In the quiet moments before the bread is broken and the cup is passed in our local gatherings, a profound weight often goes unspoken. We who are saved by grace, sealed by the Holy Spirit, and assured of eternal life in Christ Jesus still stand before the Lord’s Table with trembling reverence. The apostle Paul’s words in 1 Corinthians 11:27–32 pierce through any casual approach to this sacred ordinance. Even for the redeemed, partaking in an unworthy manner carries serious consequences, not loss of salvation, but the loving discipline of a Father who will not allow His children to profane what is holy. This passage calls us not to morbid introspection or self-exclusion, but to continual, honest examination of our hearts, our relationships, and our discernment of Christ’s body. It reminds us that “worthiness” is not perfection we earn but a posture of faith, repentance, and unity that honors the One who gave Himself for us.
The Lord’s Supper is no mere ritual tacked onto a worship service for efficiency’s sake. It is a commanded proclamation of the Lord’s death until He comes (1 Corinthians 11:26, ESV). Jesus instituted it on the night He was betrayed, saying, “Do this in remembrance of me” (1 Corinthians 11:24–25, ESV). Yet Paul, writing to a divided and self-indulgent Corinthian Church, issues a severe warning alongside a clear path of preparation. The text confronts us: even the saved can eat and drink judgment to themselves if they fail to discern the body and approach with unexamined hearts. This blog post exegetes the passage verse by verse from the original Greek, unpacks the meaning of key terms, explores the historical context, examines supporting Scriptures, and applies the truths to our lives today. We will see that self-examination is not a barrier to the Table but the very preparation that allows us to feast on grace with joy and hope.
The Historical and Cultural Context of the Corinthian Church
To grasp the gravity of Paul’s instructions, we must step into first-century Corinth. A bustling port city known for wealth, immorality, and social stratification, Corinth mirrored the excesses of the Roman Empire. The Church there reflected its culture: divisions along class lines, factions boasting spiritual superiority, and a troubling blend of pagan practices with Christian worship. Rich believers arrived early for the love feast (a shared meal preceding the Supper), gorged themselves, and even became drunk, while poorer members, slaves and laborers, arrived later to find scraps or nothing at all (1 Corinthians 11:18–22, ESV). This selfishness turned the memorial of Christ’s sacrificial death into a display of gluttony and exclusion.
Paul had already addressed idolatry and immorality in the letter, but here he turns to the heart of worship. The Corinthians were profaning the very symbols of Christ’s broken body and shed blood by failing to love one another. Their actions revealed a deeper failure: they did not discern the Lord’s body, neither the atoning sacrifice of Jesus nor the unity of the local Church as His body. This context is crucial. Paul’s warning is not abstract theology but a direct rebuke of real, observable sin among professing believers. It shows that salvation does not automatically produce mature conduct; continual examination is required to align our lives with the Gospel we proclaim at the Table.
Even today, similar dynamics persist. Modern Churches may not feature literal drunkenness at potlucks, but subtle divisions, along racial, economic, political, or generational lines, can creep in. Hurried services prioritize convenience over conviction. Unreconciled relationships linger while members partake. The passage calls us to examine not just individual piety but also corporate unity, for the Lord’s Supper is a visible testimony to the fact that the Gospel creates one new humanity in Christ.
Exegetically Unpacking the Original Greek in 1 Corinthians 11:27–32 (ESV)
Paul writes with apostolic authority: “Whoever, therefore, eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord in an unworthy manner will be guilty concerning the body and blood of the Lord” (1 Corinthians 11:27, ESV). The opening Ὥστε (“therefore”) links directly to the preceding rebuke of Corinthian abuses. The key adverb here is ἀναξίως, translated “in an unworthy manner.” This term does not describe the participant's personal worthiness, as if one must achieve sinless perfection before coming. Rather, ἀναξίως denotes conduct that is unfitting, irreverent, or unsuitable for the solemn memorial of Christ’s death. It emphasizes manner and attitude: approaching without reverence for what the elements represent or without regard for the body of believers.
