Professional Documents
Culture Documents
John Fehlen
John Fehlen 2
The dinner table is set. The food is hot and plentiful. Family and friends have gathered to
enjoy not only the food but also the warmth of fellowship,whereby affirming love and
admiration for one another around the backdrop of a common meal. The setting is glorious and
poised with possibility and yet, unforeseen to the naked eye lurks the enemy to both food and
fellowship: division.
Nothing can make a morsel taste blander and cause fellowship to fall flatter then animosity
and general distain for one another. Unresolved issues, bitterness, neglect and the like will often
steal the joy from a gathering and leave the attendees with a gaping void even though food was
consumed. The situation was similar when the Apostle Paul stuck his theological and pastoral
nose into the church of Corinth. What he found was a group of people that were ‘coming
together’ but not truly ‘being together.’ That condition still largely exists within the church of
today. Paul says in 1 Corinthians 11:20, when the church ‘come[s] together, it is not the Lord’s
Supper you eat, for as you eat, each of you goes ahead without waiting for anybody else.” The
words of Ben Witherington III capture the scenario perfectly: “the meal had become a mess.”1
When there is a mess in the church the tendency is to eradicate the potential of future
unsightliness whereby avoiding subsequent messes altogether. This has been the case in many
sectors of the church in regards to the gifts of the Holy Spirit (most particularly ‘speaking in
tongues), and the same possibility exists in regards to the Lord’s Supper. From a denominational
standpoint, the sacrament is open for such a wide variety of interpretation, and unfortunately it
would seem simpler (less messy) for the Lord’s Supper to be done away with as a whole. But
that was not the intention of Paul in his writings found in 1 Corinthians – he wanted to inspire
reform and renewal to communion and foster greater and deeper community within the church of
John Fehlen 3
Jesus Christ. He was contending that the mess become a meal again. This essay will contend for
the same thing by exploring the connection between the Lord’s Supper and the ancient Love
Feast. Over time even the best of traditions, habits or rituals can get stale and lifeless,
desperately in need of an infusion of new passion and purpose. Often the best source of renewal
can be discovered in that which gave the tradition life and vitality in the first place. In the
ordinance of the Lord’s Supper it is the conviction that vitality can be found in the Love Feast.
At the center of the debate regarding the Lord’s Supper is the relationship it may have had
to the Passover. There is absolutely no consensus on this matter. Much of the confusion involves
differences in the synoptic gospel accounts to that of the Fourth Gospel. The Johannine account
placed the Last Supper ‘before the feast of the Passover (John 13:1, 2, 21-30) whereas the
synoptic gospel writers claim it grew out of the Passover Meal. There are a number of potential
The appropriate focus is upon the meal itself not discrepancies regarding the timing of the
meal. As an example, a family will tend to eat supper around the ‘dinner hour’ – that could be at
5 pm, 7 pm or perhaps later depending upon circumstances. Yet it is still supper. William
Barclay asserts that ‘the Passover meal not only consisted of ceremonial steps (bitter herbs, small
pieces of bread shared) but also of a proper meal – one of hungry men, in that no food was to be
eaten after the sacrifice of the lamb in the temple until the Passover meal itself.”2 It was a meal
of remembrance and celebration for the handiwork of the Lord in taking the children of Israel out
of bondage in Egypt. Even church reformer Huldrych Zwingli (1484-1531) would often equate
Whether or not the template for the Passover meal was carried over into what would be
known as The Lord’s Supper (or Communion, or Eucharist) is unclear. What is apparent is that
the words and actions of Jesus at that final meal with his disciples (regardless of what day it
happened on) seems to follow the liturgy of the Passover to some degree. Bread was broken,
drink was shared and a commemoration ensued, notably for that of the Passover lamb that was
slain that mankind might live eternally. This remembrance and celebration revolved around a
common meal – a happy meal that clearly marked the early church.
