3-5. The Importance Of The Breaking Of Bread 
      Quite rightly, the breaking of bread is at the centre of our Christian 
        lives. But because there is something very special about that meeting, 
        there can be a tendency to regard it and the bread and wine as having 
        some kind of mystical aura about them. This results in the meeting not 
        being as meaningful and helpful to us as it should be. Yet at the other 
        extreme, over familiarity with it can result in our not according it the 
        vital importance which we should. In this study we want to analyze the 
        basic aspects of the breaking of bread.  
      A Memorial Meeting
      Our understanding of it is greatly helped by appreciating that the breaking 
        of bread is the New Covenant's equivalent of the Passover feast. The Passover 
        meal was in order to remember the great salvation which God had wrought 
        for all Israel at the Red Sea. Egypt, representing the power of sin, was 
        gloriously vanquished there. Yet the faithful Israelite of all ages was 
        to also proclaim that "This is done because of that which the Lord 
        did unto me when I came forth out of Egypt" (Ex. 13:8). Our memorial 
        meeting has this same two fold structure; remembering the deliverance 
        which God wrought for us personally, as well as for the whole community 
        of the redeemed. This is why at the breaking of bread there ought to be 
        an awareness of personal fellowship with God, and also with each other, 
        and with those who have gone before. The equivalent of our Red Sea experience 
        is baptism (1 Cor. 10:1). It is not unreasonable to conclude that in our 
        very personal meditations at the breaking of bread, we should think back 
        to our own baptism, our deliverance from the bondage of our personal sins 
        and weaknesses. Paul speaks of "the cup of blessing which we bless" 
        (1 Cor. 10:16), probably using "blessing" in its Biblical sense 
        of 'forgiveness' (e.g. Acts 3:25,26). Whilst there is, therefore, an awareness 
        of our own sins and salvation from them at the memorial meeting, there 
        is not any specific mediation of forgiveness to us through the bread and 
        wine. In prospect, we were saved at baptism, through our Lord's work on 
        the cross. In prospect, all our sins were forgiven then. We must be careful 
        to avoid the Catholic notion that the bread and wine do themselves possess 
        some power of atonement. They are the appointed aids to help us remember 
        what has already been achieved. And this is why the early brethren could 
        break bread with joy- not as part of a guilt trip prompted by the worrying 
        remembrance of the standard set for us in Jesus (Acts 2:46).  
            Because we are remembering our great salvation, the memorial meeting 
              need not be a place for guilt tripping. Joachim Jeremias gives a 
              whole string of quotes from Rabbinic and historical writings that 
              indicate that “At the time of Jesus the diners sat down” 
              to eat (1). Yet the Gospel records are insistent 
              that Jesus and the disciples reclined at the last supper (Mt. 26:20; 
              Mk. 14:18; Lk. 22:14; Jn. 13:12,23,25,28). Yet at the Passover, 
              it was apparently common to recline, because as Rabbi Levi commented 
              “slaves eat standing, but here at the Passover meal people 
              should recline to eat, to signify that they have passed from slavery 
              to freedom”. The breaking of bread is thus stressed in the 
              records as being a symbol of our freedom from slavery. It should 
              not in that sense be a worrying experience, taking us on a guilt 
              trip. It is to celebrate the salvation and release from bondage 
              which has truly been achieved for us in Christ our passover.  
      Self Examination
      You may like to underline two phrases in your Bible in Matthew 26. "As 
        they did eat..." they began to keep asking Him [Gk.] "Lord, 
        is it I?" (Mt. 26:21)... and as they were eating Jesus took bread..." 
