In the United States, Spiritualist churches often borrowed from the structures and practices of Protestant communities, reflecting the backgrounds of many early Spiritualist leaders, who came from a variety of Protestant sects. Over time, however, as Catholics also embraced Spiritualism, additional devotional and sacramental elements were incorporated. The result is a blended tradition shaped by both Protestant simplicity and Catholic mysticism.
There are very few written sources that describe the exact form of this ritual. It is also likely that, as with many ritual practices in Spiritualism, the service varied widely depending on the church or community that offered it. One of the few examples published in a Spiritualist manual shows a strong influence from the tradition of the Episcopal Church, with language adapted from the Book of Common Prayer.
However, in many Spiritualist churches, the practice of communion appears to have been influenced most deeply by devotional traditions found within Catholicism, particularly the practice of Spiritual Communion. In this devotional act, the faithful unite themselves inwardly with Christ through prayer and meditation, even in the absence of the physical sacrament itself.
From these influences emerges a uniquely Spiritualist understanding of communion. As in many mainline Christian churches, participants partake of bread and wine as a sacrament during the service. However, the emphasis is placed less on the literal transformation of the elements and the idea of redemption through blood atonement, and more on the spiritual effects of the rite itself.
Jesus of Nazareth, in the context of most forms of Christian Spiritualism, is often understood not primarily through a Trinitarian framework, but as a Spiritual Master, divine teacher, and guiding presence who leads the soul toward higher spiritual awareness, sometimes described as “Christ Consciousness.”
In this context, communion becomes a ritual of spiritual progression, intended to bring the individual into deeper psychic and spiritual attunement with higher divine realities, drawing the soul closer to God and the ministry of angels while assisting in the unfolding of psychic and spiritual gifts.
In my view, practices such as Spiritualist communion should not be understood as lost traditions, but rather as rituals that were never widely documented and often survived quietly within individual churches and communities.
Like other Spiritualist rites, including baptism, these practices frequently developed through local custom and oral tradition rather than formal theology. As interest in older and more traditional Spiritualist practices continues to grow among modern Spiritualists, I believe there is a strong possibility that practices such as Spiritualist communion may once again find a more visible place within Spiritualist worship and devotional life.
