April 18,
2019
1
Corinthians 11.23-26; John 13.1-17, 31b-35
+ Tonight, we are in the midst of a
mystery. Tonight we commemorate the mystery of Christ happening to us. We commemorate an event in our
lives as Christians that has changed us and affected us and transformed us and
made our spiritual lives better.
Tonight, we commemorate that
incredible and amazing miracle—the institution of the Holy Eucharist. Tonight, we remember the fact that Jesus took
bread, broke it, gave it and said, “This is my body,” and that he did the same
with the wine and said, “This is my blood,”
And that by doing so, something
incredible happened. Christ happened. God in Christ broke through to us. God
broke through to us and incredible and wonderful way.
Every Sunday, we participate in this
incredible, holy event. We
come together. We celebrate together
this mystery. We come
forward and take this bread and drink from this cup and, in doing so, we take
the Body and Blood of Christ. Every Sunday, our congregation celebrates this
mystery, this miracle and this incredible conduit in which God still continues
to come to us in this tangible, real way.
In this bread and wine we share, Christ
happens to us. Christ is present with us
in a unique and wonderful way.
And recognizing this presence, how can we be anything other than in awe of it?
We should be blown away by
what is happening on our altar. And we
should remind ourselves that, no matter what we believe, Jesus is our spiritual
food.
I will hear from people who tell me
that it was this holy event of the Eucharist that converted them and changed them and
transformed them. And that amazes me.
I’m sure there are people out there
who see what we do as archaic.
There are even some Christians out there who say we don’t need Holy Communion
every Sunday.
I disagree.
We need Holy Communion every Sunday.
One of the reasons I came back to Church
and have stayed in the Church as long as I have is this one act of the Church. Even when I wandered away from the Church and
journeyed about in my own spiritual journey, I oftentimes found myself craving
what I had always experienced in the Eucharist. And it was this deep desire for the Eucharist
that brought me back to the Church in my twenties.
The reason we come to church is so
we can experience God’s presence. What
better way than in in the Bread and the Wine and in one another? The reason we come to church is to be
strengthened in our everyday faith life. We come to church to be fed spiritually, so
that we can be sustained spiritually.
And the amazing fact is, people are
still being transformed by this event.
Each of us is transformed by what we do here. And so is anyone who comes to our altars and
experiences God’s Spirit coming to us in this bread and wine.
This is why Holy Communion is so
important. This is why we celebrate this
miracle every Sunday.
There is nothing else like this kind
of worship in the Church. It is one of
the most intimate forms of worship we can know. Christ truly comes among us and feeds us with the
Spirit. We form a bond
with Christ in Communion that is so strong and so vital to our spiritual lives.
But Jesus tells us tonight, on the
eve of his death, on the eve of his leaving us, that he will not leave us
without something. Rather, he will leave
us with a sign of his love for us.
As John tells us tonight, “Having
loved his own who were in the world, he loved them to the end.”
He loved us even at the end so that
he could leave us something to nourish us and sustain us until he comes to us
again. He leaves us this
wonderful and amazing sign of God’s sustaining us.
But Holy Communion is more than just
being fed in our bodies. What
we learn at this altar of ours, when celebrate the Eucharist together and we
share Holy Communion together is that, Jesus is our Bread of Life, our cup of
Salvation, that Jesus is
the Body given for us and the Blood shed for us, whenever we are starving or
thirsting spiritually.
When we feel empty and lost, God comes
to us and refreshes us. God feeds our
spirit with that presence of absolute love in our lives.
In other words, what Jesus is saying
to us is: this is what will fulfill you.
This God who feeds us, with Spirit,
with food. God then becomes the very staple of our spiritual lives. God is the One who feeds that hunger we have
deep within us, who quenches that seemingly unquenchable thirst that drives us
and provokes us. God fills
the voids of our lives with this life-giving Presence.
But it’s more than just a moment.
This love that we experience in this
Communion, is love that we can’t just hug to ourselves and bask in privately. This love we experience in this Eucharist is a
love that is meant, like the Bread and the Cup, to be shared with others.
“Love one another,” is Jesus’
commandment to us in those moments before he is betrayed, in those hours before
he is tortured, on the eve of his brutal murder.
“Just as I have loved you, you
should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples,
if you have love for one another.”
Communion—and the love we experience
in it—is not just something we do here in church on Sunday mornings or on
Maundy Thursday. It is
something we take with us when we go from here. It is something we take out into the world
from here.
As Christians, we are not only
supposed to share the Body and the Blood of Christ wherever we go because we
carry those elements within us.
We are to become the Body and
Blood of Christ to those who need Christ.
And because we carry those elements
within us, we are to feed those who are not just hungry of body, but are hungry
of mind and spirit as well.
We are to share and BE the Body and
Blood of Jesus with all of those we encounter in the world.
How do we do
this? We do it simply by loving. By
loving and accepting fully and completely.
That is how we live this Eucharist in our lives in joyful thanksgiving.
So, as we go from here this evening,
during the rest of this Holy Week and especially during the holy season of
Easter, let us go out into the world remembering what we carry within us. Let us remember WHO we are carrying within us. Let us remember what nourishes
us, what sustains us, what quenches our own spiritual hunger and thirst. Let us go out, refreshed and
filled with life-giving bread and life-refreshing cup—following Jesus and
serving God, who feeds us with his very self.
But let us go out also into the
world ready to share that bread and cup that gives such life to us. Let us show it in our actions and show it in
our words. Let us show it
by living out that commandment of love to all. Let that Presence of God within us nourish
those around us just as it nourishes us.
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