A Pastor without the Lord’s Supper?
The historic episode of a Baptist pastor who refused to commune with his church.
In 1806, the Third Baptist Church of Cheshire, Massachusetts, had been without a pastor for quite some time. Their most recent pastor (Lemuel Covell) had died unexpectedly, and the one before that (the famous Baptist itinerate preacher, John Leland) had departed after a bitter fight among the church about their practice of the Lord’s Supper. John Leland had been their recognized pastor for about seven years, but in July of 1798 Leland decided that he would no longer receive or administer the Lord’s Supper among the congregation.
This was a strange development indeed, but Leland was the sort of man to do and say things that were sometimes a bit odd (even for a nineteenth-century Baptist). Throughout the years of Leland’s obstinacy, a pastor from a nearby church came regularly to officiate the ordinance for the Third Baptist Church. After nearly six years of this abstinence from the Supper, Leland finally left his Cheshire residence and home base.
Still, some of the members had fond memories of their time with Leland. Though he was rigid in his convictions and though his conscience could sometimes lead him down strange paths, he was after all a compelling preacher and a great man.
When some of the members of Third Baptist Church reached out to Leland, to see if he might return as their pastor, a small group of members went public with their perspective that Leland ought not be a pastor or even a church member who did not commune with the rest of the church. They took their grievance to their association (the Shaftsbury Association), and that’s when Leland doubled down on his position of radical individualism.
He made a public statement that basically outlined his intention to continue his abstinence from communion and even withdraw from church attendance anytime he felt it was good for him to do so. The Shaftsbury Association advised the Cheshire church “not to retain such members” who acted as Leland “in their connection and fellowship.”
Indeed, they said, “Let but a cold hearted or [nitpicking] member of the church have the example of such a man for his excuse, and such a church would labor in vain to recover to neglected duty that member.” In other words, Leland ought not be admitted or retained in membership (much less named as pastor!) if he would so flagrantly rebel against local church order and discipline. This would make a mockery of God’s household, and it would invite others to rebel in the same way.
Ultimately, however, the association could not decide for the church. The congregation itself would have to vote on the matter. The Cheshire Church Records tell a story of confusion, cowardice, and convenience.
On September 28, 1811, the following four questions were presented for a vote.
Question: If a member of the church neglects to attend the regular meetings of the church, is such a delinquent member subject to discipline?
Answer: Refuse to answer.
Question: Do the members of the church feel obligated to watch over their brethren for good?
Answer: We do.
Question: Does the church believe it to be a duty of the members to attend the meetings of the church for communion?
Answer: We do.
Question: Shall the hand of fellowship be withdrawn from any member for anything excepting immorality (such as persistent non-attendance)?
Answer: Refuse to answer.
In the end, the Cheshire church held on to the fact that Leland had not committed any public and egregious sin of immorality. They reasoned that since he had not committed adultery, blasphemed, or cheated another person in business then Leland ought not be excluded from the church. However, communing together with fellow church members in the ordinance of the Lord’s Supper is precisely the act that distinguishes a church as a church.
In other words, they concluded that one could remain a communing member and even a pastor of a church even if they did not commune with the church.
This episode is an embarrassing and sobering reminder that individuals and churches can value the greatness of a man and the desire for convenience above the doctrine and practice of biblical Christianity. There are many ways in which churches today may avoid confronting sin, calling for repentance, and excluding unrepentant members from their fellowship. Churches can sometimes even overlook grievous errors and rebellion on the part of their church leaders and members in an effort to keep the peace, to maintain productivity, or to avoid making hard decisions.
It is hard to imagine a pastor of a church today refusing to observe or administer the Lord’s Supper among his congregation. And yet many people on church membership rosters today seem to have no problem at all with abstaining from the ordinance for years on end. Churches who allow absentee members to remain on their roster without confronting this radical individualization of Christianity will find it quite difficult to call for repentance for much of anything among their membership.
Quite emphatically, this historic affair shines a light on the tension that has always existed for Baptists between individual conscience and biblical standards. Baptists place a high value on the Bible as the only infallible and inerrant rule of faith and practice, and they also place a high value on the conscience of each individual. Problems arise when conscience contradicts biblical command or doctrine. In such cases, the Bible must inform and correct the conscience, not the other way around.