The Holy Table: Anglican Eucharistic Theology and the Via Media
1 Corinthians 11:23-26 • Luke 22:14-20
Holy Communion as the central act of Christian worship — the Prayer Book liturgy, the Real Presence without philosophical definition, the weekly Eucharist
Anglican / Episcopal
Scripture, tradition, and reason in balance
The Holy Table: Anglican Liturgy and the Centrality of the Eucharist
Cranmer's Ambiguous Brilliance
Thomas Cranmer wrote the words of distribution with genius: "The body of our Lord Jesus Christ" — Catholic. "Take and eat this in remembrance" — Reformed. Both clauses in one sentence. He was not being evasive. He was being pastoral: in a church being asked to hold together High Church and Low Church, Catholic and Protestant, the liturgy needed words big enough for all of them. The via media was not a compromise of truth. It was a recognition that this particular mystery is larger than any one theological tradition.
Source: Thomas Cranmer, Book of Common Prayer (1549, 1552) / Anglican eucharistic theology
Real Presence Without Philosophical Compulsion
The Weekly Feast: Anglicanism and Eucharistic Rhythm
Applications
- 1If your parish has not yet moved to weekly Eucharist, advocate for it. The Prayer Book envisions it. The early church practiced it.
- 2Bring your whole self to the table. Anglicanism feeds you body and soul — the physical act of receiving is itself an act of worship.
- 3Pray the Prayer Book. The Eucharistic prayers are among the most theologically rich texts in the Christian tradition. Receive them slowly.
- 4Come weekly. The rhythm of Sunday Eucharist is not a Catholic habit to be resisted. It is the ancient Christian practice to be recovered.
Prayer Suggestions
- Lord of the holy table, we come to You in the liturgy of Your church — Word and Table, sermon and sacrament, ancient and alive.
- We receive the body of Christ, given for us. Feed us in the manner that only You can — heavenly, spiritual, real.
- Thank You for the Book of Common Prayer — the liturgy that has held Your church together across five centuries and continues to offer us words when our own fail.
- One table. One Lord. Many traditions. Unite us in this holy meal. Amen.
Preaching Toolkit
The King's Speech (2010)
The King's speech is delivered in a moment of national crisis — carefully chosen words that must hold together a divided nation and give them courage. Cranmer's Prayer Book words of distribution are the king's speech of Anglican eucharistic theology: carefully chosen to hold together a divided church, Catholic enough for the High Church, Reformed enough for the Low Church, beautiful enough for everyone. The words do the theological work that no formula could do.
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Anglicanism affirms the Real Presence without defining the mechanism. Christ is truly present at this table — in a heavenly and spiritual manner. The "how" is the mystery. The "that" is the confession.
The Prayer Book gives you beautiful words at this table: "Feed on him in thy heart by faith with thanksgiving." That is the invitation. Come. Feed. Be thankful.
Anglicanism's eucharistic ambiguity has been called a compromise. It is actually a refusal to be more precise than Scripture requires. The presence is real. The mechanism is mystery. Live with that.
More Titles
Frequently Asked Questions
What does the Anglican Church teach about the Real Presence in communion?
Anglicanism affirms the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist — Christ is truly present — but declines to define the mechanism as Rome does with transubstantiation. The 39 Articles reject transubstantiation while affirming that Christ's body "is given, taken, and eaten, in the Supper, only after a heavenly and spiritual manner." This deliberate ambiguity allows the Anglican tradition to hold multiple positions within one liturgical practice.
Why do many Anglican/Episcopal churches celebrate communion weekly?
The Book of Common Prayer envisions weekly Eucharist as the normative Sunday worship. The early church gathered weekly to break bread (Acts 20:7). After a period when Morning Prayer dominated Anglican Sunday worship, the liturgical renewal movement of the 20th century recovered the weekly Eucharist as the center of Anglican worship — Liturgy of the Word and Liturgy of the Table forming the complete Sunday service.
This Sermon in Other Traditions
See how 16 other Christian traditions approach the communion / lord's supper sermon.