The following morning I was scheduled for a colonoscopy. We
all know how pleasant the prep for that is! The instructions made it clear that
I was to eat no food and drink nothing red or purple on the day before the
medical procedure. Strangely enough I did not consider how that was going to
affect my participation in the Lord’s Supper until I was in the worship
service. I had to bypass the elements on that particular Sunday.
Even though no one was excluding me, I felt alone as I sat
empty-handed while everyone else was partaking of the communal meal. It caused
me to remember our stay in the Holy Land decades ago. I was taking a semester
sabbatical at the Tantur Ecumenical Institute on the outskirts of Bethlehem in
the autumn of 1991. My wife and three children went with me.
Even though the institute is called ecumenical, it is owned
and run by the Roman Catholic Church. The rector was then – and is now - a
Jesuit. My family was told that we could not partake of the daily Eucharist
with the other families because we were Baptists. Other Protestants – Anglicans,
Lutherans and Presbyterians were invited to the table – but my family, another
Baptist family from Japan, and a Mennonite family from Canada were not welcome.
I know they had their centuries-old, ecclesial and
theological reasons for excluding fellow Christians from the Eucharist. Furthermore
it would have been personally costly for these leaders to disobey church
tradition and authority. I get that. As Free Church Protestants we had no right
to insist that another tradition change their practice of the Eucharist for us.
Therefore we “never said a mumblin word,” to quote the African American
spiritual. Yet that did not diminish my feeling of being excluded because of my
faith.
Ever since that time, I have been sensitive to Christians
excluding people. In the last thirty years there has been a lot of exclusion
going on. More and more people have been identified for exclusion. I am thinking
primarily about my own Baptist tradition and similar evangelical denominations.
Many Christians are becoming more exclusivistic in their thinking.
My experience of exclusion was minimal compared to the
discrimination and persecution suffered by others, but my minor experience expanded
my empathy for outsiders and my vision of the need for a spirituality that
excludes no one. It seems to me that if a church and theology justifies the systematic
exclusion of certain categories of people - from communion, membership, heaven
or anything else - it is time to get a new church and a new theology.
These thoughts came to mind last Sunday while I was sitting
in the same outdoor worship service at the same church and offered the same
Lord’s Supper. This time I had no medical procedure scheduled, and so I
joyfully partook of the bread and the cup. I felt communion. During the ritual
I thought about those who have been barred from communion in some churches because of their sincerely
held beliefs, including the President of the United States and the former
Speaker of the House of Representatives. God bless them for not being bitter.
Their attitude is a testimony to their faith.
As I ate the sacred elements last Sunday, I prayed for all those who are excluded from fellowship and society for a host of reasons: religious beliefs, gender identity, sexual orientation, race, immigration status, political views, moral standards, and many other reasons. I prayed for insight to see how I exclude people without even noticing. I meditated on Jesus, who fellowshipped with outsiders and sinners. Jesus taught and modeled God’s intentional unconditional love. Even Judas Iscariot was welcome at the Last Supper. He is welcome today. After all, it the Lord’s Supper, not ours. And it is the Lord’s Church – the Body of Christ – not ours.
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