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How important is Holy Communion/The Eucharist important to UCC congregations?
Thanks in advanced
Thanks in advanced
It is very important to me. Of course, my childhood roots are in the Lutheran Church (Missouri Synod). I personally believe in the Real Presence in the Sacrament. However, I think this varies from congregation to congregation and from person to person within the UCC. Most places I have attended have taken communion every month.How important is Holy Communion/The Eucharist important to UCC congregations?
Thanks in advanced
Thanks for your responseIt is very important to me. Of course, my childhood roots are in the Lutheran Church (Missouri Synod). I personally believe in the Real Presence in the Sacrament. However, I think this varies from congregation to congregation and from person to person within the UCC. Most places I have attended have taken communion every month.
It is my understanding the UCC does infant baptism.I grew up with the southern baptist church and we didn't even call it communion. We called it the Lord's Supper, and we took it the first Sunday of the month, only. We did not take it every day of the week. Oh, and the Baptists used grape juice and not wine. Jesus turned the water into wine and the Baptists turned the wine into grape juice. I am glad the Church of Christ does not baptize babies. Growing up southern baptist this is something I feel strongly against . Baptizing babies is a sin! I was shocked to learn how many 'protestant' denominations act so much like Catholics, they baptize babies and practice ritual chanted prayers, set prayers and not prayers from the heart. I am relieved to find the UCC. I hope they don't ever start getting into politics and gossip,
Thanks for the input!btw, communion is not important to me. doing right, praying, bible reading, obedience is. walking with Jesus on the narrow path is most important.
is there a confusion between the UCC and the Church of Christ?It is my understanding the UCC does infant baptism.
I would assume so.is there a confusion between the UCC and the Church of Christ?
Thanks for the input.I think that Communion is very important. But Communion with the Lord implies much more than simply eating a cracker and drinking an ounce of wine. Communion is a coming together. In spirit and prayer. Focused on the Lord. In spirit and in truth. If that is the case, then Communion should be every day. !! To come into communion with the Lord, are you kidding?!
I keep a cheap bottle of red wine in the frige for just that purpose. I usually use crackers but I did buy 1000 wafers like the church uses. Just in case a lot of people show up sometime. Besides, they say that an ounce of red wine every day is good for you.
I don't drink wine though. I do Communion but gave up drinking many years ago. Every day! I've taken to declaring that, this IS the blood of Jesus, and this IS the body of Jesus before I partake of it. Who knows what happens in the spiritual realm when we do that?
Thanks for the inputIt varies. The liturgy used in most UCC churches might have the Words of Institution, but the prayers typically aren't as emphatic about the presence of Christ in the sacrament, there's more talk about bread and wine and less about body and blood. It is accepted as a means of grace, though. A wide variety of viewpoints are tolerated. Most UCC churches only have communion twice a month, similar to other mainline Protestant churches.
There are some beautiful hymns in the old Pilgrim hymnal (still used in some congregations) that help me appreciate a more Reformed perspective on the sacrament, but perhaps not the kind of theological reflection you might see in a Lutheran or Catholic church.