• Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!

How often should we observe the Lord's Supper?

alexander284

Well-Known Member
How often should we observe the Lord's Supper?

Every week? Once every three months?

What are your thoughts on this?
 

Rob_BW

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Quarterly seems about right to me. Granted, I've been frequenting a non-denominational service run by a Lutheran and an Episcopalian lately, so it's been every week.
 

InTheLight

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
I might as well throw in another opinion--once a month. Once a week seems like a ritual to me. Less than once a month seems like I'm ignoring it.

Once a month on the first Sunday of the month.
 

InTheLight

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
About 10 years ago I attended an IFB, fundamental, KJVO church. They were a church plant, were renting space from the city and didn't have their own building. They NEVER had the Lord's Supper. NEVER. (They also had to use a hotel swimming pool for baptisms.) After many months and not ONE MENTION OF THE LORD'S SUPPER, I asked the pastor about this. I said I felt that I was disobeying Christ, who had said, "if you love me keep my commandments" and Jesus also said of the Lord's Supper, "do this in remembrance of me." So, I felt I was in disobedience.

His answer was that he believed in closed communion, that is, only church members could partake. He said there were only a handful of members so they hadn't had communion. Also, I was not an official member. Attendance was about 100 to 125 per Sunday morning.

He said "they were not organized as a church yet" (whatever that meant.) I suppose it meant that they were not incorporated as a non-profit yet, however, not having the Lord's Supper went on for the three years I attended there.

He said he had addressed the issue of communion in Sunday School, and I would have known that had I attended that particular day. (I attended there Sunday morning services and some Sunday nights.)

I thought this stance of not having communion was indefensible and for this (and other reasons) I quit attending there.
 

Reformed

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
I might as well throw in another opinion--once a month. Once a week seems like a ritual to me. Less than once a month seems like I'm ignoring it.

Once a month on the first Sunday of the month.
My previous church discussed this at length. All the elders were of the same opinion; anything can be a ritual. A lot of it depends on the local church.

Sent from my Pixel 2 XL using Tapatalk
 

rlvaughn

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
I like monthly or quarterly. Seems that the scriptures were careful to not set a frequency schedule, but do it right "as oft as ye" do it.
He said "they were not organized as a church yet" (whatever that meant.) I suppose it meant that they were not incorporated as a non-profit yet...
More likely he meant that they were still an arm of/under the authority of their sending church. I've seen that a lot.
 

rlvaughn

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
OK. So what? What prevents them from having communion?
I am not agreeing with their position, only positing what is more likely than it being about incorporation. I cannot speak specifically for the church you attended, but based on my experience many of the church plants that think like that do not take communion because: it is a church ordinance, they are not a church, and therefore would only take it back where their membership actually resides. This is what I have seen a lot, and may not be at all the case regarding the church you mention. However, I have never run across one that did not take communion simply because they were not incorporated. Of course, there are always exceptions, plus most of the churches in circles I move in do not incorporate.
 

InTheLight

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
I am not agreeing with their position, only positing what is more likely than it being about incorporation. I cannot speak specifically for the church you attended, but based on my experience many of the church plants that think like that do not take communion because: it is a church ordinance, they are not a church, and therefore would only take it back where their membership actually resides. This is what I have seen a lot, and may not be at all the case regarding the church you mention. However, I have never run across one that did not take communion simply because they were not incorporated. Of course, there are always exceptions, plus most of the churches in circles I move in do not incorporate.

I think you nailed their rationale for not taking communion as a church plant. They would only take communion at the "mother church".

I don't see Biblical support for this.
 

MB

Well-Known Member
How often should we observe the Lord's Supper?

Every week? Once every three months?

What are your thoughts on this?
I do not believe that it should be abused as the Catholics do yet I do believe in it's practice. Our church usually does this once a month. How often isn't really mentioned in scripture. The purpose is most importnant however we dont want to do it when we have un- confessed sins.
MB
 

MB

Well-Known Member
I mean before you take communion. We are not to take it if we are not right with God. Confessing daily is dying to sin daily as Paul speaks about in Romans 6
MB
 

OnlyaSinner

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
I like monthly or quarterly. Seems that the scriptures were careful to not set a frequency schedule, but do it right "as oft as ye" do it.
Thus frequency is a matter of church liberty. Our small IFB holds the Lord's Supper bimonthly, alternating between morning and evening services as some can attend only one or the other. Ours are open to all who are saved.
 
Top