Until He Comes: The Lord's Supper as Memorial and Proclamation
1 Corinthians 11:23-26 • Luke 22:14-20
The Lord's Supper as a memorial ordinance — looking back to the cross, looking forward to the return, proclaiming Christ's death until He comes
Christocentric / Non-Denominational
Jesus Christ as the center of all theology
Do This in Remembrance: A Commanded Memorial
The Photo on the Mantel
Every family has a photo on the mantel — someone who has gone before. When you pick up that photo and look at it, you are not just looking at pixels or chemistry on paper. You are reconnecting. You are feeling again. The person is present to you in memory and in love. The Lord's Supper is the photo on the mantel of the church. Christ is not physically present in the bread and cup — but He is present to us as we hold these elements and look at them with faith. The memorial becomes the meeting.
Source: Zwingli / Evangelical memorial view of communion
You Proclaim His Death: Communion as Evangelism
Until He Comes: The Forward-Looking Supper
Applications
- 1Come to the table with full attention. Put down your phone. Set aside distraction. The Lord's Supper deserves your full presence.
- 2Examine yourself before receiving (1 Corinthians 11:28). Not to disqualify yourself, but to come honestly — confessing what needs to be confessed, receiving what needs to be received.
- 3Tell someone why you love communion. The table should prompt testimony. Let it today.
- 4Come anticipating the next meal. Jesus promised to drink it new in the kingdom. Let that hope give you joy at this table.
Prayer Suggestions
- Lord Jesus, we come to this table in obedience to Your command. "Do this in remembrance of Me." We do. We remember.
- We proclaim Your death as we receive these elements. Every person at this table is declaring: what You did on the cross was for me, and I receive it by faith.
- Come, Lord Jesus. We practice at this table for the Marriage Supper we anticipate. Let the hope of that day brighten this one.
- For anyone at this table who has never trusted You: the Gospel is being proclaimed right now. The invitation is open. Come to the greater table — salvation — through faith. Amen.
Preaching Toolkit
Saving Private Ryan (1998)
The old man at the cemetery in the film's opening asks: "Have I lived a life worthy of what was done for me?" That is the question every soldier who survived at another's cost must face. Every communion service asks the same question. Christ died. We live. The bread and cup remind us of the price and ask: are you living worthy of it? Not to earn what was given — but to honor it.
3 Voices
Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition
The Lord's Supper is a memorial, a proclamation, and an anticipation. We look back to the cross, we meet the living Christ, and we lean forward to the kingdom.
Come to this table honestly. Bring your failures, your doubts, your weariness. The supper is not for people who have it together. It is for people who need a Savior.
Paul says we "proclaim" at this table. That is a preaching word. Every time you receive communion, you are preaching a sermon — to yourself, to the congregation, to any unbeliever watching.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is the evangelical view of communion?
Evangelicals generally hold a "memorial" or "symbolic" view — the bread and cup are symbols that represent and memorialize the body and blood of Christ, not literally or physically present in the elements. Jesus's command "Do this in remembrance of me" is understood as establishing a commemorative meal that proclaims His death until His return.
How often should evangelicals take communion?
Evangelical churches vary widely — monthly, weekly, or quarterly are all common. The New Testament does not specify a frequency beyond "whenever" (1 Corinthians 11:26). Many evangelical scholars argue for more frequent communion than is typical, since the early church appears to have observed it weekly.
This Sermon in Other Traditions
See how 16 other Christian traditions approach the communion / lord's supper sermon.