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Communion / Lord's SupperPentecostal~15 minClaude Opus 4.6

Come Expecting: The Lord's Supper as Encounter and Healing

1 Corinthians 11:23-26Luke 22:14-20

The Lord's Supper as an expectant encounter — healing in the atonement, the Spirit present at the table, breaking bread with expectation

Pentecostal

The work of the Holy Spirit and spiritual gifts

Tradition vocabulary:healing in the atonementcome expectingSpirit presentencounterwholenessprayer for healingexpectationbroken body

Healing in the Atonement: The Table as Place of Wholeness

Many Pentecostal traditions teach that the Lord's Supper is not only a memorial of forgiveness — it is a place of healing. The theological foundation is the connection between Isaiah 53 ("by his wounds we are healed") and the Words of Institution. "This is my body given for you" — and His body bore our diseases (Matthew 8:17: "He took up our infirmities and bore our diseases"). The full benefits of the atonement — including physical healing — are available to those who receive the Lord's Supper in faith. This does not mean every person who takes communion will be physically healed of every ailment. But it does mean that the table is a place where we bring our bodies as well as our souls, where we pray expecting wholeness, where we receive the broken body of Christ believing that His brokenness purchased our healing. The Pentecostal and Charismatic tradition at the table prays for the sick. It anoints with oil. It lays on hands. The Lord's Supper is not a quiet moment of private reflection — it is an encounter with the healing Christ, and we come expecting that encounter.
Isaiah 53:4-5Matthew 8:171 Corinthians 11:23-26

The Healing Table

In many Pentecostal churches, the communion table is surrounded by those seeking healing — the wheelchairs, the prayer cloths, the hands reaching forward. It is not theater. It is faith. The same Jesus who said "This is my body given for you" also said "by his stripes we are healed." Pentecostal theology says: bring your body to the table. Bring your diagnosis. Bring your wheelchair. The healing is in the atonement. The table is where the atonement is proclaimed. Come expecting.

Source: Pentecostal healing theology / A.J. Gordon, The Ministry of Healing (1882)

The Spirit Is Present: What to Expect at the Table

Pentecostals and Charismatics come to the Lord's Supper expecting the Spirit to show up. This is not presumption — it is the inheritance of a community that has learned to live in the awareness of the Spirit's presence. When believers gather in Christ's name and receive His body and blood, the Spirit is not absent. The Spirit is the reason it is possible to "proclaim the Lord's death" — proclamation is a Spirit-empowered act. At Pentecostal communion tables, it is not unusual to have prophetic words spoken, tears shed, laughter erupting, people kneeling, hands raised, burdens lifted. The table is not a somber ritual — it is a Spirit-charged encounter. The physical act of receiving the elements is accompanied by an expectation that something real and powerful is happening in the spirit realm. This can seem unusual to those from more liturgical traditions. But consider: if the Lord Himself is present at the table — if the Words of Institution are being spoken and the elements are being received — should we not expect the Spirit to work? If we are truly "proclaiming the Lord's death" — and proclamation carries power — should we not expect that power to manifest?
1 Corinthians 2:4-5Acts 2:42-47John 16:13

Come Expecting: The Posture of Pentecostal Communion

The key word in Pentecostal and Charismatic communion theology is expectation. You do not come to a Pentecostal table the way you come to a gas station — filling up and moving on. You come the way you come to a family reunion — knowing people will be there, knowing something good will happen, knowing the encounter will change you in ways you cannot fully predict. Paul's warning about receiving "without recognizing the body" is taken seriously in this tradition — not as a threat but as a description of what happens when you receive without expectation. To receive without recognition is to miss what is actually being offered. To receive with full faith and expectation is to open yourself to all that the Lord's Supper is designed to do: forgive, heal, empower, unite, encourage. Bring your needs to this table. Bring your sick body. Bring your broken relationship. Bring your failing faith. Bring your grief and your fear and your weariness. The table is not for those who have it together. It is for those who know they need what only Christ can give — and who come expecting Him to give it.
Mark 11:241 Corinthians 11:29Hebrews 4:16

Applications

  • 1Come expecting. The Lord's Supper is not a ritual. It is an encounter. Come anticipating what God will do.
  • 2Bring your body. If you need healing, bring that need to the table. The atonement is for the whole person.
  • 3Pray for others at the table. The Lord's Supper is communal. Pray for those around you as you receive.
  • 4Don't rush. Many churches rush through communion. Slow down. Something real is happening.

Prayer Suggestions

  • Lord, we come expecting. We do not come to remember You as though You are absent. You are here. The Spirit is here. We come to encounter You.
  • For those who need healing: You bore the stripes. By those stripes we are healed. We receive Your body with faith for wholeness.
  • Spirit of God, move at this table. Do what only You can do. Forgive. Heal. Empower. Encounter.
  • We proclaim Your death — with power, with faith, with expectation for the day of Your return. Come, Lord Jesus. Amen.

Preaching Toolkit

Movie Analogy

Miracles from Heaven (2016)

The film shows a family that does not stop praying even when all signs say to. The healing, when it comes, is unexpected and overwhelming. Pentecostal communion theology is that posture of persistent expectation: we bring our needs to the table even when the circumstances seem hopeless. The table is where faith meets the body of Christ. And where faith meets Christ, things happen.

3 Voices

Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition

Classic

The Lord's Supper is a place of encounter, not just memorial. The Spirit is present. Healing is in the atonement. Come expecting more than a ceremony.

Pastoral

Bring your needs to this table. Your sick body, your broken relationship, your failing faith — all of it belongs here. The table is not for the well. It is for the sick who know they need a physician.

Edgy

If you receive communion without expecting anything to happen, nothing will. Paul says receiving "without recognizing the body" has consequences. Recognizing the body means expecting it to do what the body of Christ does — heal, forgive, empower.

More Titles

Come Expecting: The Lord's Supper as Encounter and HealingHealing in the Atonement: The Pentecostal TableThe Spirit Is Present: What to Expect at CommunionBreak Bread with Power: Charismatic Communion TheologyBring Your Needs to the Table: A Pentecostal Communion Message
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Frequently Asked Questions

Do Pentecostals believe in healing through communion?

Many Pentecostal traditions teach that healing is available through the Lord's Supper because the atonement covers physical healing (Isaiah 53:4-5, Matthew 8:17). They do not teach that every communicant will be physically healed, but that the table is a place where we bring our whole selves — body and soul — expecting the full benefits of Christ's atonement.

How do Pentecostals approach communion differently?

Pentecostals approach communion with expectation — expecting the Spirit to be active, expecting healing, expecting genuine encounter with the risen Christ. Communion services in Pentecostal churches may include prayer for healing, prophetic words, and other charismatic manifestations alongside the reception of the elements. The table is understood as a Spirit-charged encounter, not a quiet ritual.

This Sermon in Other Traditions

See how 16 other Christian traditions approach the communion / lord's supper sermon.