        (Mt. 26:26). The whole meeting, according to the Greek tenses, involved 
        the disciples asking "Lord, is it I?"- and as they were eating 
        the Lord shared bread and wine with them in the manner with which we are 
        familiar at our communion service. In other words, the entire gathering 
        was shot through with a spirit of urgent self-examination and recognition 
        of their own possibility of failure and betrayal of the Lord. For all 
        the joyful assurance which the communion speaks of, that assurance and 
        joy is rooted in this other aspect- of self-examination with the knowledge 
        that failure and betrayal of the Lord is a real possibility. The importance 
        of self examination at the breaking of bread is indirectly hinted at in 
        Jn. 13:10: “He who has bathed does not need to wash, except for 
        his feet”. This is surely a reference to how Num. 19:19 prescribed 
        that a Levite was required to take a plunge bath in order to be clean. 
        The Lord is therefore saying that all His people, when they partake of 
        His feast, are to present themselves as cleansed Levites. He understood 
        His people as all being part of a priesthood. Additionally, we need to 
        bear in mind that the Lord spoke those words just before the breaking 
        of bread, in response to how Peter did not want to participate in the 
        Lord’s meal if it meant the Lord washing him. Surely the Lord was 
        saying that baptism is a one time event- he has been thus bathed does 
        not need to wash again, or be re-baptized. But, he does need to periodically 
        wash his feet, which I would take to be a reference to the breaking of 
        bread which Peter seemed to want to avoid. Thus whilst forgiveness is 
        not mystically mediated through the bread and wine, there is all the same 
        a very distinct connection between the memorial meeting and forgiveness, 
        just as there is between baptism and forgiveness. To not break bread is 
        to walk away from that forgiveness in the blood of Jesus, just as to refuse 
        baptism is to do the same.  
      Once this is understood, the command to examine ourselves at the breaking 
        of bread will not result in a frantic listing of a few sins from the past 
        week, somehow hoping that taking the bread and wine will absolve us from 
        them. "If we would judge ourselves (at the breaking of bread), we 
        should not be judged" (1 Cor. 11:31) in the sense of being condemned. 
        Our self-examination must be so intense that we appreciate that we ought 
        to be condemned; if we achieve that level of self-knowledge now, we will 
        not be condemned at the judgment. In the context of the self-examination 
        command in 1 Cor. 11, Paul is speaking of the need to completely focus 
        our attention on the sacrifice of Christ. Yet this command must have its 
        basis in the directive for Israel to search their house for leaven before 
        eating the Passover (Ex. 12:19). "Therefore let us keep the feast, 
        not with old leaven...of malice and wickedness" (1 Cor. 5:8). The 
        disciples’ question at the first breaking of bread, “Lord, 
        is it I?” is another prototype of the command to examine ourselves 
        at the feast (Mt. 26:22). Combining Paul's command to examine ourselves 
        that we are really focusing upon our Lord's sacrifice, and the Exodus 
        allusion which implies that we should examine our own lives for wickedness, 
        we conclude that if we properly reflect upon Christ and His victory for 
        us, then we will inevitably be aware of our own specific failures which 
        Christ really has vanquished. But this will come as a by-product of truly 
        grasping the fullness of the Lord's victory. The Passover was to be a 
        public proclamation to the surrounding world of what God had done for 
        Israel. Likewise our feast 'shows forth' (Greek: publicly declares') the 
        Lord's death. Our memorial meeting should therefore include a degree of 
        openly declaring to others what spiritual deliverances the Lord has wrought 
        for us. This is surely the sort of talk that should fill up the half hour 
        between ending the service and leaving the hall.  
      If we really know Christ, if we love that salvation which He has achieved, 
        then we will want to break bread, often. "If ye love me, keep my 
        commandments". There can be no doubt that the bread and wine do make 
        our Lord come so real to us once again. The more an Israelite believed 
        that he really had been redeemed from Egypt, the more he would want to 
        keep the Passover. Likewise, our attitude to the breaking of bread is 
        a reflection of our confidence in salvation and forgiveness. Physical 
        isolation, Sunday School duties, unco-operative family members, none of 
        these things will stop the confident believer from breaking bread, alone 
        if necessary.  
