Section Eight: the doctrine of the Lord’s Supper


To the Christians the Lord’s Supper is pieces of bread plus a cup of wine. A Christian believes that the bread he eats will change into the flesh of Christ although it still tastes as bread; and the cup of wine will change into the blood of Christ although it still tastes as wine. Belief in this is inevitable albeit it does not agree with reality. This supper is not confined to a certain time; it is eaten on Easter Day or on any other times but it must be eaten in the church; therefore, “people should be notified two weeks prior to its date.”[1] The Protestant sect does not accept the claim that bread and wine change into the flesh and blood of Christ, but takes this as a symbol of what happened to Christ (peace be upon him) and as a relic of his crucifixion for the good of human beings. Matthew relates that Jesus (peace be upon him) broke bread into pieces and gave it to the disciples, and said: “Take, eat; this is my body.” And he took the cup, and gave thanks, and gave it to them, saying, Drink ye all of it; for this is my blood of the New Testament, which is shed for many for the remission of sins.”[2]

“This event (the Lord’s Supper) in its entirety is not mentioned in John. This is amazing, for the Lord’s Supper is one of the most significant beliefs and rituals of the church!  John, the author of the Gospel, was among the Disciples who attended that supper. Why did he not mention it then?”[3]

Shaikh Rahmatullah al-Hindi discredits this doctrine, which Catholics strongly believe in, saying: “If what you allege of eating the flesh of Christ and drinking his blood in the Lord’s Supper were true, you would be worse and more wicket than the Jews, for the Jews tortured and tormented him once but they did not eat his flesh or drink his blood or crush his bones…! In contrast, you slaughter him everyday in various places and break his bones into pieces on every occasion.”[4]  If that was really what Christ wanted, as you allege, why do the Protestants not believe in it since the Gospel states it on behalf of Jesus? In reality, the notion of the Lord’s Supper was an attractive notion in the ancient heathen world, for they believed that whoever ate of the corpse of the dead god and drank of his blood would become immortal. For instance, “Ancient Egyptians used to worship the god Osiris and they would make a body of wheat dough representing him and then eat it as a sanctified sacrifice, thinking that they would receive power from the body and blood of Osiris.

The grains symbolized Osiris, the bread made from wheat was a sacred meal and the beer that was fermented barley juice was a sacred drink. They believed that the bread and the beer were the body and blood of Osiris literally and not figuratively.[5]


[1] Al-Khalaf, op. cit., p. 270.

[2] Matthew:26:26-28

[3] Al-Khuli, Muhammad ‘Ali, Muqaranah baina al-Anajil al-Arba‘ah, p. 68.

[4] Shalabi, ‘Abdul-Wadud, op. cit., p. 47.

[5] Al-Zain, op. cit., pp. 142-143.