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Communion: Difference between revisions

 
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What does it mean, then, to eat or drink “in an unworthy manner” (1 Cor. 11:27)? We might at first think the words apply rather narrowly and pertain only to the way we conduct ourselves when we actually eat and drink the bread and wine. But when Paul explains that unworthy participation involves “not discerning the body,” he indicates that we are to take thought for all of our relationships within the body of Christ:  
What does it mean, then, to eat or drink “in an unworthy manner” (1 Cor. 11:27)? We might at first think the words apply rather narrowly and pertain only to the way we conduct ourselves when we actually eat and drink the bread and wine. But when Paul explains that unworthy participation involves “not discerning the body,” he indicates that we are to take thought for all of our relationships within the body of Christ:  
*are we acting in ways that vividly portray not the unity of the one bread and one body, but disunity?  
*are we acting in ways that vividly portray not the unity of the one bread and one body, but disunity?  
*Are we conducting ourselves in ways that proclaim not the self-giving sacrifice of our Lord, but enmity and selfishness?  
*are we conducting ourselves in ways that proclaim not the self-giving sacrifice of our Lord, but enmity and selfishness?  


In a broad sense, then, “Let a man examine himself” means that we ought to ask whether our relationships in the body of Christ are in fact reflecting the character of the Lord whom we meet there and whom we represent.
In a broad sense, then, “Let a man examine himself” means that we ought to ask whether our relationships in the body of Christ are in fact reflecting the character of the Lord whom we meet there and whom we represent.