Mark Osgatharp
New Member
GB,Originally posted by gb93433:
I have been in two churches where we celebrated by people bringing food and sharing it with others. Some of those who were poor got to eat some of the food of those who brought dishes that would have cost more to prepare. Almost evryone of the people who came and saw how Christians rejoiced and the words of testimony of God's grace and love have now become Christians."
There might be a time and place for such proceedings, but it is not at the Lord's supper. Paul explicitly said, "if any man hunger, let him eat at home." The Lord's supper was not a pot luck dinner. It was a time to commemorate the broken body and shed blood of the Lord.
This was such a serious matter that Paul said the judgement of God had fallen on the Corinthian church for turning the Lord's supper into a pot luck dinner. And in their case, anyone who didn't bring a pot was out of luck!
A believer who cheats his customers should not be welcome at the Lord's table. Paul explicitly said, "with such an one no not to eat." As brother Vaughn has already pointed out, closed communion has no validity apart from the practice of church discipline.It would be very easy in a closed situation for a non-believer who has high standards to point the finger at someone else he knows who lives on a lower plane than he does. I have seen it first-hand. So you include the person who cheats his customers during the week and calls himself a believer and was baptized but you exclude the person who may not be a believer and would never think of cheating someone.
But an unbeliever is not to feel accepted because he is not accepted. "The wrath of God abideth on him." "Thou hatest all workers of inquity." "What part has he that believeth with an infidel."When non-believers are in the service just imagine how they feel when they are excluded versus if they exclude themselves. I cetainly think it is very appropriate to talk about 1 Cor 11 and let the people know what it means to celebrate the Lord's death until he comes. I have welcomed many into the fellowhip as non-believers later becoming believers because they felt loved and accepted.
When Paul envisioned unbelievers coming into the church worship he did not envision them feeling "accepted." He envisioned them being "convinced of all" and "judged of all" and "thus are the secrets of his heart made manifest; and so falling down on his face, he will worship God, and report that God is in you of a truth."
The church is not an inclusive fellowship, it is an exclusive fellowship of believers - yeah, not just of believers but of faithful believers. I think your statements here show how wide the chasm is between the philosphies of open communion and restricted communion.
Mark Osgatharp