      The Vital Importance Of Breaking Bread
      It is noteworthy that God's offer of deliverance from Egypt was conditional 
        on a number of things. One of these was that Israel would keep the Passover 
        to remember the great salvation God was going to achieve for them. So 
        often in the record it is stressed: "Ye shall observe this thing...for 
        ever...ye shall keep this service". For this reason, it is necessary 
        to explain before baptism (cp. the Passover salvation) that we must keep 
        the breaking of bread service. God's eagerness for them to remember shines 
        through the written word. The description of the memorial service as being 
        a 'proclamation' of the Lord's death (1 Cor. 11:26 RV) is an allusion 
        to the second of the four cups taken at the Jewish Passover: "the 
        cup of proclamation". This was drunk after the reading of Psalms 
        113 and 114, which proclaimed Yahweh's deliverance of Israel from Egypt. 
        Therefore our breaking bread is our proclamation that we really believe 
        that we have been saved out of this world, and are on the wilderness path 
        to the Kingdom. God forbid, really, that our breaking bread should come 
        down to mere ritual and habit. It is a very personal proclamation of our 
        own salvation- as well as that of the whole body of believers.  
             So important was it, that he that "forbeareth to keep the Passover, 
              even the same soul shall be cut off from among his people...that 
              man shall bear his sin" (Num. 9:13). It seems from Num. 9:10 
              and the examples of Hezekiah and Josiah's Passovers, that it was 
              more important to keep the Passover even if not everything was being 
              done exactly in order, even if there was a sense of unworthiness, 
              than to not do it at all. This should be borne in mind when some 
              feel 'unworthy' to take the emblems, or where there are genuine 
              problems in obtaining wine. Moses bound the people into covenant 
              relationship with the words: “Behold the blood of the covenant” 
              (Ex. 24:8). These very words were used by the Lord in introducing 
              the emblems of the breaking of bread (Mk. 14:24). This is how important 
              it is. We are showing that we are the covenant, special Israel of 
              God amidst a Gentile world. Indeed, “the blood of the covenant” 
              in later Judaism came to refer to the blood of circumcision (cp. 
              Gen. 17:10) and it could be that the Lord was seeking to draw a 
              comparison between circumcision and the breaking of bread. For this 
              is how His words would have sounded in the ears of His initial hearers (2). 
              This is how vital and defining it is to partake of it.  
      "Even the same soul shall be cut off from among his people...that 
        man shall bear his sin" is the language of Ex. 12:15 concerning the 
        man who ate leavened rather than unleavened bread, and of Gen. 17:14: 
        "The uncircumcised man (who refuses to be circumcised)...shall be 
        cut off from his people; he hath broken my covenant". Circumcision 
        was the Old Covenant's equivalent of baptism. To not break bread over 
        a prolonged period therefore shows that a person is no longer in covenant 
        with God. It was due to an incorrect attitude to the memorial meeting 
        that many at Corinth were struck down "weak and sickly...and many 
        sleep" (1 Cor. 11:30), presumably referring to the power the apostles 
        had to smite apostate believers with physical discomfort and death. Such 
        was the importance accorded to that meeting by them. The sensitive Bible 
        student will see the connection between the bread and wine offered with 
        the daily burnt offering under the Law, and the breaking of bread service. 
        The connection was surely intended to teach that the spirit of the memorial 
        service is to go with us morning and evening in daily life. There is surely 
        no believer who has not privately lamented the fact that they experience 
        an almost inevitable loss of intensity after the climax of the breaking 
        of bread.  
