No.
The bread and wine in communion is not the literal flesh and blood of Jesus. They baked that bread and fermented that wine using grapes. Communion is a memorial service done in remembrance of Jesus that involves food. There are other examples in the Bible of communion and Paul refers to it as food in 1 Corinthians 11:17-34.
The bread and drink Jesus refered to is spiritually symbolic.
What do you mean? Are you saying that you have the Holy Spirit and I don't?
Have you not read in the book of 1st John 4:1-3?
It is written, "every spirit that confesseth Jesus Christ is come in the flesh is of God. And every spirit that confesseth not that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh is not of God..."
I would like you to note, scripture does not say, has come, but "is come", as in, already and presently here in the flesh.
And have you not also read in Matthew 18:20 saying, "for where two or three are gathered together in my name there I am in their midst"?
And have you not read in John 1:14, where it says,"and the word of God was made flesh..."?
And what Jesus said in Matthew 19:5-8 saying, "and they two shall be one flesh. So they are no longer two, but one flesh."
And have you also not read where Jesus says, "for as much as you have done it to the least of these, you have done it unto me"?
How is it that when something is done to our body or our flesh it is done to both his body and his flesh as well.
And have you not read, how we are part of the body of Christ, here on Earth?
How can we presently be in the body of Christ when we are here on Earth? Unless the body of Christ along with a flesh, is presently here on Earth.
And the very scripture you used in 1st Corinthians 11:17-34, to prove your point, actually proves the contrary.
Jesus himself said, "this IS my body..."
He did not say it represents his body, even though we are to do it in remembrance of him, it still is his body according to the word of God, which is here on Earth.
And in verse 27 it talks about being guilty of both the body and blood of Christ, if we eat and drink unworthily. How can we be guilty of crucifying Christ, if the bread and wine is not his flesh and blood respectively?
Think about it for a minute. What if I were to mutilate or throw a regular piece of bread on the floor stomp on it and dump wine down a toilet, would I be guilty of crucifying Christ? The answer to that would be an obvious, and resounding, NO.
Why? Because it is not the body and blood of Christ. And we will not suffer any punishment for it either, like we would if we are taking communion.
Remember, that was the very reason why many were sick, weak, and dead.