looking forward to the Marriage Supper of the Lamb. Guard the Table. Reverence the blood. Examine your soul.

THEOLOGICAL PATHWAYS

CONNECTED DOCTRINAL RECORDS

“The investigation of covenantal ordinances requires systematic cross-examination.”