      The breaking of bread is described as eating at "the table of the 
        Lord" (1 Cor. 10:21). This was Old Testament language for the altar 
        (Ez. 41:22). By eating from it we are partaking of the altar, the Lord 
        Jesus (1 Cor. 9:13; 10:18; Heb. 13:10). If we don't partake of it, we 
        declare ourselves to have no part in Him. Yet the very fact we partake 
        of it, is a statement that we have pledged ourselves to separation from 
        this present world; for it is not possible to eat at the Lord's table, 
        and also that of this world (1 Cor. 10:21). The Passover, as the prototype 
        breaking of bread, featured bitter herbs to remind Israel of their bitter 
        experience in Egypt (Ex. 1:14). The breaking of bread should likewise 
        focus our attention on the fact that return to the world is a return to 
        bondage and bitterness, not freedom.  
      Whilst forgiveness itself is not mediated in any metaphysical sense by 
        the memorial meeting, it is nonetheless a vital part of the life of the 
        forgiven believer. When Peter didn’t want to break bread, the Lord 
        reminded him that he who has been baptized / washed is indeed clean, but 
        needs periodic feet-washing. This, surely, was a reference to the breaking 
        of bread (Jn. 13:10). The same word for ‘wash’ is found in 
        Jn. 15:2, where we read of how the Father washes / purifies periodically 
        the vine branches. Could this not be some reference to the effect the 
        breaking of bread should have upon us?  
      The Breaking Of Bread Meeting: A Caveat
      Not assembling ourselves together is of course not a good thing. If we 
        love our brethren, we will seek to be physically with them. There can 
        be no doubt that we must struggle with our natural selfishness, our desire 
        to go it alone. But is this actually what Heb. 10:25 is talking about? 
        A glance at the context shows that forsaking the assembly is paralleled 
        with the wilful sin which shall exclude us from God’s salvation: 
       
        Let us hold fast the profession of our faith 
          Without wavering [going back to Judaism, according to the context in 
          Hebrews] 
           
          Let us consider one another to provoke unto love 
          Not forsaking the assembly-of-ourselves 
           
          Exhorting one another 
          Unlike the “some” who, according to how Hebrews uses that 
          Greek word, have turned away from Christianity 
           
          Wilful sin, with no more access to the Lord’s sacrifice 
           
          Certain condemnation- “a certain fearful looking for of judgment 
          and fiery indignation” 
           
          Despising the Law 
           
          Treading under foot the Son of God and reviling the blood of the covenant- 
          what had to be done by Christians who ‘repented’ of their 
          conversion and returned to the synagogue, the sort of blasphemy that 
          Saul was making Christian converts commit. 
       
      Now are those awful things in the right hand column above really a description 
        of someone who fervently believes in the Lord Jesus, but for whatever 
        reason, doesn’t ‘make it out to meeting’ on Sundays? 
        Those terms seem to speak about a wilful rejection of the Lord Jesus. 
        And this of course is the very background against which Hebrews was written. 
        It was a letter to Hebrew Christians who were beginning to bow to Jewish 
        pressure and renounce their faith in Christ, and return to Judaism. “The 
        assembling of ourselves together” can actually be read as a noun- 
        not a verb. Those who ‘forsook’ ‘the assembly together 
        of us’ would then refer to those who totally rejected Christianity. 
