by David T. KoyzisIn most Reformed and Presbyterian churches, the typical Sunday  morning     worship service is a preaching service in which the sermon  is regarded as     the centerpiece. The Lord's Supper, or communion, is  celebrated     infrequently—perhaps four to six times a year—and is  viewed by the     congregation as something of a special occasion. Such  occasional celebration     is so much a part of the life of Calvinistic  churches that it is probably     not widely known that Calvin himself  favored weekly celebration of     communion.
     Why did he favor freqent celebration of the sacrament, and why were his     wishes not followed?
 Scripture and the Early Church
      As is the case with the mode and time of baptism, the Scriptures  are not     clear about how often the Lord's Supper ought to be  celebrated. Jesus     himself gave no direction on the matter, nor did  the apostle Paul. But Luke     reports in the book of Acts: "On the  first day of the week we came together     to break bread." (20:7) Luke  was describing his seven-day visit to the city     of Troas in Asia  Minor. The passage implies that the breaking of bread was     not an  unusual occurrence, but the normal practice of the Christians in that      city.
     Several extrabiblical sources report more explicitly that the  early church     celebrated the Lord's Supper whenever it met for  worship. These include the     late first-century Didache, or the Teaching of the Twelve Apostles, and the     First Apology  of Justin Martyr, which was written in the middle of the     second  century. In The Apostolic Tradition of Hippolytus, which was    written  around A.D. 200 and is the oldest surviving Christian liturgy, the      author documents the normal worship service at Rome, which included the      Lord's Supper. Unfortunately, as early as the fourth century the  laity had     already begun to participate in the supper with decreasing  frequency.
 Calvin and Late Medieval Practice
      In the centuries prior to the Reformation a number of serious  abuses crept     into the life of the church, some of which affected the  celebration of the     Lord's Supper. The medieval church continued to  celebrate the supper (in the     form of the Mass) whenever it met, but  with the passage of centuries, fewer     and fewer people were able to  partake of the sacrament. Often only the     "celebrants," that is, the  presiding clergy, received the bread and wine,     while the vast  majority of parishioners watched the ceremony passively from     a  distance. Laypersons who wanted to participate in the sacrament were      required to do penance before partaking of the sacrament, and that  proved to     be a burdensome obstacle to regular participation. As a  result, ordinary     Christians often received the sacrament on an  annual basis only, the     absolute minimum permitted by church  authorities. This was the situation the     Reformers found at the  beginning of the sixteenth century.
     John Calvin was clearly disturbed by this unbiblical practice and  tried to     change it in the Genevan church. He used surprisingly  strong language in     condemning the custom of his day:
     Plainly this custom which enjoins us to take communion once a  year is a     veritable invention of the devil, whoever was  instrumental in introducing     it...For there is not the least doubt  that the Sacred Supper was in that era     [the early church] set before  the believers every time they met together;     and there is no doubt  that a majority of them took communion...
     Calvin regretted that worshiping Christians were ordinarily prohibited from     receiving the sacrament and urged reform:
     It should have been done far differently: the Lord's Table  should have been     spread at least once a week for the assembly of  Christians, and the promises     declared in it should feed us  spiritually.
 [Inst. IV. XVII. 46, emphasis mine].
 
     Unfortunately, the prevailing tradition of Calvin's day  reasserted itself.     The city fathers of Geneva were unwilling to see  the Reformation go this     far, at least partly because they felt  obligated to examine and approve     prospective communicants—a gigantic  task that would have made weekly     celebration impractical.  Consequently, they forced Calvin to settle for a     compromise: The  people would receive the Lord's Supper four times a year,     and the  other worship services would become preaching services at which the      sacrament would not be celebrated at all. This second-best solution was      preferable to a weekly celebration in which most people did not  participate.
     Calvin could scarcely conceal his disappointment, but he  nevertheless     foresaw a time when matters might be put right. Towards  the end of his life     he wrote:
     I have taken care to record publicly that our custom is  defective, so that     those who come after me may be able to correct it  the more freely and     easily.
[Bretschneider, Corpus Reformatorum, XXXVIII, i, p. 213].
     Unfortunately, even defective traditions are not changed quite so  "freely     and easily." In our celebration of communion, we in the  Reformed churches     have inherited not the more    Reformed practice  urged by Calvin, but the less-than-Reformed compromise     imposed on  him by a city used to the old ways. Is it at last time to think      about changing our custom?
 The Benefits of Weekly Celebration
      Why celebrate weekly? It is impossible to answer this question  without     understanding why we receive the sacrament in the first  place. In the sixth     chapter of John, Jesus tells his followers, "I  am the bread of life. He who     comes to me will never go hungry, and  he who believes in me will never be     thirsty" (6:35).
