Why Our Church Celebrates The Lord's Supper Every Week
What if a simple, weekly meal could reshape the life of a whole church? We explore why our congregation practices the Lord’s Supper every week and make a grounded case that blends biblical patterns, early church tradition, and pastoral experience. Rather than asking why we should do it weekly, we flip the question and ask why we would step away from a rhythm the first Christians embraced and their successors carried for centuries.
We walk through four core reasons.
1. First, the New Testament’s witness and early writings show the table at the center of gathered worship, not a rare add-on.
2. Second, the logistics are lighter than many assume; with shared service and clear systems, preparing the elements is a matter of minutes, not hours.
3. Third, routine need not be hollow. Like prayer before bed or a daily kiss before work, repetition can deepen love, secure memory, and form a people who live by grace rather than novelty.
4. Fourth, Christ meets us at his table. Without collapsing into confusion about how, we affirm a real spiritual presence that nourishes faith as surely as the preached word does.
Along the way, we consider how the Supper reorients the church’s gaze in three directions: back to the cross so we never forget, forward to the kingdom so present troubles don’t swallow hope, and outward to those who watch and ask why we eat and drink. The table becomes a visible proclamation that invites questions from children and guests and opens doors for gentle witness. If you’ve felt distant from God or unsure how to root your community more deeply in the gospel, this conversation offers a simple, historic, and profoundly pastoral path: set the table, come hungry, and keep remembering until he returns.