A Review Of The Lords
Supper As Presented in F. LaGard Smiths,
Radical
Restoration
The Lords Supper
Jim Deason
The apostle Paul said,
there
must also be factions among you, so that those who are approved may
become evident among you
(1 Cor. 10:19). I do not suppose that there has been a time or a
place in the history of Gods
people when this has not been true
and ours is no exception. As Peter said,
...
there will also be false teachers among you, who will secretly
introduce destructive heresies...
(2 Pet. 2:1). It is our responsibility to
...
test the spirits to see whether they are from God; because many
false prophets have gone out into the world
(1
John 4:1).
The purpose of this article is to review a portion of
a book written by LaGard Smith entitled, Radical Restoration.
Specifically, I want to deal with the contents of chapter seven of
that book entitled, In An Unworthy Manner, which sets forth
Smiths
position on the Lords
Supper. I intend to let Smith, in his own words, explain his view
of the Lords
Supper and then show, from the Scriptures, why I believe him to be
in error.
LaGard Smith On
The Lords
Supper
Smith affirms that,
...perhaps
the most universally-overlooked feature of the Lords
Supper as practiced in the primitive church is that
from all appearances it was observed in conjunction with a fellowship meal. That
is, a normal, ordinary meal with the usual variety of food.
However, unlike normal, ordinary meals, this combined table
fellowship and memorial was shared among the disciples for the
special purpose of strengthening, not just their physical bodies,
but their common bond in the spiritual body of Christ. Hence,
Judes
reference to their love
feasts
(verse 12).
(Radical Restoration, p. 128-129, all emphasis should be
considered mine - jhd).
He continues, ...on
the occasion of its inaugural introduction
there in the upper room on the night Jesus was betrayed
the memorial was part of an actual meal being shared,
which included bread, wine, and whatever dish
it was into which Jesus dipped the bread before handing it to Judas
(John 13:26-27). (p. 129).
Smith describes a Thanksgiving meal at his home in
Nashville with its mixture of emotions, devotions, and memories and
then said, In
fact, from what we can tell, its
also very much like the house churches of the first century and
their memorial meals on the Lords
Day.
Apparently, their love feasts were a mirror image of our own
Thanksgiving celebrations, with home, family, food, love,
prayer, and shared memories. Especially the memory of Christ
(Radical Restoration, 146).
Having made his assumptions, using terms like
apparently
and from
all appearances,
Smith argues saying, From
its very inception, therefore, the Lords
Supper was an integral part of a real meal.
That real meal was not unlike the fellowship meals which the
larger body of Pentecost disciples shared throughout the week when
they broke
bread in their homes and ate together with glad and sincere hearts
(Acts 2:46). (p. 128-129)
Therefore, Smiths
view of the Lords
Supper is that of A
Memorial Within A Meal
(Radical Restoration, 128)
A meal with normal table fare
bacon and beans, biscuits and greens, to strengthen our body
with a pause at some point to eat unleavened bread and fruit of the
vine in memory of Jesus to strengthen our spirits.
Is this what the Scripture teaches?
A Preliminary
Observation
From the beginning to the end of Smiths
book, it is hard to find an old fashioned Scriptural argument where
a passage is quoted and a point of application clearly derived.
Brother Smith makes several assertions and assumptions then proceeds
to make his argument, having assumed the very point to be proven.
For example, he says,
perhaps
the most universally-overlooked feature of the Lords
Supper as practiced in the primitive church is that
from all appearances
it was observed in conjunction with a fellowship meal.
In order to prove that we have overlooked any feature of the Lords
Supper brother Smith needs to provide the passage that instructs us
in that feature. What passage have we overlooked that shows the
Lords
Supper was observed in conjunction with an ordinary meal? Brother
Smith assumes the very point he is supposed to prove.
Another example is the fact that Smith refers to Judes
love
feasts
(Jude 12) and asserts that this is talking about his blend of a
common meal and the Lords
Supper. Where is his proof of this? He doesnt
give it, but merely assumes and asserts that it is so and expects
the reader to believe it. The truth is, unless it be the Lords
Supper itself, neither he nor I have enough information from Jude 12
to know anything about the nature of these love
feasts.
Smiths
Fundamental Affirmation
Smiths
fundamental affirmation comes from the institution of the Lords
Supper at the last Passover Jesus observed with his disciples (Matt.
