Breaking Bread
Breaking Bread
Breaking Bread
Associate Editor
Journal of the Grace Evangelical Society
W
hat role did eating play in the NT church? While that may
not seem like a particularly interesting question, my growing
conviction is that theology should emphasize what the Bible
emphasizes, and there are at least eight important connections between
eating and a healthy NT church life. This article will survey eight ways
that the otherwise common act of eating ought to be a part of that life.
1
William Barclay, The Lord’s Supper (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 2001),
59.
2
Craig Keener, Acts (New York, NY: Cambridge University Press, 2020), 171.
71
72 Journal of the Grace Evangelical Society Spring 2021
3
Christine D. Pohl, Making Room: Recovering Hospitality as a Christian Tradition (Grand
Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1999), 21.
4
Keener, Acts, 171. See also, I Howard Marshall, Acts (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans,
1980), 83.
5
David Horrell, “The Lord’s Supper at Corinth and in the Church Today,” Theology 98
(1995): 201.
6
Pohl, Making Room, 31.
7
Vincent Branick, The House Church in the Writings of Paul (Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock,
2012), 32.
Breaking Bread: The Centrality of Eating to New Testament Church Life 73
A. Meeting En Ekklēsia
8
Suzanne Watts Henderson, “ ‘If Anyone Hungers…’: An Integrated Reading of 1 Cor
11.17–34,” New Testament Studies (48): 206. Greek transliterated.
74 Journal of the Grace Evangelical Society Spring 2021
that didn’t include the Lord’s Supper. And after 25 years we still have
found none.”9
9
See Bob Bryant, “Rediscovering the Lord’s Supper: One Church’s Journey” Grace in Focus
(July-August 2000): 6.
10
Gerd Theissen, The Social Setting of Pauline Christianity: Essays on Corinth, ed. and trans.
John H. Schütz (Philadelphia, PA: Fortress Press, 1982), 152
11
Branick, House Church, 98. While virtually all commentators admit that the Lord’s
Supper was eaten with a meal, few say the meal was itself part of the Lord’s Supper. Fee
says, “The words ‘after supper’ indicate that at the Last Supper the bread and cup sayings
were separated by the meal itself (or at least part of it); given their continuing but otherwise
unnecessary role in the tradition, it seems probable that this early pattern persisted in the
early church.” Gordon D. Fee, The First Epistle to the Corinthians, Revised Edition (Grand
Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1987, 2014), 613.
12
I. Howard Marshall, Last Supper and Lord’s Supper (Vancouver, BC: Regent College
Publishing, 1980, 2006), 108. See also G. H. Lang, The Churches of God (Shoals, IN:
Kingsley Press, 2012), 70; Jeffrey A. Gibbs, “An Exegetical Case for Close(d) Communion:
Breaking Bread: The Centrality of Eating to New Testament Church Life 75
is correct, the Lord’s Supper was not merely observed with a “social
meal” but was, itself, a real supper. As Meeks says, “the basic act is
the eating of a common meal, at which it is possible that ‘one goes
hungry, another is drunk’ (1 Cor 11:21).”13
That is not only suggested by Paul’s description of the Supper, but
also by the meaning of the Greek word for supper itself:
The word is deipnon. It may be that to western ideas the
word Supper is misleading, for in the west supper is a light
meal. But in Greece and in Palestine the deipnon was the
evening meal, and it was the only main meal of the day.
Breakfast was no more than bread taken with water or
with diluted wine. The midday meal was likely to be eaten
in the street in the open air and not at home at all. It
was not more than a picnic snack. The deipnon was the
evening meal, eaten by the family at home, the one main
and principal meal of the day.14
As a deipnon, the Lord’s Supper was not just a ritualized token
meal, but the main meal of the day, eaten in the evening.15 This may
be why Jude refers to a love feast (Jude 1:12), evidently a full meal,
which some take to be another name for the Lord’s Supper.16
In sum, later ritualized versions of the Lord’s Supper bear little
resemblance to how it was originally celebrated. As Barclay says,
“There can be no two things more different than the celebration of
the Lord’s Supper in a Christian home in the first century and in a
cathedral in the twentieth century. The things are so different that it
is almost possible to say that they bear no relationship to each other
whatsoever.”17
18
Branick, House Church, 99. See also Keener, Acts, 171; Craig Blomberg, “Jesus, Sinners,
and Table Fellowship,” Bulletin for Biblical Research, Vol. 19, No. 1 (2009), 55.