        The same word “forsaking” occurs in 2 Pet. 2:15, also in a 
        Jewish context, about those who “forsake the right way”. So 
        I suggest that forsaking the assembly refers more to turning away from 
        Christ and returning to apostasy, than to simply not turning up at church 
        as often as we might. The writer laments that “some” were 
        indeed forsaking the assembly (Heb. 10:25). But that Greek word translated 
        “some” recurs in Hebrews to describe those “some” 
        who had forsaken the ecclesia and turned back to Judaism: “Take 
        heed…lest there be in some [AV “any”] of you an evil 
        heart of unbelief, in departing from the living God” (and returning 
        to Judaism- Heb. 3:12)… lest some [AV “any”] of you 
        be hardened through the deceitfulness of sin (Heb. 3:13)… for some, 
        when they had heard, did provoke [referring to the earlier Hebrews in 
        the wilderness who turned away from the hope of the Kingdom- Heb. 3:16]… 
        some of you should seem to fail [like the condemned Hebrews in the wilderness- 
        Heb. 4:1]… lest some fall after the same example of unbelief” 
        (Heb. 4:11). In fact, right after the reference to the “some” 
        who forsake the assembly, Heb. 10:28 speaks of “some [AV “he”- 
        but the same Greek word in all these places for “some”] that 
        despised Moses’ law”. Clearly, those Hebrews in the wilderness 
        who turned away from the spirit of Christ in Moses and the hope of the 
        Kingdom, are being held up as warnings to that same “some” 
        in the first century Hebrew ecclesia who were turning back from the Hope 
        of the Kingdom. Now let me get it right. I’m not in any way saying 
        that we needn’t bother about our ecclesial attendance. Far from 
        it! But I also feel it’s not right to insist that if someone doesn’t 
        attend an ecclesia, for whatever reason, they are therefore guilty of 
        the wilful sin and certain fiery condemnation of which Hebrews 10 speaks 
        for those who forsake the assembly. In fact, the passage has almost been 
        abused like that- as if to say: ‘If you don’t turn up on Sunday, 
        if you quit meeting with us, then, you’ve quit on God and His Son’. 
        This simply isn’t the case. 
      There are some who find attendance at the memorial meeting difficult 
        for whatever reason. Yet there is only one loaf, one cup, and all those 
        truly baptized into the one body are partaker in it, so Paul explains. 
        Even disfellowship can never be any more than a local issue between you 
        and one ecclesia; whenever you partake the one loaf and one cup, you're 
        in fellowship with the entire body of Jesus- even if some of them tell 
        you that you're not. An ecclesia can part company with you, you can with 
        them, but nothing can separate us from the body and blood and love of 
        Jesus. They cannot tell you that you are no longer a part of the body 
        of Jesus. Also, it's worth paying attention to Matthew 18, a passage invariably 
        invoked by these types. If your brother sins against you, you can go to 
        him, then get the church involved, and then, the Lord says to the person 
        sinned against, let him be unto THEE as a Gentile / publican. I am such 
        a fuddy duddy I am still reading from the AV and RV. About the only advantage 
        of those versions is the way 'thee' signifies a 'you singular' as opposed 
        to 'ye / you' which in KJ English meant 'you plural'. Modern English no 
        longer makes a distinction. So, let such a person be unto THEE- you singular, 
        not your ecclesia- as a Gentile and Publican. And what was Jesus' attitude 
        to them? To mix with them, eat with them in table fellowship, and try 
        to win them. 
      Also. Mt 18 continues. Peter asks "And how often shall my brother 
        sin against me and I forgive him?". Jesus replies, 70 x 7. i.e. to 
        an unlimited extent. It's as if He's saying that yes you can go through 
        the procedure of sorting it out with your brother and rejecting him from 
        your personal company. But, the higher level, is to simply forgive him. 
        It's like adultery under the Law. There were several options for the husband. 
        Do a trial of jealousy and make her infertile. Stone her. Divorce her. 
        Or, just forgive her. We surely all ought to be aiming for the higher 
        level. Those who quote Matthew 18 as a reason for withdrawal are in my 
        view living on a lower spiritual level than those who forgive 70 x 7. 
        But the gracious Lord doubtless shall accept them too in the last day. 
      Coming Together
      And so for these reasons and others, brethren and sisters walk miles 
        through the blazing African sun, travel for hours in sub zero temperatures 
        in Eastern Europe, drive hundreds of kilometers along North American highways- 
        to meet together for the memorial service. But again, Why? Why not just 
        break bread at home? The answer to this lies in the fact that the breaking 
        of bread (as the Passover) is intended to recall the salvation which was 
        achieved for the whole body of Christ- which includes us personally. We 
        should be aware of this if we have to break bread alone. It is understandable, 
        therefore, that those in 'isolation' often try to break bread at the same 
        time as their brethren are doing so elsewhere. "The bread which we 
        break, is it not the communion of the body of Christ? For we being many 
        are one bread (Greek 'loaf'), and one body"- of Christ (1 Cor. 10:16,17). 