26:20-29; Mark 14:12-25; Luke 22:1-23). He argues that, because the
Lords
Supper was instituted during the Passover meal, i.e., what he calls
a normal,
ordinary
meal, therefore it should be observed today in conjunction with a
normal,
ordinary
meal. To which I have several replies.
First, I deny that the Passover meal was a
normal,
ordinary
meal. In fact, it was a very unusual meal, observed only once a
year, designed itself as a memorial. The meal, strictly regulated (Exo.
12), consisted of roasted lamb (unblemished one year old male),
unleavened bread, bitter herbs, and fruit of the vine (Matt. 26:29;
Luke 22:18). When Jesus and His disciples sat down to eat the
Passover it was anything but a typical meal. I teach, and I think
rightfully so, that by necessary inference the Lords
Supper is limited to unleavened bread and fruit of the vine. If the
Lords
Supper elements are restricted to unleavened bread and fruit of the
vine, why are not the contents of Smiths
normal,
ordinary
meal limited to the elements of the Passover feast. If they are not
so limited, why not? Further, if the elements of the
common
or Passover meal can be changed to bacon and beans, biscuits and
greens, by what logic can I not also change the elements of the Lords
Supper?
Second, the truth is that Jesus only instituted the
Lords
Supper on that Passover evening, He did not observe it. Why?
Because, neither He nor His disciples could memorialize an event
that had not yet taken place. I acknowledge, based on 1 Cor. 5:7;
John 1:29, et. al. (For
Christ our Passover also has been sacrificed.
Behold,
the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!)
that there is a type/anti-type relationship between Jesus and the
paschal lamb. However, the Lords
Supper was not a part of the Passover meal, nor an extension of it,
but merely the occasion upon which Jesus instituted His own memorial
supper by giving instruction on how His disciples were to observe it
after His death, when the church was established, and local
congregations gathered across the globe on the first day of every
week to worship. Furthermore, Jesus likely gave instruction on
other subjects while eating with his disciples. Must we assume that
because the instructions were given at mealtime that they must be
carried out at a meal? I think not.
Third, in further proof that the Lords
Supper was distinct from the Passover meal and not a part of it, I
offer 1 Cor. 11:25
the apostle Pauls
description of the institution of the Supper he said,
In
the same way He took the cup also after supper...,
indicating a distinction between the Passover meal and his
instruction concerning the institution of His memorial. This same
distinction is seen in Luke 22:20.
Gathered
Together To Break Bread
Brother Smith has trouble with the term
gathered
together to break bread
in Acts 20:7. He writes, In the New
Testament record, we find three ways to break
bread...
(1) The
first...was the literal breaking apart of the bread, as Jesus did
that night before he distributed it (Luke 22:19)... (2)
The
eating of the meal itself was also referred to as breaking
bread...
(Acts 2:46; 27:35 - jhd)... (3) It
appears that, in time, the Lords
Supper itself was referred to as breaking
bread...
(1 Cor. 10:16-17).
(P. 129-130)
In trying to establish his assertion that
On
the Lords
day...their common, ordinary fellowship meals took on an added
significance as they came together specifically to celebrate Christs
memorial,
he then writes, A
much clearer example is found when the disciples in Troas
came
together to break bread...on the first day of the week
(Acts 20:7). Because of its association with the
first
day
(the day on which the disciples regularly met together), the
breaking of bread on that occasion seems to have had the double
connotation of both meal and memorial `(Emphasis mine -jhd).
Whatever actual form it took, it was a memorial
within a meal
a time to remember the Bread of Life while breaking
bread
with one another.
(p. 130).
Smiths
double
connotation
argument reminds me of the struggles that a Pentecostal preach I
once debated had with Eph. 4:5. I asked the Pentecostal,
Which
baptism is the apostle Paul talking about in Eph. 4:5 when he
affirms, There
is... one baptism?
Is it water baptism, or Holy Spirit baptism?
He, Jerry, caught up in the dilemma, said both.
In like manner, if I were to ask brother Smith,
For
what purpose did the disciples gather on the first day of the week
in Troas? Was it to have a common meal, or to observe the Lords
Supper?
Knowing he has a similar dilemma, brother Smith has already answered
the question. He says, both.