The consequence is stark: the person “will be guilty concerning the body and blood of the Lord”, ἔνοχος ἔσται τοῦ σώματος καὶ τοῦ αἵματος τοῦ κυρίου. Ἔνοχος carries a legal connotation of liability or culpability. One becomes accountable for profaning the very realities the bread and cup symbolize: Christ’s sacrificial body given and His blood poured out. This is not a minor lapse but a serious offense against the Lord Himself, akin to treating the cross with contempt.
Verse 28 provides the remedy: “Let a person examine himself, then, and so eat of the bread and drink of the cup” (ESV). The imperative δοκιμαζέτω δὲ ἄνθρωπος ἑαυτόν commands each individual to “examine” or “test” himself. Δοκιμάζω is a rich term drawn from metallurgy and the marketplace. It means to test something for genuineness, to prove its quality, with the expectation of approval, like assaying metal to confirm its purity. This is not a morbid, endless self-flagellation that keeps one from the Table. It is an honest appraisal: Am I approaching with faith in Christ’s finished work? Have I repented of known sin? Is there unity and love toward my brothers and sisters? Paul immediately follows with καὶ οὕτως (“and so” or “in this way”): after examination, eat and drink. Self-examination prepares us; it does not disqualify the repentant sinner.
Verse 29 explains the danger: “For anyone who eats and drinks without discerning the body eats and drinks judgment on himself” (ESV). The participle μὴ διακρίνων τὸ σῶμα is pivotal. Διακρίνω means to distinguish, to judge correctly, or to discern between things. “The body” (τὸ σῶμα) most likely refers both to Christ’s physical body sacrificed on the cross and to the Church as His body (see 1 Corinthians 10:17; 12:27). Failing to discern means treating the Supper casually, ignoring its Gospel proclamation, or participating while harboring division, selfishness, or unconfessed sin. The result is κρίμα ἑαυτῷ, “judgment on himself.” Κρίμα here is not the final, eternal condemnation (κατάκριμα) but corrective judgment, discipline from a loving Father.
The consequences unfold in verse 30: “That is why many of you are weak and ill, and some have died” (ESV). Paul points to observable realities in the Corinthian congregation: ἀσθενεῖς καὶ ἄρρωστοι (weak and sick) and κοιμῶνται (a euphemism for those who have “fallen asleep” in death). These were not random afflictions but direct results of God’s hand of discipline for unworthy participation. Yet verse 31 offers hope: “But if we judged ourselves truly, we would not be judged” (ESV). The verb κρίνομεν echoes the earlier terms; self-judgment (proper use of διακρίνω and δοκιμάζω) averts divine κρίμα.
Finally, verse 32 clarifies the Father’s heart: “But when we are judged by the Lord, we are disciplined so that we may not be condemned along with the world” (ESV). Παιδευόμεθα, from παιδεύω, means “we are chastened” or “disciplined,” the same word used for a father training his children (Hebrews 12:5–11). The purpose is protective: ἵνα μὴ σὺν τῷ κόσμῳ κατακριθῶμεν (“so that we may not be condemned along with the world”). Even those who “sleep” under discipline remain saved; their early departure prevents them from being lost with the unbelieving world. This is profound grace wrapped in severity.
Understanding “Unworthy Manner” in Light of Corinthian Failures
In the Corinthian context, ἀναξίως specifically manifested in division and selfishness. Some ate full meals and drank to excess, while others went hungry (1 Corinthians 11:21–22). This was not mere bad etiquette; it denied the unity the Supper proclaims. Paul had earlier declared, “Because there is one bread, we who are many are one body, for we all partake of the one bread” (1 Corinthians 10:17, ESV). Failing to share reflected a failure to love.
Lack of discernment compounded the issue. The Corinthians did not properly regard the Lord’s body, either Christ’s atoning sacrifice or the Church family. They treated the elements as ordinary food rather than sacred symbols proclaiming the Gospel. Unconfessed sin and unreconciled relationships further profaned the Table. Jesus’ own teaching echoes this: “So if you are offering your gift at the altar and there remember that your brother has something against you, leave your gift there before the altar and go. First be reconciled to your brother, and then come and offer your gift” (Matthew 5:23–24, ESV). Worship requires relational health.
