Full communion
Full communion is a mutual recognition between Christian churches or
denominations that the partner churches hold "the essentials of the Christian faith". It includes \n*mutual recognition of members\n*common celebration of the Lord's Supper/Holy Communion/Eucharist\n*mutual recognition of ordained ministers\n*mutual recognition of sacraments\n*a common commitment to mission.
Full communion does not mean that the involved churches join into one denomination or forgo their distinctive traditions and theology.
Examples of full communion among churches:
- The twenty-four sui juris churches of the Catholic Communion (the Roman Catholic Church and the so-called Eastern Rite Catholic churches)\n*The sixteen autocephalous Eastern Orthodox Churches (for example, the Russian Orthodox Church, Serbian Orthodox Church and the Greek Orthodox Church)\n*The Coptic, Armenian, Jacobite, Indian Orthodox and Tewahedo churches (infelicitously called "Oriental Orthodox" churches)\n*The Anglican Communion, the Old Catholic Church, and the Mar Thoma Syrian Church of India\n*The twelve churches of the Porvoo Communion\n*The Episcopal Church and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America\n*The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, the Moravian Church, the Presbyterian Church USA, the Reformed Church in America, and the United Church of Christ.
Full communion is distinguished from
partial communion such as exists between Catholics and Protestants, who recognize each other as their fellow Christians but are of different Christian
denominations.
The word "communion" is also sometimes used as a synonym of "denomination", in the sense in which the latter word is used above.
Denominations that practice "
closed communion" will only share the
Eucharist (or Lord's Supper) with those with whom they are in full communion. Among those are the
Roman Catholic and
Eastern Orthodox churches. This may be for a number of reasons; for example, a church that believes in
Transubstantiation (
i.e. that the bread and wine become the body and blood of
Jesus Christ at the consecration during the
Mass) might hold that to allow those who do not believe in transubstantiation to take the Eucharist would be to show disrespect to Christ present in the bread and wine or even imperil the souls of those who partake improperly. Denominations that practice "open communion" will typically also share the Lord's Supper with those with whom they are in partial communion.
Category:Christianity