        The bread represents the body of Christ; but it is hammered home time 
        and again in the New Testament that the believers are the body of Christ. 
        By partaking of Christ's body, we are sharing with each other. Paul drives 
        home this point with an Old Testament allusion: "Behold Israel after 
        the flesh: are not they which eat of the sacrifices partakers of the altar?" 
        (1 Cor. 10:18). We are the living sacrifices, offered on the Christ altar 
        (Rom. 12:1; Heb. 13:10). By being placed upon the altar, the sacrifice 
        was counted as the altar. As Christ hung on the cross, all believers were 
        counted as being in Him; Christ and the believers were, in this sense, 
        indivisible on the cross. And they still are- hence the figure of us being 
        the very body, the very being, of Christ. To personally share in fellowship 
        with Him therefore must involve intense fellowship with other members 
        of Christ's body. We must 'discern' the Lord's body (1 Cor. 11:29), and 
        also "judge (same word as 'discern') ourselves" at the memorial 
        meeting (1 Cor. 11:31). We discern the Lord's body, and thereby discern 
        ourselves too- because we are part of His body. This further shows that 
        our self-examination at the breaking of bread is both of Christ and also 
        of ourselves (both individually and collectively, as the body of Christ?). 
       
       "Where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am 
        I in the midst of them" (Mt. 18:20) surely promises a special closeness 
        of Christ when we are physically gathered together. All those who have 
        made real effort to gather together for the memorial meeting will know 
        the truth of this. Our community increasingly features many in semi-isolation; 
        this promise of special spiritual blessing in meeting together is something 
        which they can and surely do know the truth of. The close fellowship which 
        was engendered by the Passover feast, as Israel huddled together in family 
        units around the slain lamb, the focus of their love and gratitude to 
        God, explains why Israel were repeatedly warned not to share that meal 
        with those not in covenant with God. To argue that our fellowship is only 
        with God leads to a woolly attitude towards breaking bread with those 
        in the apostasy; yet this runs counter to the teaching of the Passover 
        type.  
            The Lord held the memorial meeting as a keeping of a Passover, and yet 
              He changed some elements of it. In like manner He was made known 
              to the disciples “in the breaking of bread” (Lk. 24:35), 
              perhaps because it was usual for the host to say the blessing before 
              the meal, and yet Jesus the stranger, the guest, presumed to lead 
              the prayer. Joachim Jeremias cites evidence that “By the time 
              of Jesus, individual cups were used at the Passover meal” 
              (3), and yet Mk. 14:23 implies that He used only 
              one cup, which was passed around amongst those at the last supper: 
              “He took the cup [RV “a cup”]…he gave it 
              to them: and they all drank of it [singular]”. They didn’t 
              take up their own cups and drink- the Lord gave them His cup, just 
              as He passes on to all in Him a participation in His “cup” 
              of suffering and final joy. Reflect how deftly and determinedly 
              the Lord must have “received the cup” (Lk. 22:17 RV), 
              knowing what it represented; imagine His body language. Paul’s 
              references to “the cup” imply the same. This change 
              was surely to indicate the unity that His death, His blood, His 
              life, was to inspire amongst those who share in it. This, in passing, 
              is behind my undoubted preference for not using individual cups 
              at the memorial meeting. It would seem to be a returning to the 
              Jewish legalistic tradition, however unintentionally. I have elsewhere 
              commented upon the clear link between the death of Jesus and our 
              unity. The memorial meeting is the supreme celebration of that unity 
              between us. To deny a brother or sister participation in it is something 
              serious indeed. Tragically, and it is a tragedy, we have tended 
              to use the memorial meeting as a weapon for exclusion rather than 
              as a celebration of our unity. Yet this was the intention, without 
              doubt. Comparing Lk. 22:20 and Mk. 14:24 we find the Lord saying 
              that the cup of wine was “for you poured out, poured out for 
              many”- as if He wanted them to be aware at the memorial meeting 
              that it was not only they who had been redeemed in Him. Likewise 
              the Passover was essentially a remembering of the deliverance of 
              a community, through which the individual worshipper found his or 
              her personal salvation. This is why it is just not good enough to 
              insist on breaking bread alone, or with no thought to the fact that 
              all of us were redeemed together, as one man, as one nation, in 
              Him.  
