SRC Holy Supper and Annual Meeting (06/09/24)
Friends:
A reminder that this weekend is our SRC Annual Meeting (complete with lunch by Bill Smith), and this will also be the last church service until Fall where we will offer Holy Supper (Communion). In preparation, I am once again including an article from New Church Life on the value of the Holy Supper. Please join us!
Love and Peace,
Ethan
"Can there be anything better known in the Christian world than that a person ought to examine themselves? For everywhere...before approaching the
holy supper, people are taught and admonished to examine themselves, to recognize and acknowledge their sins, and to live a new and different life." (Swedenborg, True Christianity 526)
But common sense dictates that the mere tasting of the bread and wine cannot in itself cleanse evil. The act, then, must be symbolic of something else. The natural food must
correspond to the essential spiritual food that feeds the heart and mind of the communicant. A sincere worshiper knows that a merciful Lord alone can see into the heart of the repentant, and provide the nourishment they need. The confession of sins, privately, before one's Creator has a definite cleansing affect on the conscience. But as in every trespass in life, confession of one's guilt is only the beginning. It must be followed by a life that is amended for the confession to have
meaning.
Examination and confession, of course, are essential and prerequisite. But if one lingers in this state, without turning to the Lord for both instruction and help to move on from there, one falls back into the hands of [hellish influence]. Evil spirits enjoy prodding our memory of trespasses. They entice us to dwell on our evils. Their ambition is to
make us feel both helpless and hopeless. Their goal is to create doubt, hesitation, and eventual immobility. Their cunning approach intends to take away our trust in a merciful and forgiving God who alone can remove [these things] from us. By keeping our imperfections before us they hope to blind our understanding with remorse and self-pity.
However, the
Lord through His angels endeavors to show us the next step. Once we admit to our failings and short comings, we are to turn to God for the strength and insight to combat the hells. Admitting to our own weakness is initial; but acknowledging that the Lord alone is omnipotent is crucial. When we continually reaffirm this belief by approaching the holy supper table to receive symbolically His goodness and truth, we are released for the moment from the grasp of hell. The very act of reaching out for
His spiritual food, represented by the bread and wine, invites the sphere of heaven.
(NCL, Rev. Lorentz Soneson)