Breaking Of Bread
The two men that walked with Jesus on the road to Emmaus certainly got an eye full. Luke
24:30 writes that “[Jesus] was at the table with them, he took bread, gave thanks, broke it and
began to give it to them. Then their eyes were opened and they recognized him.” This post-
resurrection encounter undoubtedly reminded them of their final meal with the Messiah. This
relational model of eating and sharing together carried over to the first church in the Book of
Acts. The burgeoning church was committed to learning from the apostles, to fellowship, prayer
and to the breaking of bread. Witherington reasons “a good case can be made that ‘breaking of
bread’ was Luke’s shorthand for the special Christian meal that came to be called the Lord’s
Supper by the time Paul wrote 1 Corinthians. The earliest Christian meetings then were
characterized not just by acts we would today associate with worship, but also by sharing meals
in common and indeed other kinds of property as well.”4 As the church moved beyond Jerusalem
and the Jewish influence was less of a dominant role in its development, it is possible that a
combination of sorts took place with the annual Passover celebration and the regular ‘breaking of
bread.’ Corporate worship would happen not only in the temple but also in homes, therefore an
extension of ordinary early Jewish worship context would be the Jewish meal, also known as the
John Fehlen 5
Love Feast (Jude 12). Within this framework, the gathered congregation would often
commemorate the communal Lord’s Supper. A congregation, incidentally, that was increasingly
growing in number with those that were being saved. New Christians, then and now, will often
bring with them many of their former habits, dysfunctions and immoral behaviors. Thus was the
Throughout the first letter to the Corinthians, the Apostle Paul dealt aggressively with
abuses, excess, and divisions. He was on a corrective warpath in an effort to bring the church
back to the truth of the Gospel and away from their Greco-Roman leanings. In no uncertain
terms, he forbid them from partaking in their drinking parties at the pagan temples. He argued,
“You cannot drink the cup of the Lord and the cup of demons too; you cannot have part in both
the Lord’s table and the table of demons” (1 Cor. 10:21). The Corinthian Christians were
definitely a work in progress, and understanding this reality helps one grasp the nature of the
abuses at their Love Feasts that were ‘do[ing] more harm than good.’
The term ‘Lord’s Supper’ only occurs once in Scripture: 1 Corinthians 11:20. Notably,
the reference is sandwiched within a strong rebuke from Paul. Thankfully, had there not been a
mess to clean up in Corinth there would be considerably less to draw from for our understanding
of the Lord’s Supper. It is possible that had there been no ‘disorder’ then there might have never
been a need for Paul’s rebuke and teaching. The primary abuse at the Corinthian Love Feast
involved neglect of the poor, the slaves, the less fortunate, and those on the fringe of the
community. Simply put, the ‘haves’ had forgotten the ‘have-nots’. It is in this context that one of
the most widely recognized passages of Scripture is introduced. 1 Corinthians 11:23 begins with
“For I received from the Lord what I also passed onto you….” Many within Christianity would
John Fehlen 6
have some point of recognition with this passage. Gordon Fee observes:
In fact the greatest difficulty in reconstructing the problem is to overcome our own
familiarity with part of the text (at least vs. 23-26, often vv. 23-32), which usually has been
informed within a given liturgical setting. This is true even of – perhaps one should say,
warning against improper participation – meaning ‘if one has sin in one’s life’ – and
Fee is a strong proponent of the Lord’s Supper being an extension of the ‘fellowship meal’
known as the Love Feast – a meal that was intended to be open and available to all, not just the
rich and spiritual. The Corinthian church had been eating and drinking ‘without recognizing the
body of the Lord’ (1 Cor. 11:29). The ‘body’ in this verse is the church. Paul’s strong challenge
to Corinthians was to honor the Body – Jesus’ church. Fee goes on to emphasize:
The very Table that is God’s reminder, and therefore his repeated gift, of grace…has
been allowed to become a table of condemnation for the very people who most truly need
the assurance of acceptance that this table affords - the sinful, the weak, the weary. One
does not have to ‘get rid of sin in one’s life’ in order to partake. Here by faith one may
once again receive the assurance that ‘Christ receiveth sinners.’ One wonders whether
our making the text deal with self-examination has not served to deflect the greater
concern of the text, that we give more attention at the Lord’s Supper to our relationships
with one another in the body of Christ. It is the Lord’s Supper, after all, not ours. Our
task - and joy - is to receive anew the benefits of his grace in the context of truly
The Lord’s Supper was originally intended to be a meal that would destratify the hierarchy and
John Fehlen 7
invite equality among its participants. Remarkably, the Last Supper had a man named Judas
seated at the table with Jesus (not to mention Peter who denied the Master and all the other
disciples that ran after his arrest!). The Love Feast was intentioned as a gathering point for all
that would come…”from the highways and hedges…come in so that my house may be filled”
such as referenced in Jesus’ parable in Luke 14:23. Over time the Lord’s Supper had gotten to be
a mess that was characterized by exclusion and a pecking order. Could this be what Paul was
imploring the Corinthians to ‘examine’ before eating and drinking? Had they stopped
‘recognizing the body of the Lord’ and thereby grown weak and sick within their fellowship?
