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Fellowship
in the Lord’s Supper is the basis for the practice of
“close” or “closed communion.” (The
phrases “close communion” and “closed communion”
refer to one and the same practice). This pamphlet will help
you appreciate, understand and explain to others the practice
of close communion.
What
does God teach in His Word?
What does the Lutheran church believe about
the Lord’s Supper?
How is the Lord’s Supper an expression
of church fellowship?
What About...Fellowship in the Lord’s
Supper?
What is the Lutheran church’s motive
for practicing close communion?
Conclusion
What
does God teach in His Word?
[top]
“Jesus
took bread, gave thanks and broke it, and gave it to his disciples,
saying, ‘Take and eat; this is my body. ’Then
he took the cup, gave thanks and offered it to them, saying,
‘Drink from it, all of you. This is my blood of the
covenant, which is poured out for many for the forgiveness
of sins.’ ”(cf. Matt. 26:26–28; Mark 14:22–25;
Luke 22:14–20; 1 Cor.11:17–29).
“They
devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and to
the fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer”
(Acts 2:42).
“Whenever
you eat this bread and drink this cup, you proclaim the Lord’s
death until he comes. Therefore, whoever eats the bread or
drinks the cup of the Lord in an unworthy manner will be guilty
of sinning against the body and blood of the Lord. A man ought
to examine himself before he eats of the bread and drinks
of the cup. For anyone who eats and drinks without recognizing
the body of the Lord eats and drinks judgment on himself”
(1 Cor.11:26–29).
What
does the Lutheran church believe about the Lord’s Supper?
[top]
The
Lutheran church believes, teaches and confesses that the Lord’s
Supper is the true body and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ,
under the bread and wine, given to us Christians to eat and
to drink. We hold that the bread and the wine in the Supper
are the true body and blood of Christ and that these are given
and received into the mouths of all who commune. Those who
believe the promise: “Given and shed for you for the
forgiveness of sins,” receive forgiveness of sins, life
and salvation. This promise, along with the bodily eating
and drinking, is the main thing in the Sacrament.
The
Lutheran church rejects and condemns incorrect understandings
of the Lord’s Supper, such as the view that the sacrifice
of the Mass delivers man from his sins, or that the substance
of the consecrated bread and wine is actually changed into
the body and blood of Christ. We also reject and condemn the
view that in the Lord’s Supper the true body and blood
of Christ is not received by the mouth of the communicants,
under the bread and wine, but is received only spiritually
in the heart by faith, or that the bread and wine are only
symbols of the far-distant body and blood of our Lord.
How
is the Lord’s Supper an expression of church fellowship?
[top]
While
the Lord’s Supper is always a personal matter, it is
never a private matter. That is an important truth that is
often overlooked. Those who commune at the same altar are
thereby declaring publically that they are united in the doctrine
of the Apostles (Acts 2:42). Therefore, fellowship in the
Supper is church fellowship. This is what is taught by Holy
Scripture in 1 Cor. 10 and 11. Here is how one of our church’s
teachers explained this truth.
“As
there is but one bread, one loaf, from which we eat, so we
who are eating of this loaf are one body. The eating of one
and the same loaf of bread unifies us to one body. Our participation
in the Lord’s Supper is a public profession on our part
that we are not only in fellowship with Christ, but that we
also are in fellowship with those with whom we commune at
the Lord’s Table. We all eat the same bread, the body
of Christ. Through that act we indicate that we belong together.
All of us Christians who in the Lord’s Supper eat the
body of Christ and drink His blood present ourselves as one
spiritual family. What we eat and drink together, Christ’s
body and blood, ties us together more closely than the bonds
of blood. We declare ourselves to be brothers and sisters
in Christ. Upon this Bible passage do we base the saying, ‘Altar
Fellowship is Church Fellowship.’
“This
passage in Corinthians strikes a crushing blow at unionism.
To admit those who believe differently to our Communion, and
so to our church fellowship, is a contradiction in itself.
For those who approach the same altar together profess to
be one—one in all points of Christian doctrine and practice—while
in reality they disagree. It would be shameful hypocrisy on
our part if we would have those who actually profess a different
faith than we do join us at the Lord’s Altar”
(Stoeckhardt, 1 Corinthians, p.60–61).
