Do This in Remembrance: Meeting Christ at the Table
1 Corinthians 11:23-26 • Luke 22:14-20
Remembrance, covenant renewal, proclaiming the Lord's death until He comes
The Night He Was Betrayed: Context Changes Everything
The Table That Judas Left
Judas was at the table when Jesus served the bread. Think about that. Jesus knew. He knew that Judas had already made the deal. He knew that the betrayal was in motion. And He served him anyway. He broke bread with the man who was about to break Him. The table of the Lord is not a place of exclusion. It is a place of scandalous inclusion — where the betrayer is served before he betrays, and the denier is fed before he denies, and the deserter is given bread before he runs. If Jesus served Judas, there is no one in this room who is too far gone for this table.
Source: Biblical narrative / John 13:26-27
This Is My Body, This Is My Blood: What the Elements Mean
Until He Comes: The Table That Points Forward
Applications
- 1As you receive the elements today, do not rush. Let the bread sit in your hand for a moment. Remember: this is the body that was broken for you, specifically, personally.
- 2Examine yourself before you come — not to disqualify yourself, but to bring your real self. Confession is the preparation for communion.
- 3After the service, consider who in your life needs to be invited to the table — literally or figuratively. The same scandalous inclusion that served Judas calls us to extend welcome to the unlikely.
- 4Practice anamnesis this week: make the past present. When doubt creeps in, return to the table in your memory and say: "Christ has died. Christ has risen. Christ will come again."
Prayer Suggestions
- Lord, as we come to Your table, we remember. Not a distant memory, but a present reality. The cross is here. The grace is here. You are here.
- Forgive us for the times we have come to this table carelessly — without examining our hearts, without remembering the cost, without being amazed by the grace.
- Feed us with Your body and blood. Renew the covenant. Remind us that we are Yours and You are ours, and nothing — nothing — can separate us from Your love.
- Until You come, we proclaim. Christ has died. Christ has risen. Christ will come again. Maranatha — come, Lord Jesus. Amen.
Preaching Toolkit
Babette's Feast (1987)
In the Danish film, Babette — a refugee and secretly a master chef — spends her entire lottery winnings on a lavish French dinner for a small, austere religious community that has never experienced such extravagance. They are suspicious at first, determined not to enjoy it. But as the meal progresses, something breaks open. Old feuds are forgiven. Tears flow. Joy erupts. The meal itself becomes the medium of grace — not because the food is magical, but because abundance has a way of dismantling the walls we build around our hearts. Communion is Babette's feast: an extravagant gift we did not earn, served by a host who gave everything, breaking open the hardened places we did not know were hard.
3 Voices
Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition
Anamnesis does not mean "think back fondly." It means "make present again." At this table, the distance between Calvary and here collapses.
You do not need to arrive at this table clean. You need to arrive hungry. The bread is broken because you are broken, and the cup is poured because you need to be filled.
Jesus served bread to Judas knowing Judas would betray Him within the hour. If that doesn't wreck your assumptions about who deserves a seat at the table, nothing will.
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Frequently Asked Questions
How long should a communion sermon be?
Shorter than a regular sermon — 8-12 minutes. The communion liturgy itself (distribution of elements, prayers, music) takes time. The sermon should frame the meaning without dominating the service. This template targets 12 minutes.
Is this communion sermon appropriate for all traditions?
Yes. This template uses universal language that works across traditions — Catholic, Orthodox, Protestant, and nondenominational. It avoids taking a position on transubstantiation vs. real presence vs. memorial view, focusing instead on remembrance, covenant renewal, and proclamation.
Can this be used for a first communion service?
It can be adapted. For a first communion, you may want to add a brief explanation of the elements and a more explicit invitation for first-time participants. The core content — especially the "you do not need to arrive clean, you need to arrive hungry" framing — works well for first-time communicants.