The truth is, when Paul wrote to the church in Corinth, that appears
to have been exactly what they were doing. They were gathering for
both a common meal and to partake of the Lords
Supper
abusing the Lords
Supper in the process
and Paul rebuked them for it! Saying:
What!
Do you not have houses in which to eat and drink? Or do you despise
the church of God...
(1 Cor. 11:22). And again... If
anyone is hungry, let him eat at home, so that you will not come
together for judgment
(1 Cor. 11:34).
Problems With 1
Corinthians 11:17-34
Brother Smith realizes he has problems with 1 Cor. 11
and admits, I
am aware that most of us have traditionally understood this passage
to condemn the eating of a common, ordinary meal at a time when
Christs
memorial is being observed... So bear with me as I attempt to show
the passage in an altogether different light
(p. 130). And this is exactly what he attempts to do by taking
apart the passage, ignoring its simple, most obvious meaning and
reconstructing it to fit the presuppositions he brings to the
passage.
He asserts, Far
from prohibiting a fellowship meal in conjunction with the Lords
Supper, it is clear that Paul is saying (in current vernacular): If
the reason you are participating in the fellowship meal is to feed
your stomach, then youd
do better to stay home and pig out!
(p. 131). Paul, Smith to the contrary not withstanding, says again
simply, What!
Do you not have houses in which to eat and drink? Or do you despise
the church of God...
(1 Cor. 11:22). And again, If
anyone is hungry, let him eat at home, so that you will not come
together for judgment
(1 Cor. 11:34).
The apostle, in contradiction to brother Smith, is
saying in my parody of Smiths
words, If you have come together for the
purpose of partaking of a common meal, then youd
do better to stay at home and pig out!
Personally, I think Pauls
words are so clear and plain, that it takes a lawyer to confuse it!
The Consequences
of Smiths
Position
The consequences of Smiths
position need to be clearly understood. He would have us believe
that Matt. 26, Acts 20:7, and 1 Cor. 11 teaches that the Lords
Supper was
observed in conjunction with a fellowship meal. That is, a normal,
ordinary meal with the usual variety of food
(p. 128). If this is indeed the case then I ask,
Where,
then, is the passage that teaches that we may observe the Lords
Supper without a fellowship meal?
Brother Smith cant
cite Acts 20:7, 1 Cor. 11:23-26, Matt. 26:26-29 for he has already
used them to show the opposite. The truth is that our brother,
according to his reasoning, cant
cite a single passage to show that he has the authority to partake
of the Lords
Supper without a fellowship meal. Therefore,
according to his own logic, we MUST have
a common meal when we observe the Lords
Supper,
and to observe the Lords
Supper without it would be sinful. I find it difficult to believe
that even he would accept the consequences of his argument.
Conclusion
We live in troubled times. While I acknowledge that
there seems to be a spirit of stagnation among some churches, the
answer to that stagnation is not to be found in novel gimmicks in an
effort to find a closer vertical relationship with God and a warmer
horizontal relationship with one another. It is true that we need a
closer relationship with God and a warmer relationship with one
another. But I maintain that such can only truly be found by
following the instructions of the ancient prophets of God,
Thus
says the Lord, Stand
by the ways and see and ask for the ancient paths, Where the good
way is, and walk in it; And you shall find rest for your souls...
(Jer. 6:16). And again, Remove
not the ancient landmark, which thy fathers have set
(Pro. 22:28).
After all I have said
it may be surprising to some that I say that there are actually many
things in Smiths
Radical Restoration with which I agree. For instance, chapter 11
of the book entitled, A Youth-Driven Church, begins with Smith quoting
Bertand Russell as saying, I was born in
the wrong generation. When I was a young man, no one had any respect
for youth. Now I am an old man and no one has any respect for age.
I dont
consider myself an old man at all, but I am old enough to sympathize
with that statement. It seems that the spirit of our age is, if it is
old, it needs to be discarded. Little thought is given to the
possibility that some things that are old are so because they are
divinely revealed by a God who knows us better than we know ourselves.
Little thought is given to the possibility that the reason some things
are old is because they have been tried and tested and proven reliable.
I am convinced that these things will stand when this world is on fire
and false doctrine and the men who promote them are long gone. May God
give us the wisdom to both recognize and preserve the ancient
landmarks.