
Called to Fellowship—Hilvert Wijnholds
The writing of this book is prompted by the fact that the issue it treats remains ever current. It concerns the question with whom one can “partake of that one bread” (1 Cor. 10:17–18) at the Lord’s table. Does not the Lord alone have the right to receive at His table?
It is the responsibility of believers to learn the Lord’s will regarding this matter in dependence upon Him alone.
In the first four chapters the reader will find instruction about Christian fellowship in the church, that is, the fact that all believers sanctified in Christ Jesus (1 Cor. 1:2) have part together in the same blessings in the very house of God and as members of the body of Christ.
The fifth chapter considers the practical realisation of this fellowship, which, sad to say, is restricted as a result of fellowship with evil. There is therefore, on the one hand, a vital and indissoluble bond which unites every member of the body of Christ; and on the other hand fellowship at the Lord’s table which cannot be fully realised now as it was in the very first days of the church.
Saddle-stitched, 40 pages
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The writing of this book is prompted by the fact that the issue it treats remains ever current. It concerns the question with whom one can “partake of that one bread” (1 Cor. 10:17–18) at the Lord’s table. Does not the Lord alone have the right to receive at His table?
It is the responsibility of believers to learn the Lord’s will regarding this matter in dependence upon Him alone.
In the first four chapters the reader will find instruction about Christian fellowship in the church, that is, the fact that all believers sanctified in Christ Jesus (1 Cor. 1:2) have part together in the same blessings in the very house of God and as members of the body of Christ.
The fifth chapter considers the practical realisation of this fellowship, which, sad to say, is restricted as a result of fellowship with evil. There is therefore, on the one hand, a vital and indissoluble bond which unites every member of the body of Christ; and on the other hand fellowship at the Lord’s table which cannot be fully realised now as it was in the very first days of the church.
Saddle-stitched, 40 pages