Revolutionary Christianity. John Howard Yoder

Revolutionary Christianity - John Howard Yoder


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of this distorted practice is the abundant demonstration that the normal observance was an ordinary meal taken together at every normal gathering of the young Christian fellowship.

      Therefore, it is part of the definition of the Christian church that Christians are people who eat together. We profoundly misunderstand the development of what is referred to as Christian communism in the early days in Jerusalem when we try to see it as the outworking of a moral condemnation of private property or of a vision of an ideal social order. In the early days, the common purse at Jerusalem was not the outworking of the deliberation about whether it is good for disciples to have possessions of their own, and certainly it involved no speculation as to whether it is wholesome for society to be governed by a regime of private property. Sharing together was much more immediate and unpremeditated; they shared their wealth because they ate together and because food for the morrow is about all the wealth a common person can ever hope to possess in any simple society.

      It is quite correct that, in order to avoid the Corinthian misunderstanding of the common meal as an overly joyful banquet, the apostle reminded them that the most dramatic Lord’s Supper had been a Passover meal and that according to the instructions of Jesus it should be a time to remember not only his resurrection and promised return but also his death. Thus, it is appropriate that we should take the meaning of the annual Passover celebration in its Christian transformation into our understanding of the supper. Yet, for the early church, this did not necessitate any weakening of concentration upon the primary character of this celebration as a fellowship meal.

      It is an irony of history that this reminder of the Passover sacrifice—when the apostle Paul sought to warn his readers against distortion of the simplicity of the supper by pagan admixtures drawn from the ceremony of the temple—could have had the effect, over the years, of permitting just what he wished to prevent. The idea of sacrifice contributed to the development of a quasi-magical understanding of the mass as an assuredly efficacious transaction whenever the proper words are spoken by a properly qualified officiant. Thus, what was initially a community experience by its very nature became a ceremony for its own sake in Catholicism, a ceremony that could be and often was carried out by the priest alone.

      The Reformation was not sufficiently radical to restore the character of the fellowship meal despite some efforts in that direction, especially in the early thought of Zwingli. Preoccupied with the rejection of certain aspects of the Catholic practice, the Reformers were willing to agree with the assumption that the mass was a ritual distinct from the rest of life and debated only what it means and what it achieves, only what its substance is and of what it is a sign. They warded off the dangers of superstition but did not restore the reality of communion. The Protestant practice of the Lord’s Supper remained a ceremony within the church with no direct connection to what bread and drink commonly mean. Upon unfolding the meaning of that common meal as explained in Protestant practice, it would occur to no one to sell a piece of land and contribute it to the church so that everyone would have enough.

      The New Community

      When Jesus warned his disciples of the sacrifice they would need to expect, that warning was linked with a promise:

      Such a promise is a most striking occurrence in the midst of a text that (some scholars would tell us) should have eyes only for the end of the age. Jesus promises, to those who forsake all to follow him, a community in which the necessities of life are shared already in this age, in the midst of persecution. The apostolic writers could not have preserved this record in this form if it had not already been fulfilled in their experience; this was a promise regarding their present and not their future.

      One Lord, One Table

      All those who desire to break the one bread in remembrance of the broken body of Christ and all those who wish to drink of one drink in remembrance of the shed blood of Christ . . . must beforehand be united in the one body of Christ, that is the congregation of God, whose head is Christ, and that by baptism. For as Paul indicates, we cannot be partakers at the same time of the table of the Lord and the table of devils. Nor can we at the same time partake and drink of the cup of the Lord and the cup of devils. That is: all those who have fellowship with the dead works of darkness have no part in the light. Thus, all who follow the devil and the world have no part with those who have been called out of the world unto God. All those who lie in evil have no part in the good.

      One of the most general topics of ecumenical debate is the question of intercommunion. A review of the several available attitudes on this question may help to clarify the originality of the free church position.


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