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Can Online Communion Be a Substitute for the Real Thing?

By Sarah Pulliam Bailey
United Methodist leaders asked their bishops to stop the practice of online Communion. RNS file photo by Lynn Ischay.
Oct 11, 2013
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As online worship becomes more common in some churches, leaders within the United Methodist Church are debating whether the denomination should condone online Communion.

About 30 denominational leaders met last week after Central United Methodist Church in Concord, N.C., announced plans to launch an online campus that potentially would offer online Communion. Some nondenominational churches already offer online Communion, according to United Methodist News Service, but leaders urged the denomination’s bishops to call for a moratorium on the practice and do further study of online ministries.

The majority of the leaders agreed with the statement that Communion “entails the actual tactile sharing of bread and wine in a service that involves people corporeally together in the same place.” Not everyone, however, agreed that congregants must be in the same place.

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United Methodist leaders asked their bishops to stop the practice of online Communion. RNS file photo by Lynn Ischay.
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