Wednesday, May 23, 2018


Tu‘apulelulu Me 24, 2018

Ko e feohi mo Kalaisi mo hono kakaí ‘i he lolotonga ni
(a present communion with Christ and each other)


Fehu‘i #47

‘Oku toe tanaki ‘e he ‘Ohomohe ‘a e ‘Eikí  ha me‘a ki he ngaue na‘e fai ‘e Kalaisí ‘i he huhu‘í ?
‘Ikai, na‘e pekia tā tu‘o taha pe ‘a Kalaisi ma‘a kitautolu. Ko e ‘Ohomohe ‘a e ‘Eikí, ko e me‘atokoni kovinānite ke kātoanga‘i e ngaue huhu‘i ‘a Kalaisí; ‘oku tokoni ke fakamālohi‘i ‘etau tuí pea ke tau sio fakamama‘u kiate Ia, pea mo e talateu ‘o e katoanga ‘e fai ‘i langi. Ka ko kinautolu te nau kau ta‘e mālu‘ia ki he ouau ni, te nau kai mo inu ‘a e ha fakamaau kiate kinautolu.

Does the Lord's Supper add anything to Christ's atoning work?
No, Christ died once for all. The Lord's Supper is a covenant meal celebrating Christ's atoning work; as it is also a means of strengthening our faith as we look to him, and a foretaste of the future feast. But those who take part with unrepentant hearts eat and drink judgment unto themselves.

1 PITA 3:18
He ko Kalaisi foki na‘a ne mo‘ua mamahi tu‘o taha koe‘uhi ko e ngaahi angahala, ko e angatonu ma‘a e ta‘eangatonu, koe‘uhi ke ne fakaofiofi ‘a kitautolu ki he ‘Otua . . .

1 PETER 3:18
For Christ also suffered once for sins, the righteous for the unrighteous, that he might bring us to God...


LEO SCHUSTER

It becomes a sort of gospel shorthand where, as an ancient writer put it, first we hear the gospel, then we taste the gospel, and so the gospel goes forward in our lives on two legs. As Paul put it in 1 Corinthians, "For as often as you eat this bread and drink this cup, you proclaim the Lord's death until he comes" (11:26). As Christians we eat and drink to remember Jesus’s triumph. That's the past dimension.

Paul points to the present dimension of the Lord's Supper when he writes in 1 Corinthians, "The cup of blessing that we bless, is it not a participation in the blood of Christ? The bread that we break, is it not a participation in the body of Christ?" (10-16). That word participation could also be translated "fellowship" or "communion.” It's where we get the term communion. Think of what that means-the Lord's Supper is not only a symbolic reminder of what Jesus has done for us; it's also a present communion with one another and with Jesus.

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