Holy communion wafers for sale near me

Whether you are a full-time employee or serving as a volunteer in your local church, you are engaged in ministry. Communion, hospital visits, greeting guests, and administrative duties—it’s all part of being the hands and feet of Jesus to others. We realize your ministry takes many forms so we have developed a variety of resources to help you minister well. We are honored to serve as a partner with you in making your ministry matter.

Economical, disposable, recyclable communion cups that are designed to fit standard trays. The 1 3/8″ high cups have the clarity of real glass with no breakage. Each cup holds approximately 3/4 oz. of juice. Available for purchase in a box of 1000 or in a pack of 50

The wafer of white unleavened bread – made of wheat flour, shortening, salt, and water – for use in the Communion service, these plain round wafers measure 1 1/8″ across (slightly larger than a dollar coin) and come packaged in cellophane tubes. Available for purchase in a box of 1000 or in a pack of 100

For enquiries, please contact us at Faithworks Bookstore or write to us:

The fellowship cup contains raspberry juice and unleavened biscuit. Ready to serve and easy access to elements. No refrigeration needed. Cups are guaranteed fresh if used by stamped date on the box. The expiry is usually two months from the date of purchase.

INGREDIENTS 

Biscuit: Wheat flour, vegetable oil, and salt. 

Juice: Vitamin C, water, sugar, and flavour.

Location

Can't Wait?

The elements can also be purchased at Tiong Hoe Specialty Coffee  

NEW PRICING: $17 nett per pack (50 cups)

170 Stirling Road #01-1133 S140170 Singapore 

Mon - Fri:  8.30am - 5.30pm
Sat - Sun / PH: 9am - 4pm

Get directions

About Me

If you were to describe my life, I am a busy bee and always-on-the-go. I travel 40% of the time, run my own company, and volunteer after work hours.  It was one Sunday afternoon in 2007 when my Pastor preached about the Holy Communion and encouraged the congregation to take it daily. I found that by participating in the Lord’s Supper daily, gave me a space to ‘stop’ and ‘remember’ His grace and love for me.

After visiting Christian bookstores, I found the elements bulky or not travel friendly. It was then that I wanted to create elements for those like me, who are always on the go.  And here we are, 12 years later, we are continuing to help to partake in elements across Singapore. 

Microsoft and Sony are both battling behind the scenes over the Activision Blizzard deal, and Microsoft is no longer pulling its punches with regulators

By Tom Warren / @tomwarren

Oct 12, 2022, 6:23 PM UTC|

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Holy communion wafers for sale near me

Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

Microsoft isn’t happy with Sony and the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority. The UK regulator signaled an in-depth review of Microsoft’s $68.7 billion deal to acquire Activision Blizzard last month, and the CMA has now published its full 76-page report (PDF) on its findings. The CMA says it has concerns that Microsoft’s Activision Blizzard deal could lessen competition in game consoles, subscriptions, and cloud gaming, but Microsoft thinks the regulator has simply been listening to Sony’s lawyers too much.

Microsoft pleaded for its deal on the day of the Phase 2 decision last month, but now the gloves are well and truly off. Microsoft describes the CMA’s concerns as “misplaced” and says that the regulator “adopts Sony’s complaints without considering the potential harm to consumers” and “incorrectly relies on self-serving statements by Sony which significantly exaggerate the importance of Call of Duty.” Microsoft even accuses the CMA of adopting “Sony’s complaints without the appropriate level of critical review,” suggesting that the regulator is simply just listening too much to what Sony has to say.

At the heart of all the back and forth is access to Call of Duty and concerns around the future of game subscriptions. “The CMA recognizes that ABK’s newest games are not currently available on any subscription service on the day of release but considers that this may change as subscription services continue to grow,” says the UK regulator. “After the Merger, Microsoft would gain control of this important input and could use it to harm the competitiveness of its rivals.”

Microsoft’s full response to the CMA, seen by The Verge, also includes parts where the company tries to, comically, make it look like it somehow sucks at gaming and it can’t compete. Microsoft says Xbox “is in last place in console” and “seventh place in PC” and “nowhere in mobile game distribution globally,” and Microsoft argues it has no reason to harm or degrade rival cloud gaming services as it wants to “encourage the major shift in consumer behavior required for cloud gaming to succeed.”

Microsoft might well be in last place in console sales during the previous generation, but it’s certainly investing billions of dollars to ensure any future Xbox sales aren’t less than half of the PlayStation and that its Xbox Game Pass bet pays off.

Sony and Microsoft have also been battling it out over Call of Duty, and the CMA recognizes this by revealing it’s concerned about Sony’s future revenues related to Call of Duty. “PlayStation currently has a larger share of the console gaming market than Xbox, but the CMA considers that Call of Duty is sufficiently important that losing access to it (or losing access on competitive terms) could significantly impact Sony’s revenues and user base.”

Holy communion wafers for sale near me

Call of Duty is at the center of Sony and Microsoft’s battles.Image: Activision

Sony has shown how significant Call of Duty is after it labeled Microsoft’s offer to keep Call of Duty on PlayStation “inadequate on many levels.” The Verge revealed last month that Microsoft Gaming CEO and Xbox chief Phil Spencer made a written commitment to PlayStation head Jim Ryan earlier this year to keep Call of Duty on PlayStation for “several more years” beyond the existing marketing deal Sony has with Activision. “After almost 20 years of Call of Duty on PlayStation, their proposal was inadequate on many levels and failed to take account of the impact on our gamers,” said PlayStation head Jim Ryan in response.

Now Microsoft says keeping Call of Duty on PlayStation is a “commercial imperative for the Xbox business and the economics of the transaction.” Microsoft says it would put revenue at risk if it pulled Call of Duty from PlayStation and that “Microsoft has been clear that it is counting on revenues from the distribution of Activision Blizzard games on Sony PlayStation.”

Microsoft also accuses Sony of not welcoming competition from Xbox Game Pass and that Sony has decided to block Game Pass on PlayStation. “This increased competition has not been welcomed by the market leader Sony, which has elected to protect its revenues from sales of newly released games, rather than offer gamers the choice of accessing them via its subscription, PlayStation Plus.” This comes just months after Microsoft claimed, in legal filings, that Sony pays for “blocking rights” to keep games off Xbox Game Pass.

If the UK battles are anything to go by, this acquisition could get messy as Microsoft and Sony battle it out behind the scenes to sway regulators. Microsoft even has a dedicated website to highlight its arguments as it seeks to convince regulators that its giant deal isn’t a bad one for gamers. We’re still months away from final regulator decisions, but get ready for this battle to continue to spill out onto the internet’s streets.

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Where do churches get communion wafers?

For many centuries, hosts were made primarily in monasteries. Even today, several monastic communities of women religious support themselves by baking hosts and selling them directly to parishes. There are also commercial companies that make hosts and sell them directly to parishes and through religious goods stores.

What are communion wafers called?

Sacramental bread, also called Communion bread, Eucharist wafer, the Lamb or simply the host (Latin: hostia, lit. 'sacrificial victim'), is the bread used in the Christian ritual of the Eucharist. Along with sacramental wine, it is one of two elements of the Eucharist.

Do communion wafers expire?

We recommend using within 2 years and since this is a dry and stable product, it can never spoil.

Who makes the communion wafers for the Catholic Church?

Broadman Communion Wafers are prefect for churches who prefer wafers of white, unleavened bread for use in the Communion service, these plain round Communion wafers measure 1 1 ⁄ 8" across (slightly larger than a quarter) and come packaged in 10 cellophane tubes of 100 wafers each.