Paul wanted to bring correction to their mealtime not eradication. He implored them to
wait for others and share with others. The entire context of the familiar 1 Corinthians 11 passage
is clearly about others. Communion and Community. Veli-Matti Karkkainen addresses the
context regarding ‘discerning the body’: “As far as I can tell from the literature, it has been
understood exclusively along the canons of older exegesis in terms of moral lapses and
failures…contemporary exegesis argues that what Paul had in mind was discerning the unity of
the body of Christ, meaning the church…not the unworthiness of the celebrants because of their
failure in their private Christian walks, but breaches in the fellowship.”7 Karkkainen continues:
Because Christians have a personal fellowship with Christ, they can also have personal
fellowship with one another. As such, the Lord’s Supper expresses the fundamental
equality of all God’s people. Also, believers at the Table are not side-by-side as unrelated
individuals, because the Supper is a fellowship (koinonia) meal at which the believers are
entering communion, concerns not so much the members’ direct relation to God as their
This fundamental understanding is supported by Witherington as well when he says, “No one is
worthy of partaking of the Lord’s Supper; it’s not a matter of personal worth. Paul is rather
concerned with the abuse in the actions of the participants, or at least some of them. Paul says
that those who partake in an unworthy manner, abusing the privilege, are liable or guilty in some
sense of the body and blood of Jesus.”9 Paul finished the rebuke in chapter 11 the same way he
began it, by asking the church to wait for one another and share the meal together. The Love
Feast and the corresponding Lord’s Supper were to be a point of rejoicing for all and by all. Yes,
it was messy. But rather than do away with the meal entirely because of the mess, Paul restored
order, direction, passion and purpose. The same cannot be said across the landscape of organized
In the years that followed Paul’s admonishing words, a progressive shift went into
motion. The meal became something exclusive in which only the baptized could be allowed to
partake. Rules that simply do not exist within Scripture would soon regulate the meal. Soon the
meal would not function in its original form whatsoever. Barclay notes: “Whether the movement
was in the right direction or not is something which we cannot at the moment lay down, but
movement there was from the house to the Church, from real meal to symbolic meal, from
simplicity to elaboration, from devotion to theology, from the concrete to the abstract, from the
layman to the priest.”10 The Didache (Teaching of the Twelve Apostles), dated at the end of the
1st Century declared that the Lord’s Supper was for baptized Christians, particularly those who
repented of their sins.11 This document also regulated when the Lord’s Supper should take place
and by whom, specifically that it should be governed by and prayed over by the cleric. By A.D.
110 Ignatius wrote: “It is not permitted either to baptize or to hold a love feast without the
John Fehlen 9
bishop. But whatever he approves is acceptable to God, so that everything you do should be
secure and valid.”12 As the years elapsed so did the value and validity of the Love Feast. By the
4th Century, at the Council of Laodicea, the Love Feast was banned in the universal (Catholic)
church. This was reaffirmed at the Council of Trullian in A.D. 692. In conjunction with the
abolition of the Love Feast there was a move towards reductionism in regards to the Lord’s
Supper. The elements (bread and drink) would become more regulated, disposable, and self-
contained to the point that Bishop Will Willimon humorously (yet perhaps appropriately) asserts:
Over the years both the glasses and the wafers got smaller until the church seemed to
have a make-believe meal without food…I finally said ‘enough is enough’ a couple of
years ago when I read of man in the West, who, believing that the Lord’s Supper is time-
consuming and cumbersome because of the individual cups involved, has begun
marketing a product for those in a hurry. He produces airtight packets, which contain a
cracker like pellet in one compartment and two grams of grape juice in another
is my body packaged for you.” There you have it. The last hindrance to totally self-
need never come into contact with or be touched by another human being again. Just
when you thought modern life had depersonalized the gospel to the uttermost, we have
Certainly it is not difficult to hear the tone of sarcasm in Willimon's comments and yet in
Protestant circles (and even within Pentecostalism) there is a propensity for the Lord’s Supper to
become stale, lifeless and void of community – no longer a meal – now a mess of another kind.