      The unity between believers at the breaking of bread is brought out in 
        Acts 2:42, where we read of the new converts continuing in  
      
      It could be that this is a description of the early order of service 
        at the memorial meetings. They began with an exhortation by the apostles, 
        then there was “the fellowship”, called the agape in Jude 
        12, a meal together, and then the breaking of bread itself [following 
        Jewish Passover tradition], concluded by “the prayers”, which 
        may have included the singing of Psalms. The performance of this feast 
        was a sign of conversion and membership in the body of Christ. This is 
        how important it is.  
      Broken Body?
      Considering how the bread represents the body of Christ leads us to a 
        common query: 'Seeing that "a bone of Him shall not be (and was not) 
        broken", how can we say that we remember the broken body of Jesus 
        by breaking the bread?'. First of all, it must be understood that 'breaking 
        bread' or 'eating bread' is simply an idiom for sharing in a meal (Is. 
        58:7; Jer. 16:7; Lam. 4:4; Ez. 17:7; 24:17; Hos. 9:4; Dt. 26:14; Job 42:11). 
        'Bread' is used for any food, just as 'salt' is used in the same way in 
        Arabic. The breaking of a loaf of bread is not necessarily implicit in 
        the phrase (although it can be). However, we must also be aware of a fundamental 
        misconception which one feels is held by many; that the physical blood 
        and body of Christ are all that we come to remember. This notion is related 
        to that which feels that there is some mystical power in the physical 
        bread and wine in themselves. Bro. Roberts makes the point in "The 
        Blood of Christ" that "it is not the blood as literal blood 
        that is precious or efficacious". And the same might be said about 
        the Lord's literal body. His body and blood were no different to those 
        of any other man.  
      The fact that we are asked to symbolize His broken body, when it is stated 
        that His literal body was not broken, is proof enough that Christ's body 
        is to be understood as something more than His literal flesh and blood. 
        Indeed, 1 Cor. 10:16,17 seems to suggest that the "body of Christ" 
        in which we partake through the bread is a symbol of the whole body of 
        believers, just as much as His actual body which enabled this salvation. 
        Likewise the Passover was not intended to commemorate the red liquid which 
        flowed from the first Passover lambs, but to remember the salvation which 
        God had achieved for all Israel on account of that. Christ bore our sins 
        "in his own body on the tree" (1 Pet. 2:24)- and it was more 
        in His mind and mental awareness that this was true, rather than our sins 
        being in (e.g.) His arms and legs. Other uses of "body" which 
        require reference to our whole mind and being, rather than our literal 
        body, include Mt. 5:29,30; 6:22-25; Jn. 2:21; Rom. 7:4; 1 Cor. 6:19; 9:23. 
        Luke's record of the Last Supper shows how the Lord spoke of His body 
        and blood as parallel with His whole sacrifice: "This is my body...this 
        do in remembrance of me (His whole way of life- not just His physical 
        body). This cup is the new testament in my blood, which is shed for you" 
        (Lk. 22:19,20). Col. 1:20 likewise parallels “the blood of the cross” 
        with “him” (the man Jesus). Rom. 7:4 puts “the body 
        of Christ” for the death of that body; He was, in His very person, 
        His death. The cross was a living out of a spirit of self-giving which 
        was Him. The cup of wine represents the promises ("testament") 
        of salvation which have been confirmed by Christ's blood. Note how Jesus 
        quietly spoke of "my body which is (being) given for you...my blood 
        which is shed for you". The pouring out of His life/blood was something 
        ongoing, which was occurring even as He spoke those words. The cross was 
        a summation of a lifetime of outpouring and breaking of His innermost 
        being, or "body". It is this that we remember at the breaking 
        of bread. The Passover was comprised of the lamb plus bread. The breaking 
        of bread, the Passover for Christians, is wine and bread. The lamb was 
        thus replaced in the thought of Jesus by His blood / wine. He perceived 
        that His blood was Him, in that sense.  