What
About...Fellowship in the Lord’s Supper? [top]
Another
teacher of our church had this to say about why the Lord’s
Supper is an expression of church fellowship: “The Holy
Supper is one of the marks, one of the banners of the church,
one of the seals of the church’s doctrine and faith
(Rom.4:11; see 1 Cor.10:21; Ex.12:48). In whichever church
one receives the Holy Supper, one is confessing that church
and its doctrine. There cannot be a more inward, brotherly
fellowship than that into which one enters with those in whose
fellowship he receives the holy Supper...Even one who confesses
the Real Presence cannot ordinarily, except in the case of
death, be admitted if he is and wants to remain, not a member
of our orthodox church, but rather a Roman Catholic, Reformed,
so-called Evangelical or Unionist, Methodist, Baptist, in
short, a member of an erring fellowship. For the Sacrament,
as it is a seal of faith, is also the banner of the fellowship
in which it is administered” (Walther, Pastoral
Theology, p.110–111, 149).
What
is the Lutheran church’s motive for practicing close
communion?
[top]
Our
Synod’s Commission on Theology and Church Relations
offers the following helpful explanation of why we practice
close communion: “Close communion seeks to prevent a
profession of confessional unity in faith where there is,
in fact, disunity and disagreement. It would be neither faithful
to the Scriptural requirements for admission to Holy Communion
(1 Cor. 11:27ff; cf. 10:16–17) nor helpful to fallen
humanity if the Christian Church welcomes to its altars those
who deny or question clear Scriptural teachings.
“The
reasons for the practice of close Communion are often misunderstood
by Christians who have been accustomed to an ‘open Communion’
policy. In a tract titled, Why Close Communion? the
rationale for the practice of close communion is explained
in this way: ‘So it is not that a Lutheran congregation
wants to bar fellow- saints from the blessings of the Eucharist
when they practice Close Communion. It is not that they want
to be separatistic, or set themselves up as judges of other
men. The practice of Close Communion is prompted by love and
is born of the heartfelt conviction, on the basis of Scripture
alone, that we must follow Christ’s command. This means
refusing the Lord’s Supper to those whose belief is
not known to us. It is not showing love to allow a person
to do something harmful, even though he may think it is for
his own good. It also means if they are members of a Christian
body which departs from the full truth of the Scripture in
some of its doctrines, that we must not minimize the evil
of this false teaching by opening our fellowship to any and
all Christians who err in the faith’ [Deffner, Why
Close Communion?, p.14].
“In
keeping with the principle that the celebration and reception
of the Lord’s Supper is a confession of the unity of
faith, while at the same time recognizing that there will
be instances when sensitive pastoral care needs to be exercised,
the Synod has established an official practice requiring,
‘that pastors and congregations of The Lutheran Church—
Missouri Synod, except in situations of emergency and in special
cases of pastoral care, commune individuals of only those
synods that are now in fellowship with us. By following this
practice whereby only those individuals who are members of
the Synod or of a church body with which the Synod is in altar
and pulpit fellowship are ordinarily communed, pastors and
congregations preserve the integrity of their witness to the
Gospel of Christ as it is revealed in the Scriptures and confessed
in the Lutheran confessional writings.’”
“The
Office of the Keys is less than faithfully exercised when
admission to the Sacrament is granted to all who come to the
altar regardless of their faith and congregational and/or
denominational affiliation. The practice of open Communion
renders it difficult, if not impossible, for church discipline
to be exercised in a way that honors the ministrations being
carried out by those to whom the responsibility of spiritual
care for a member of God’s flock has been entrusted”
(Heb. 13:17; cf. John 20:22–23; Acts 20:27–28;
1 Cor. 4:1–2. Theology and Practice of the Lord’s
Supper, pp.21–23).
Conclusion
[top]
On
the basis of God’s Holy Word, our Lutheran church continues
to practice the ancient, Biblical and confessional practice
of close communion as an opportunity to give joyful witness
to our unity in the true faith. We practice close communion
with the belief that this is what the Lord would have us do
as we faithfully administer His body and blood in His holy
Sacrament.
Close
communion is not a practice unique to The Lutheran Church—Missouri
Synod. It is also practiced by the majority of Christians
in the world who are members of the Roman Catholic and Orthodox
communions.
Hopefully,
this brief explanation will help you, or someone else, understand
that our love for our Lord and His Sacrament, and our love
for the individual, is the reason why we practice close communion.
—
Dr.A.L.Barry President
The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod
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