     This is only one of several places in Scripture where Christ is  said to     nourish us and we are said to feed on him. At the Last  Supper Christ     instituted the sacrament as a visible reminder of this  nourishment and as a     means by which to communicate his grace to us.  The Heidelberg Catechism puts     it beautifully:
     He wants to assure us, by this
 visible sign and pledge, that we,
 through the Holy Spirit's work,
 share in his true body and blood as
 surely as our mouths receive these
 holy signs in his remembrance (A. 79).
But won't a weekly celebration of communion cause this sacrament  to lose its     special character? Won't it become routine and humdrum?  This is probably the     most frequently voiced objection to weekly  communion.
     First of all, it should be pointed out that we rarely hear anyone  object to     sitting through sermons on a weekly basis. Yet what we  receive in the     sacrament simply confirms in a vivid and direct way  what we have already     received in the proclamation of Scripture in  the sermon. Both sermon and     sacrament are means of grace that affirm  and enrich our faith.
     Moreover, it may be that we shall have to reconsider, in a rather  basic way,     our attitude towards Sunday worship itself. In the  Russian language Sunday     is called Resurrection Day, underscoring the  fact that each Lord's Day is     intended to be a "special" one in  which we celebrate the resurrection of     Christ. If we have come to  see normal Sunday worship as routine, then     perhaps we need to  recover this celehrative character.
     As for the Lord's Supper itself, we should begin to think of it  as it was     meant to be: a meal. We eat meals three times a day. And  the most pleasant     and meaningful of these are eaten in the company  of family and friends.     Fellowship at table does not lose its  significance simply because it is     repeated two or three times daily.  The same, I would argue, is true of     frequent reception of  communion.
     Because we are frail human beings plagued with the normal doubts  that beset     everyone, we need this tangible confirmation of our  salvation in Christ's     body and blood. Far from being burdensome, our  nourishment in the Lord's     Supper should be cause for joy and  gratitude. In some Christian traditions     the Lord's Supper is even  known as the Eucharist, from the Greek word     meaning "thanksgiving."
     One more issue perhaps ought to be addressed: Are we not, by  holding the     Lord's Supper so often, flirting with a sacramentalist  view which sees the     sacrament as conferring salvation on us in some  magical, automatic way?
     No, not in the least; the sacraments themselves do not save us.  We are saved     by grace through faith in Jesus Christ. The Lord's  Supper, rather, "nourish[es]     and sustain[s] those who are already  born again and ingrafted into his     family: his church" (Belgic  Confession, Article 35).
 How Shall We Celebrate?
      Some people might point out that the use of lengthy formularies  inhibits     frequent celebration. This is probably true of the Lord's  Supper forms     inherited from the sixteenth-century Palatinate by way  of the Netherlands.     These were in a sense liturgical "training  wheels"—didactic monologues used     by the Reformers to educate their  parishioners concerning the true meaning     of the sacrament and to  dispel superstitions connected with it. The element     of lay  participation was almost entirely absent.
     Fortunately, this has been largely rectified by many  denominations in recent     years. The worship edition of the new  Psalter HymnaKpp. 972-5) of the     Christian Reformed Church contains a  Lord's Supper form, approved by synod     in 1981, which builds on a  much older liturgical tradition that goes all the     way back to  Hippolytus and that incorporates the congregation as a whole     into  the liturgy. The Reformed Church in America has a similar "Order of      Worship" in Rejoice in the Lord (pp. 560-70) and Worship the Lord (pp.      2-12). These are much more appropriate than our older forms for  frequent     use.
     Some congregations have taken it upon themselves to adapt and  vary these     forms in accordance with the church year. For example,  Church of the Servant     (CRC) in Grand Rapids, Michigan, celebrates  weekly communion, and its     members have created liturgies that are  specifically fitted for the seasons     of Advent, Christmas, Epiphany,  and so forth.
     As a denomination the Christian Reformed Church also publishes a  loose-leaf     Service Book, which includes seasonal variations of its  1981 form. Examples     of comparable liturgical variations in other  traditions can be found in the     Lutheran Book of Worship, the  Episcopal Church's revised Book of Common     Prayer (1979), and the  Anglican Church of Canada's Book of Alternative     Services. A more  frequent Lord's Supper need not imply monotony or sameness.
     In churches where the Lord's Supper is celebrated weekly, the  people have     generally come to treasure this opportunity to "taste  and see that the Lord     is good" (Ps. 34:8). Far from becoming mundane  and ordinary, the supper has     come to enrich the faith of those  receiving, who increasingly find     themselves looking forward to each  Resurrection Day with eager anticipation.