      The prophecy of Ps. 34:20 about not a bone of the Lord being broken is 
        clearly applied to Him in Jn. 19:36. But the context is clearly about 
        all of us- any righteous man. The preceding verse speaks of how the Lord 
        delivers the righteous man out of all his tribulations- and this verse 
        is applied to other believers apart from the Lord Jesus in Acts 12:11 
        and 2 Tim. 3:11,12. The chilling fact is that we who are in the body of 
        the Lord are indeed co-crucified with Him.  
      We 'discern' the Lord's body by correctly breaking bread (1 Cor. 11:29). 
        The Greek translated 'discern' means to analyze, to pull apart, as a judge 
        does. It is the same word translated "examine [himself]" in 
        the previous verse; our examination of the Lord's body leads inevitably 
        to our self-examination. Consideration of His death by His people leads 
        to the thoughts of many hearts being revealed (Lk. 2:35). The purpose 
        of an exhortation is therefore to centre our minds upon Christ, to analyze 
        His "body", His very essence and spirit, so that our minds are 
        focussed upon the slain lamb as clearly as Israel's were on Passover night. 
       
      It is also worth reflecting how the Hebrew writer saw the torn veil as 
        a symbol of the Lord’s flesh. It is just possible that the physical 
        tearing of the Lord’s flesh at His death through the nails represented 
        the tearing of His flesh nature, symbolized in the physical tearing of 
        the veil. But the tearing of the veil was something essential and far 
        reaching- not a surface rip. The Lord’s death is surely to be understood 
        as a tearing apart of the flesh nature and tendencies which He bore; and 
        it is this we remember in breaking the bread which represents His flesh. 
       
      A Type Of The Kingdom
      The Lord told us that the Passover feast would "be fulfilled in 
        (i.e. by?) the Kingdom of God" (Lk. 22:16). This is confirmed by 
        the description of "the marriage supper of the lamb" in Rev. 
        19:9. Likewise the parable of Lk. 14 speaks of "a great supper" 
        at the beginning of the Millennium. As we share this feast together now, 
        we are acting out a parable of the feast to be kept at the Lord's return. 
        In the light of this, how important it is to ensure that there is no bitterness 
        and disunity at the breaking of bread meeting! There will be a due sense 
        of decorum to the whole meeting if its typical meaning is properly grasped; 
        emblems laid out in time, so that they are in full view of the members 
        as they file into the meeting room; at least 5 minutes of silence before 
        the meeting starts, with the congregation focusing their thoughts upon 
        the emblems, and the Kingdom which the meeting points forward to. To be 
        invited to sit at the King's table is an honour indeed (cp. 2 Sam. 19:28). 
        Remember that we are reaffirming our covenant. "This is the blood 
        of the covenant" is a reference back to the blood of the Old Covenant 
        being sprinkled upon the people, with their response of vowing obedience 
        unto the end (Ex. 24:7). The solemnity of that distant moment should be 
        ours, weekly.  
        Notes
      (1) Joachim Jeremias, The Eucharistic 
        Words Of Jesus (London: S.C.M., 1973 ed.), p. 48. 
      (2) See A.J.B. Higgins, The Lord’s 
        Supper In The New Testament (London: S.C.M., 1952) p. 33. 
      (3) Joachim Jeremias, op cit p. 68. 
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