19
Marshall, Last Supper, 19.
20
Peter Stuhlmacher, Biblical Theology of the New Testament, trans. Daniel P. Bailey (Grand
Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2018), 401. Viola and Barna have a similar reconstruction: “For
the early Christians, the Lord’s Supper was a festive communal meal. The mood was one of
celebration and joy. When believers first gathered for the meal, they broke bread and passed
it around. Then they ate their meal, which then concluded after the cup was passed around.
The Lord’s Supper was essentially a Christian banquet.” See Frank Viola and George Barna,
Pagan Christianity?: Exploring the Roots of Our Church Practices (N.P.:Tyndale, 2002, 2008),
192. See also John Koenig, New Testament Hospitality: Partnership with Strangers as Promise
and Mission (Philadelphia, PA:Fortress Press, 1985), 67.
Breaking Bread: The Centrality of Eating to New Testament Church Life 77
21
Where they met would depend on what they did when they met. See Gregory Linton,
“House Church Meetings in the New Testament Era,” Stone-Campbell Journal 8 (Fall
2005): 229.
22
Linton says, “Perhaps the disciples rented a room that was part of a domestic residence, or
maybe a believer donated it for their use. Many houses in Palestine had rooms on the upper
floors accessible by an exterior stairway. Rabbinic writings indicate that Pharisees used such
rooms as meeting places for study.” Linton, “House Church Meetings,” 231.
23
Billings notes that it is often assumed that Paul “either rented or was provided a lecture
hall owned by a certain Tyrannus;” however, the school may not have been a physical
place at all, but an informal gathering of students around their teacher, Tyrannus. “Most
such orators found an audience for their activities in public spaces, such as the gymnasia
and baths, etc.” See Bradley S. Billings, “From House Church to Tenement Church,” The
Journal of Theological Studies 62 (2) (October 2011): 546.
24
Linton, “House Church Meetings,” 231. See also Branick, The House Church, 13. This
is a widely shared view. See also Jon Zens, Jesus Is Family (Orange, CA: Quoir, 2017), 24;
Carolyn Osiek and David L. Balch, Families in the New Testament World: Household and
House Churches (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox , 1997), 32; Robert and Julia
Banks, The Church Comes Home: A New Basis for Community and Mission (Claremont, CA:
Albatross Books, 1986), 39.
78 Journal of the Grace Evangelical Society Spring 2021
25
Branick, House Church, 39-42. See also Jerome Murphy-O’Connor, St. Paul’s Corinth:
Texts and Archeology, 3rd rev. and expanded ed., (Collegeville, MN: The Liturgical Press,
1983, 2002), 180-82.
26
Jewett, “Tenement Churches,” 26; Branick, House Church, 42.
27
Linton, “House Church Meetings,” 235. The top floors were less desirable because
when fires broke out, people in the top floors were the last to know. See Osiek and Balch,
Families in the New Testament World, 18.
28
Jewett, Romans, 69.
Breaking Bread: The Centrality of Eating to New Testament Church Life 79
29
Billings, “From House Church to Tenement Church,” 567.
30
Linton, “House Church Meetings,” 229.
31
Alexander Strauch, The Hospitality Commands (Littleton, CO: Lewis and Roth Publishers,
1993), 22.
32
Strauch, Hospitality, 22.
80 Journal of the Grace Evangelical Society Spring 2021
Zane Hodges, The Epistles of John: Walking in the Light of God’s Love (Denton, TX: Grace
34
financial help for future travel expenses, giving directions, and caring
for their car if that is their means of transportation.”35
35
Strauch, Hospitality, 29.
