What the Lord’s Supper and your body Teaches You

Perhaps more than ever, many people today are confused over the meaning and purpose of the human body. However, the Lord’s Supper and your body helps clarify why bodily existence matters in God’s design.

Sadly, many Christians have been influenced by the idea that matter does not matter, or that our bodies are less important than our souls. While some believe what really counts is the spiritual, the fact that God is Spirit (John 4:24) does not mean physical reality is insignificant. When the apostle Paul distinguishes between the “natural” and the “spiritual” (1 Cor. 2:14–15), he is not implying that the physical is contrary to the Spirit, but rather distinguishing between what is animated by the Holy Spirit and what is not.

God is the Creator of all things, and he is redeeming his entire creation through his Son (Col. 1:16, 20). The gospel teaches us that our bodily existence matters, a truth reinforced by the Lord’s Supper. This central practice of the church represents the good news of Jesus’s death and resurrection in physical form (Matt. 26:26–28; Mark 14:22–24; Luke 22:19–20; 1 Cor. 11:24–25). Ultimately, this meal has a great deal to teach us about who we are as physical beings.

The first reason that the Supper teaches us that matter matters is that it points to our Savior who is both God and man (see John 1:1, 1:14). Because Christ took on a human body, our bodies have dignity and purpose, meaning far greater than what our world could ever attribute to them. 

The Supper also teaches us that physical objects, including our bodies, are not meaningless stuff. The Supper reinforces the truth that God grants all things (which he created and is redeeming) meaning and purpose. It also teaches us that he takes certain matter and gives it special meaning and purpose. The bread and cup represent Christ’s body and blood, and his body and blood reveal who he is, what he is like, and what he has done. His body—which still bears his wounds—proclaims his person and work. It reminds us that he, the Lord of the universe, is our crucified and risen Savior. 

The Supper therefore highlights the truth that our bodies reveal who we are and what our purpose is. This meal helps us better understand what and whom our bodies are made for, and how they should therefore be directed. Christ gave himself on the cross so that we might have loving communion with him (see 1 Cor. 10:16). He gives us his body and blood so that we, in all our existence, could come into life-giving contact with all of who he is, both human and divine. We are physical-spiritual beings who are created and redeemed for fellowship with God, and we experience that fellowship in our very bodies.

Moreover, the Supper teaches us that we cannot “use” our bodies however we want. Our bodies belong to the Lord, and they are meant for his service. Jesus came not to be served but to serve so that others might live (Mark 10:45). Because we live in him, we live for him. And we are called to serve as he has served—self-sacrificially. We are to give of ourselves—body and soul—for the benefit of others and for the glory of God. 

The world tries to tell us who we are and how we can live, but the gospel of Jesus Christ—presented to us in the Lord’s Supper—offers a better word. It proclaims to us both who Christ is and who we are. It reminds us that we live by him and for him. His body and his blood give us and our bodies unrivaled meaning and purpose. Let us ever feast on him by faith and come to know more and more who we are in him.

Kevin Emmert
Kevin Emmert

Kevin P. Emmert is an academic book editor at Crossway and is the author of The Water and the Blood: How the Sacraments Shape Christian Identity.

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