John Fehlen 10
Perhaps the Apostle Paul’s words to Corinth carry weight for the church yet today. Can the meal
be recovered? Can the Lord’s Supper and the Love Feast be reconnected in these days?
There was a time when Christianity was new, and the relatively few Christians on the
planet could fit into a few homes and share everything in common. Those days are gone. The
tiny upstart rag-tag band in the Book of Acts is now a full-fledged movement with 60-minute
services on multi-site campuses. How do we reclaim the Love Feast in the McChurch era? How
For some churches that adjustment may be minor. Perhaps it could give more focus to the
Lord’s Supper within the service instead of it being an afterthought or addendum. Perhaps small
groups could become the epicenter of community life in which there is ‘breaking of bread’ in
homes and true fellowship is shared within the context of communion. For other congregations
the shift may need to be more radical. If the worship has been consistently lifeless and cold and
community life is non-existent then true reform may be appropriate. Huldrych Zwingli was in
many regards a spiritual reformer. His undeniable boldness in matters of Scriptural adherence in
the face of organizational taboos is to be commended. Shortly before Easter, Zwingli and his
closest associates requested to cancel the mass and to introduce a new public order of worship.
On April 13, 1525, Zwingli celebrated communion under his new liturgy. Wooden cups and
plates were used to avoid any outward displays of formality. The congregation sat at set tables to
emphasize the meal aspect of the sacrament. Zwingli then proposed to limit the celebration of
communion to four times a year14 – which most certainly felt like an earthquake in the church
Could reform of that nature be paramount in today’s church? Have we made a mess out of
what was supposed to be a meal? There are so many practical implications to consider. Does the
church move back into homes? Is a full meal offered during every worship service? Should
smaller sanctuaries be built to make room for larger fellowship halls? The answers are not
immediate, but what remains is a desire for koinonia – that the church may truly celebrate “until
He comes,” and when He does all meals will be superseded by the messianic banquet.
Notes
1
Ben Witherington III, Making a Meal of It: Rethinking the Theology of the Lord’s
Supper (Waco, TX: Baylor Press. 2007)
2
William Barclay, The Lord’s Supper (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press.
2001), 20.
3
W.P. Stephens, The Theology of Huldrych Zwingli (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1986),
64-66.
4
Witherington, Making a Meal of It. 30.
5
Gordon Fee, The First Epistle to the Corinthians (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans
Publishing Company. 1987), 531.
6
Fee, The First Epistle to the Corinthians, 566.
7
Veli-Matt Karkkainen, The Lord’s Supper: The Pentecostal View, ed. Gordon T. Smith
(Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2008), 134.
8
Ibid. 131.
9
Witherington, Making a Meal of It. 58.
10
Barclay, The Lord’s Supper. 117.
11
Witherington, Making a Meal of It. 95.
12
Ibid. 100.
13
Ibid. 128.
14
Ulrich Gäbler, Huldrych Zwingli: His Life and Work (Philadelphia: Fortress Press,
1986), 105-106.
John Fehlen 13
Bibliography
Barclay, William. The Lord’s Supper. Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 2001.
Ciampa, Frank G. The Spirit of the Reformation: A Guidebook for Restoring and Reforming the
Lord’s Supper in Worship. Xulon Press, 2007.
Fee, Gordon. The First Epistle to the Corinthians. Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans Publishing
Company, 1987.
Gäbler, Ulrich. Huldrych Zwingli: His Life and Work. Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1986.
Just, Arthur A. The Ongoing Feast: Table Fellowship and Eschatology at Emmaus. Collegeville,
MN: Liturgical Press, 1993.
Karkkainen, Veli-Matt. The Lord’s Supper: The Pentecostal View, ed. Gordon T. Smith.
Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2008.
McLaren, Brian. Finding our Way Again: The Return of the Ancient Practices. Nashville, TN:
Thomas Nelson, 2008.
Packer, J.I., Merrill C. Tenney and William White, Jr. The World of the New Testament.
Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson, 1982.
Segler, Franklin M. and C. Randall Bradley. Christian Worship: Its Theology and Practice. B*H
Publishing Group, 2006.
Stephens, W.P. The Theology of Huldrych Zwingli. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1986.
Uhlhorn, Gerhard. Conflict of Christianity with Heathenism. New York: Charles Scribner’s
Sons, 1908.
Witherington III, Ben. Making a Meal of It: Rethinking the Theology of the Lord’s Supper.
Waco, TX: Baylor Press, 2007.