36
Strauch, Hospitality, 22.
37
Leon Morris, 1 Corinthians, rev. ed. (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1985, 2001), 191.
38
Fee, First Epistle to the Corinthians, 758-59; Carson says the two words “probably refer to
the same kinds of people: non-Christians.” D. A. Carson, Showing the Spirit: A Theological
82 Journal of the Grace Evangelical Society Spring 2021
But whoever has this world’s goods, and sees his brother in
need, and shuts up his heart from him, how does the love of
God abide in him? (1 John 3:17).
Poverty was especially prevalent among widows, and the believers
in Jerusalem cared for them. However, there were problems in the
supply chain, and the widows were not being treated equally:
Now at this time, as the disciples were increasing in number,
a complaint developed on the part of the Hellenistic Jews
against the native Hebrews, because their widows were being
overlooked in the daily serving of food (Acts 6:1 NASB).
Obviously, providing food to the poor was considered an important
job for the church. And those practical needs could be naturally filled
if the church met to eat a supper.
But even outside of Jerusalem, there were problems. When Paul
corrected the Corinthians in their celebration of the Lord’s Supper,
that criticism included concern for the poor:
Therefore when you come together in one place, it is not to
eat the Lord’s Supper. For in eating, each one takes his own
supper ahead of others; and one is hungry and another is
drunk. What! Do you not have houses to eat and drink in?
Or do you despise the church of God and shame those who
have nothing? What shall I say to you? Shall I praise you in
this? I do not praise you (1 Cor 11:20-22).
What, exactly, was the problem? Blue argues that the larger context
was a famine in Corinth, so that Paul urged the believers with ample
food to share with those who did not.43 It could be that the rich ate a
sumptuous supper on their own before the poor could arrive to celebrate
the Lord’s Supper.44 Or perhaps the rich did not share their abundant
food with the poor, who then went hungry.45 Instead of inviting the
43
Bradley B. Blue, “The House Church at Corinth and the Lord’s Supper: Famine, Food
Supply, and the Present Distress,” Criswell Theological Review 5.2 (1991): 237.
44
Koenig, New Testament Hospitality, 67.
45
Fee, Corinthians, 599. Craig Blomberg describes the problem this way: “The minority
of well-to-do believers (1:26), including the major financial supporters and owners of
84 Journal of the Grace Evangelical Society Spring 2021
A. Elders
If you remember the context of a house church where believers met
together to eat a full meal, Paul’s description of the overseer takes on
new meaning. It may be important to point out that a house church
would have had a sponsor, patron, or patroness—the paterfamilias of
the house (see Rom 16:5; 1 Cor 1:11; 16:15, 19). Branick says the title
the homes in which the believers met, would have had the leisure-time and resources to
arrive earlier and bring larger quantities and finer food than the rest of the congregation.
Following the practice of housing festive gatherings in ancient Corinth, they would have
quickly filled the small private dining room. Latecomers (the majority, who, probably
had to finish work before coming on Saturday or Sunday evening—there was as of yet no
legalized day off in the Roman empire) would be seated separately in the adjacent atrium
or courtyard. Those that could not afford to bring a full meal, or a very good one, did not
have the opportunity to share with the rest in the way that Christian unity demanded.” See
Craig Blomberg, 1 Corinthians (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1995), 228.
46
Michael A. Eaton, “Jude,” The Branch Exposition of the Bible: A Preacher’s Commentary of
the New Testament (Cumbria: Langham Global Library, 2020), 1189.
47
Strauch, Hospitality, 24.
48
Peter Lampe, “The Corinthian Eucharistic Dinner Party: Exegesis of a Cultural Context
(1 Cor. 11:17-34),” Affirmation 4/2 (1991):10-11.