Paul reinforces the incompatibility of divided loyalties: “You cannot drink the cup of the Lord and the cup of demons. You cannot partake of the table of the Lord and the table of demons” (1 Corinthians 10:21, ESV). The heart cannot simultaneously cling to sin and feast on grace.
The “Worthiness” Required is not Perfection, but Faith, Examination, Repentance, and Unity
According to these texts, worthiness is not sinless perfection, impossible for any but Christ, but a posture of the heart. It includes:
Faith in the finished work of Christ. We come as sinners, remembering that His body was broken and blood shed for us.
Self-examination. Δοκιμάζω demands honest appraisal: Is my heart repentant? Do I discern the cost of my redemption?
Repentance for known sin. Stubborn, unrepentant sin mocks the cross. As J.C. Ryle noted, those living in open, unrepentant sin insult Christ by pretending to remember His death while clinging to what made it necessary.
Unity and love toward the body of believers. The Supper is a family meal. Division or selfishness at the Table contradicts the Gospel.
The Heidelberg Catechism captures this beautifully: the Lord’s Supper is for “those who are truly sorrowful for their sins, and yet trust that these are forgiven them for the sake of Christ; and that their remaining infirmities are covered by his passion and death; and who also earnestly desire to have their faith more and more strengthened, and their lives more holy.”
Self-examination, therefore, is preparation, not prohibition. The one who has sinned most grievously yet repents most sincerely is precisely the one who needs to come and remember the Savior.
Practicing Continual Self-Examination
Examination is not a one-time event before the quarterly Supper but a continual lifestyle. Paul’s command uses the present tense, implying ongoing vigilance. Practically, ask: Have I harbored bitterness or unresolved conflict? Am I indulging a secret sin that I refuse to confess? Do I truly discern Christ’s sacrifice and my union with His people? Tools for this include Scripture-saturated prayer (Psalm 139:23–24), the mirror of God’s law, and accountability with trusted believers.
Edge cases abound. What of the believer battling besetting sin yet fighting by the Spirit? Repentance, not perfection, qualifies one. What of those plagued by false guilt or scrupulosity? The Table is for the weary who trust Christ’s blood covers infirmities. What of cultural or denominational differences in practice? The heart of the passage transcends forms; it demands reverence.
Weakness, Illness, and Even Death
Paul’s report of weakness, illness, and death among the Corinthians underscores God’s seriousness. These were not punitive wrath but παιδεία, fatherly correction to prevent condemnation by the world. This aligns with Hebrews 12: the Lord disciplines those He loves. It also echoes 1 John 5:16 (sin leading to death) and the sobering account of Ananias and Sapphira (Acts 5). Yet we must not speculate on every believer’s untimely death; our times are in God’s hands.
The implication is sobering yet comforting: God cares too much about His children and the purity of His Table to allow unchecked irreverence. Discipline preserves us for glory.
Modern Implications, the Call to Reverent Participation
In our fast-paced, consumer-driven Churches, the Supper is often minimized, passed quickly with little reflection. This casualness risks the very judgment Paul warned against. Yet the passage does not foster legalism or fear that drives us away. It invites us to the Table with renewed awe: “With renewed hatred of our sin and dependence on our Savior, let us take the bread and the cup and with joy and hope commune with our Lord at His table.”
Nuances matter. Saved believers remain secure (verse 32), yet discipline is real. The Supper strengthens faith, not because we are worthy, but because Christ is. In a divided age, it calls the Churches to pursue visible unity. For individuals, it cultivates humility: we never “make ourselves worthy”; we receive worthiness from Christ.
Consider a hypothetical: a faithful believer attends service harboring resentment toward a fellow member over a minor offense. Without reconciliation, participation risks ἀναξίως. Or a new convert wrestling with old habits: examination drives them to the cross, not away. These scenarios reveal the pastoral heart of Paul’s words.
Ultimately, the Lord’s Supper is serious business to God because it proclaims the costliest act in history. He will not let us treat it lightly. Yet in that seriousness lies profound joy: the Table welcomes the repentant, unites the divided, and nourishes the weary until He comes.
May we, therefore, examine ourselves continually, approach the Table with fear and trembling mixed with gladness, and proclaim the Lord’s death in a manner worthy of His sacrifice. Let a person examine himself, and so let him eat.