In Remembrance: The Baptist Ordinance of the Lord's Supper
1 Corinthians 11:23-26 • Luke 22:14-20
The Lord's Supper as a symbolic memorial ordinance for believers only — juice (not wine), open or close communion, local church authority
Baptist (Distinctive)
Soul liberty, believer's baptism, and local church autonomy
Ordinance, Not Sacrament: Why the Word Matters
The Wedding Ring
A wedding ring does not create a marriage. It does not convey love. It does not bind two people together in any magical or mechanical way. But a wedding ring is not nothing. It is the visible, physical, public symbol of a commitment that exists in the heart. When a spouse looks at their ring, they remember their vows. The ring prompts, reinforces, declares. The Lord's Supper is the wedding ring of the covenant — not the covenant itself, but the physical symbol that reminds us of what we have committed to and what has been promised to us.
Source: Baptist ordinance theology / Memorial view
Who May Come: Baptists and Table Fellowship
Grape Juice: The Baptist Table and Abstinence
Applications
- 1Come to the table as a believer. The Lord's Supper is for those who know why they are there. Take a moment to examine yourself.
- 2Receive slowly. Baptist communion is often rushed. Let the bread and cup prompt genuine reflection on the cross.
- 3Teach the ordinance to your children. They observe it before they receive it — that observation period is catechesis.
- 4Thank Jesus. The ordinance is His command, but behind the command is His love. The table is a gift.
Prayer Suggestions
- Lord Jesus, we do this because You said to. Obedience is love — let this be an act of love.
- We remember. We remember the cross. We remember the blood. We remember the price.
- Examine our hearts, Lord. Is there sin to confess? Is there forgiveness to receive? Meet us here.
- We look forward to the day when we will drink it new in Your kingdom. Come quickly. Until then — we do this. Amen.
Preaching Toolkit
Courageous (2011)
The resolution in Courageous is a covenant — fathers signing a document pledging to their families and to God. The physical act of signing does not create the commitment — it declares and confirms it. Baptist communion works the same way: the bread and cup do not create what they represent. They declare it. They confirm it. Every time you receive the Lord's Supper, you are re-signing the covenant of faith.
3 Voices
Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition
The Lord's Supper is an ordinance — a commanded practice of the church — not a sacrament that conveys grace. The grace was given at the cross. The table helps us remember it.
Come to this table knowing what it means. The bread is His body broken. The cup is His blood shed. For you. Receive it that way — personally, gratefully, in faith.
Many Baptist churches rush through communion in five minutes as an afterthought to the main service. Jesus called it the supper — a meal, not a footnote. Give it the weight it deserves.
More Titles
Frequently Asked Questions
Why do Baptists call communion an "ordinance" rather than a "sacrament"?
Baptists use "ordinance" to emphasize that communion is a commanded practice (ordained by Christ) rather than a means of saving grace. Sacraments in Catholic and some Protestant traditions convey grace through the elements. Baptists believe the grace was given at the cross; communion is the commanded memorial that helps believers remember and proclaim what Christ did.
Why do many Baptist churches serve grape juice instead of wine?
The use of grape juice was popularized in Baptist and Methodist churches in the 19th century through the influence of the temperance movement. The concern is the principle of not being a stumbling block to those who struggle with alcohol. Most Baptist churches maintain this practice, arguing that the element is secondary to the memorial meaning.
This Sermon in Other Traditions
See how 16 other Christian traditions approach the communion / lord's supper sermon.