Breaking Bread: The Centrality of Eating to New Testament Church Life 85
B. Deacons
The role of deacons takes on clearer meaning if you picture a
house church meeting where believers have gathered together to eat
a full supper. The original proto-deacons, like Stephen, were chosen
specifically to wait on tables to establish fairness in the distribution
of food because the Hellenistic widows were being short-changed in
favor of the Hebrew widows.55 The problem of equally distributing
food also became a problem in Corinth, where the rich were not
sharing with the poor. Could the function of the deacons have been
as basic as literally waiting tables, serving the food, making sure it
was distributed equally to all, and helping to set up and clean up
afterwards? Jewett notes that “the eucharistic liturgy was combined
with diaconal service, understood as serving meals in celebration with
the faith community.”56 If that is right, no wonder, then, that Paul
opens the role to both men and women, or better still, to married
teams, who know what it means to have a well-run household, and
who have control of their drinking, among other virtues (1 Tim 3:8,
12).
that the early believers worshipped together by eating together in homes, no wonder a
man overseeing such a gathering in his home better have a good relationship with his
wife and should rule his house well. A chaotic household would not be an ideal place to
host a meeting. And given the financial disparities between believers that had expressed
themselves in Corinth, where, as Craig Blomberg explains, “wealthy patrons” would have
been “accustomed to being treated unequally” (Blomberg, 1 Corinthians, 228), such a man
should not be greedy or covetous, so as to side with the rich against the poor.
55
Branick, House Church, 88-89.
56
Jewett, “Tenement Churches,” 32.
Breaking Bread: The Centrality of Eating to New Testament Church Life 87
Do not eat with that brother. Gordon Fee understands this to mean
“that the incestuous man is to be excluded from Christian fellowship
meals, including the Lord’s Table.”57 However, Fee does not believe
Paul meant to also exclude this man from private meals. But Strauch
thinks Paul does have in mind not showing private hospitality:
“we are to refuse hospitality to a professing Christian who lives in
unrepentant moral evil.”58 He adds, “We cannot act as if nothing is
wrong and invite such a Christian into our homes to eat.”59
Jude may also refer to disciplining people by excluding them from
the love feast:
These are spots in your love feasts, while they feast with you
without fear, serving only themselves. They are clouds without
water, carried about by the winds; late autumn trees without
fruit, twice dead, pulled up by the roots (Jude 1:12).
It sounds as though Jude expects them to remove the “spot” from
their feasts.
Yet another example, is John’s prohibition of showing hospitality to
traveling teachers who contradict his doctrine:
If anyone comes to you and does not bring this doctrine, do
not receive him into your house nor greet him (2 John 1:10).
Many commentators take 2 Thess 3:10b (“If anyone will
not work, neither shall he eat”) as popular maxim “of good old
workshop morality.”60 However, Jewett thinks it is another example
of “community discipline” and refers to being excluded from a
communal meal:61
The wording thus implies a sanction in which deprivation
of food as such is in view, not temporary exclusion from
a particular meal. The most obvious point about this
sanction has never been pointed out, so far as I can tell,
and it is crucial for understanding the place of the common
meal in the Thessalonian congregations. The sanction
must be enforceable for the regulation to be effective. This
means that the community must have had jurisdiction
57
Fee, Corinthians, 247.
58
Strauch, Hospitality, 45.
59
Ibid., 46.
60
Leon Morris, 1 and 2 Thessalonians, rev. ed. (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1984), 146.
61
Jewett, “Tenement Churches,” 33-34. See also Jewett, Romans, 67-68
88 Journal of the Grace Evangelical Society Spring 2021
62
Jewett, “Tenement Churches,” 37. See also Mal Couch, The Hope of Christ’s Return:
Premillennial Commentary on 1 & 2 Thessalonians (Chattanooga, TN: AMG Publishers,
2001), 253.
63
Jewett, “Tenement Churches,” 41.
64
Jewett, Romans, 66. However, Jewett also notes how an “overly realized eschatology” led
to excesses and “licentious behavior.”
65
Koenig, New Testament Hospitality, 16.
