Mark 10:2-16
No Tokens Required
James Sledge October 4,
2015
If
you go into our church parlor, you will find a few items from this
congregation’s history displayed there. There’s an old pulpit Bible and a curio
cabinet with an old hymnal, more Bibles, old photos, and other artifacts. Young
congregations tend not to have such displays, but those that have been around long
enough often have a history display somewhere.
I
once visited an old church with an elaborate display going back to colonial days.
And in one corner of this mini-museum, on a curio shelf, were some communion
tokens.
If
you’ve never heard of such things, they are just what the name implies, tokens
that gained a person admission to the Lord’s Supper. They were used back in the
days of very infrequent communion, and you got one after elders from the Session
(our church governing council) visited and quizzed you about your understanding
of the faith. John Calvin suggested such a practice to ensure that people
correctly understood the sacrament. He worried about what he saw as magical or
superstitious beliefs about the Lord’s Supper.
Calvin
may have understood these tokens as a kind of impromptu communicants’ class
rather than a gauge of personal worthiness, but even if he did, you can be sure
that people were denied tokens for reasons other than insufficient
understanding of Reformed theology. Inevitably, the elders made character
judgments about church members and denied tokens to those who didn’t measure
up.
Use of these tokens largely disappeared
in the 1800s, but it’s interesting to wonder about what sort of moral failing
would have prevented people receiving one. Could a young, unmarried woman with
a child get one? How about those who were divorced? What about drinking or
carousing or dancing? Tokens were done on a church by church basis, so there
was likely a good deal of variety from place to place. Nonetheless I feel
confident that there were plenty of congregations that would not have welcomed divorced
folks to the table.
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“Truly
I tell you, whoever does not receive the kingdom of God as a little child will
never enter it.” When
the gospel of Mark wants to take up an entirely new topic, the writer will
often change locales, but he tells us about people bringing little children to
Jesus with no break at all from the teachings on marriage. Curious.
Jesus
has just finished talking about how relationships would work if people’s hearts
weren’t out of whack, when the disciples demonstrate, for the umpteenth time,
that they still don’t get this kingdom thing. Turn back one page in Mark’s
gospel and you’ll hear Jesus saying, “Whoever welcomes one such child in my name
welcomes me.” He has already said that children in some way exemplify what
it means to be highly valued in the kingdom’s way of viewing things, but these
disciples are fairly slow learners, like disciples in every age.
This
seems to be the only place in Mark’s gospel where we’re explicitly told that Jesus
got mad at his followers, “indignant” our translation says. Surely there is
some significance here. Surely we are being told to pay attention.