Itwin, please understand that I have no doubt that you participate in a spiritual communion and that it s a real communion, not illusory, in which you acknowledge and commemorate his sacrifice and death. And I believe that you receive grace because of your faith. But it is not the Eucharist.
I understand. I disagree about it not being the Eucharist, but i agree that it is a spiritual communion. I’m reading a book right now for a course on the Radical Reformation by George Huntson Williams. It’s fascinating because I’m reading about the idea of spiritual communion that was prevalent in many different forms throughout Europe on the Eve of the Reformation. Some embraced spiritual communion because they did not believe in the Real Presence. But others practiced spiritual communion because they had an incredibly high respect for the Real Presence and for a variety of reasons stemming from fear of partaking unworthily avoided physically partaking.
Anyway, a Dutch Sacramentist from the 1400s and friend of Thomas a Kempis named Wessel Gransfort wrote what I think sums up evangelical views. Remarking that “Those who are able to believe on him are able to eat his flesh,” Gransfort gives the example of the first hermit, Paul of Thebes, saying that he:
did eat of the flesh of the Son of Man even during the time when he did not see a single human being, not to speak of a priest celebrating the sacrament. But he did eat of it because he believed; and because he believed he frequently remembered; because he remembered he carefully considered; because he considered he ruminated; because he ruminated he tasted that it was sweet; because he tasted that it was sweet he desired; because he desired he hungered and thirsted; because he hungered and thirsted he knew that it was sweeter than honey and the honeycomb, he panted for it, he esteemed it, he loved it, he pined with love; he was wounded by love for it. (The Radical Reformation, 3rd ed. pages 102-103)
You made an interesting comment: 'We do not partake of Christ by eating a wafer and slurping down a fluid. We partake of Him by faith."
If you do not partake of Christ by eating a wafer and “slurping down fluid” then why do you do it? What is the point? Could not you and I sit down together, in faith, and just “remember” what he has done for us and give him thanks and praise for his great sacrifice? Why did he command us to eat something? And why did he call it his body and blood?
We should do it for:
First reason: obedience.
Second reason: remembering him in the specific way he told us to remember and commemorate him
Third reason: part of that is to do as Paul described, “proclaim his death.”
Fourth reason: to do this together as the body of Christ
I would also add that one reason actually doing Holy Communion is important is that in Holy Communion we use physical objects as signs and types of Christ’s body and blood. They are “points of contact.” In setting them apart for holy purposes, in touching them and in consuming them, we focus our faith on His broken body, His shed blood, His passion, and His suffering for us. In contemplating this as we partake, we are reminded once again in a tangible, physical way what He has done for us. We are reminded of His love, His mercy, His promises, His provision, and His healing.
As a result, faith is released: faith for healing, faith for deeper intimacy with God, faith that the lost will be found, faith in the midst of suffering and tribulation. With faith, comes renewed hope, strength, joy, and so much more.