Breaking Bread: The Centrality of Eating to New Testament Church Life 89
How long will the Church celebrate the Lord’s Supper? Until
He comes. For Paul, the Lord’s Supper is not only a reminder of
what He did, but also of what He will do, i.e., return again. Meeks
says, “some connection with Jesus’ eschatological coming is found
in all versions of the early Eucharistic tradition, though in varied
verbal formulations.”66 But why would a supper have that kind of
eschatological connection? In part, because a Biblical image for life
in the Messianic age was sitting at a grand banquet with the heroes
of the faith:
“And I say to you that many will come from east and west,
and sit down with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob in the kingdom
of heaven” (Matt 8:11).
“They will come from the east and the west, from the north
and the south, and sit down in the kingdom of God” (Luke
13:29).
Leon Morris comments, “Sit at table employs the imagery of the
Messianic banquet, a symbol of the joy of the end of time greatly
beloved by the Jews.”67 In pointing to the return of the Messiah,
the Lord’s Supper is an anticipation of that Messianic banquet. The
realization of the banquet is pictured in Revelation:
Then he said to me, “Write: ‘Blessed are those who are called
to the marriage supper of the Lamb!’ ” And he said to me,
“These are the true sayings of God.” (Rev 19:9).
Thomas notes that the “marriage supper” is a deipnon, as is the
Lord’s Supper. However, he also notes that these two deipna are
distinct: “the Lord’s Supper is not the same as the marriage supper of
the Lamb which fulfills the commemorative suppers practiced by local
churches and is exclusively future in connection with Christ’s second
advent. The Lord promised Laodicean overcomers the privilege of
participation in this supper (3:20).”68 Thus, the idea of a supper could
also be a reminder and motivation to work for eternal rewards.
66
Meeks, The First Urban Christians, 158-59. See also Horrell, “The Lord’s Supper at
Corinth,” 201.
67
Leon Morris, Luke, rev. ed., (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1974, 1988), 248.
68
Robert L. Thomas, Revelation 8–22: An Exegetical Commentary (Chicago, IL: Moody,
1995), 373.
90 Journal of the Grace Evangelical Society Spring 2021
IX. CONCLUSION
The picture of the importance of eating to normal church life
as seen in the Bible, and as noted in the academic literature, may
strike you as different from how church is practiced today. Why the
difference? As Emil Brunner once noted:
In the last 50 or 100 years New Testament research
has unremittingly and successfully addressed itself to
the task of elucidating for us what was known as the
Ecclesia in primitive Christianity—so very different from
what is to-day called the Church both in the Roman
and Protestant camps. It is, however, a well-known fact
that dogmatists and Church leaders often pay but small
attention to the results of New Testament research.69
Instead of facing this “distressing problem,” the dogmatists appeal
to “development” to explain the difference between the NT ekklēsia
and today’s church.
By contrast, it is important for Biblicists to face the issues raised in
the role of eating to NT church life. If your practices differ from the
Biblical ones, what should you do? Of course, the obvious answer is
to return to Biblical practices. Horrell suggests at least experimenting
with such a return: “Perhaps the occasional reincorporation of the
Lord’s supper [sic] into the context of a real shared meal might be
worth experimenting with.”70 Likewise, Jewett says we ought to “seek
new ways of integrating the Lord’s Supper into revitalized forms of
potluck meals.”71 Simply put, begin eating together. Some people may
object that church has not bee conducted like that for many centuries.
When Roland Allen faced similar opposition after explaining how
Paul’s missionary methods differed from modern methods, he would
give this response: “All I can say is ‘This is the way of Christ and
69
Emil Brunner, The Misunderstanding of the Church, trans. Harold Knight (London:
Lutterworth, 1952), 5.
70
See Horrell, “The Lord’s Supper at Corinth,” 201.
71
Jewett, “Tenement Churches and Pauline Love Feasts,” Quarterly Review (Spring 1994):
55-56.
Breaking Bread: The Centrality of Eating to New Testament Church Life 91
72
Roland Allen, Missionary Methods: St. Paul’s or Ours? (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans,
1962), ii.