THE LORD'S SUPPER
by John Angell James
My dear friends, I propose in this address to make some
remarks on the Lord's Supper, and to lay down some rules for the right
observance of this solemn and affecting ordinance. You cannot fail to be
struck with the truly spiritual nature of the Christian religion, and the
contrast to Judaism, which, in this view of it, is presented to the careful
observer. Speaking of the law of Moses, the apostle says, "They are only a
matter of food and drink and various ceremonial washings--external
regulations applying until the time of the new order." Hebrews 9:10. Hence
also the terms of depreciation in which he speaks of the ceremonial law,
calling it the "flesh," "the elements of this world," "beggarly elements,"
"the letter," and other designations of similar import, 2 Cor. 3; Gal. 4:5.
These rites and ceremonies, with all the visible pomp and splendor of the
legal worship, were solemnly obligatory upon the Jews, because enjoined by
God, and were proper for the church at that time, for it was then in a state
of infancy and childhood, Gal. 4:1-3, and was not prepared for the full and
clear revelation of unveiled truth it was taught by these shadows—as by a
kind of hieroglyphic Bible in the hands of a schoolmaster.
But when Christ came, who was the substance of this
shadowy system, truth was no longer to be principally taught by ceremony—but
by doctrine; not by rites, which, however gorgeous, were still obscure—but
by explicit and plain declaration. This is the true distinction between
Judaism and Christianity; the truths taught are the same in both—but the
manner of teaching is essentially different. This is the meaning of the
expression, "The law was given by Moses—but grace and truth came by Jesus
Christ," John 1:17. The word, "truth," here stands opposed, not to
falsehood—but to shadow. So again, our Lord in his discourse with the woman
of Samaria, tells her that the hour was coming when 'sanctity of place', as
the seat of Divine worship, would be abolished—and men would every where
worship God, who is a Spirit, "in Spirit and in truth," John 4:23,
24; that is, he would be worshiped not only in sincerity with the heart, for
such worship God required under the law—but with spiritual offerings of
truth, instead of ceremonial and shadowy ones.
Hence a disposition to multiply, or to exalt ceremonies
in religious worship now, is to misunderstand the nature of the Christian
dispensation, and to go back again to Judaism—to go down from our high
standing as the disciples of Jesus, the Great Teacher of a spiritual system,
and become again the pupils of Moses as our schoolmaster in the 'preparatory
school of rites and ceremonies'. This is one of the errors of Popery, which
is in this respect the Jewish form of Christianity. It lays great stress on
the external circumstances, and tangible instrumentality of religion. Unlike
the apostles, it makes 'things of time, and place, and manner', essential to
godliness; it aims to hold the soul in subjection, not so much by faith in
invisible realities, which are directed exclusively to the judgment, as by
the aid of objects which appeal to the senses and the imagination—it thrusts
'man' between the soul and God; hides the priesthood of Christ behind a
human priesthood; and makes the communication of grace inseparable from
external rites and ceremonies.
These external rites and ceremonies are the soul of
Popery, which is not content with a worship of spirit and truth—but must
have fuming incense, beautiful paintings, exquisite music, and a gorgeous
and imposing ceremonial. And this, its advocates tell us, is to render their
worship worthy the Great God to whom it is offered. Worthy of God! As if he
who is Spirit, could take peculiar pleasure in silver and gold, purple and
fine linen. But did he not ordain these things, or something like them,
under the law? Yes; but not under the gospel—and under the law, not because
he delighted in them on their own account, as if they were worthy of his
magnificent nature, or could convey adequate ideas of himself—but simply
because they were a shadow of good things to come, and intended, as
being considered the most glorious of earthly things, to convey an
impressive idea of the excellence of spiritual things under the gospel. Amid
all the grandeur of the Jewish temple and its worship, this very glory was a
confession of the weakness and unprofitableness thereof. And what is all
that contention going on in our day, by many who are not Papists, for the
efficacy of sacraments; for altars with lighted candles upon them; for
crucifixes and bowings; for saints' days; for rites, ceremonies, and outward
observances? What is it, I say—but a substitution of the flesh for the
spirit; bodily exercises for the living spiritualities of the heart; and
which teaches men to be externally religious, without being godly!
Never forget, my dear friends, that you are placed under
an eminently spiritual economy, and that the religion which God demands of
you, and delights in and will accept, is a religion of the heart; a religion
of penitence and faith in Christ, love to God, hope of heaven, hatred of
sin, charity to man—all existing in the soul as so many godly affections,
called forth in the actions of a holy life, and rendered vocal in words of
prayer and praise.
For the support of these, he has instituted the
ordinances of his house and the other means of grace. These ordinances, and
these only, we are to observe in such manner, and for such purposes, as he
himself has prescribed. We have no more right to enlarge the design of God's
ordinances, than we have to multiply their number. We must take them as they
are delivered to us, and use them for the ends laid down, without investing
them with any new character, or directing them to any new purpose; and ever
recollecting that their object is defeated, when they are rested in as
ultimate ends, and not used as means to holy affections, and a godly life.
As tests of our submission to the will of God; as adapted to suggest godly
reflection, and promote spiritual feeling; as calculated to bring before our
minds the great objects of faith and hope; as intended to quicken our love,
which is the principle of all acceptable obedience; and in these views of
them, as ordinances with which God has promised, when they are rightly
observed, to connect the communications of his grace, they are of
inestimable worth! But when raised above this, and made channels exclusive,
and essential to the communication of grace from the Divine fountain, they
are exalted beyond measure, and instead of leading the soul on to God,
detain it from him. How inferior even the sacraments are, in some views of
them, to the preaching of the gospel, may be learned from the conduct of our
Lord, John 4:2, and of the apostle, 1 Cor. 1:14-17.
I now go on to consider the LORD'S SUPPER, and a due
observance of it. To a right attendance on this blessed ordinance, it is
indispensable you should have a clear understanding of
its nature and design.
Perhaps a few lines may be well devoted to an explanation of the terms by
which it is designated. In the New Testament it is called the "Lord's
Supper," 1 Cor. 11:20; because instituted by Christ, and in commemoration of
him—"Breaking of Bread," Acts 2:42; as expressive of one of its principal
acts—"the communion of the body and blood of Christ," 1 Cor. 10:16; which
signifies that those who thus commune together are spiritual partakers of
the body and blood of Christ. To these have been added, by men uninspired,
other terms, such as "the Eucharist," which comes from a Greek term
signifying "thanksgiving," because, like Christ, we give thanks in receiving
it, 1 Cor. 10:16—the cup of blessing, for which we give thanks.
"The sacrament," which comes from the Latin word
sacramentum, and meant the military oath of fidelity, which the Roman
soldiers took to their general. This term, so much used, is thus borrowed
from Paganism, and is no great favorite with those who in their phraseology
wish to keep close to Scripture. Much less proper is it to call the
communion table "the altar." This is Popish. An altar supposes a
sacrifice; it was designed for this purpose, and had no other use. Now it is
very consistent for the Roman Catholics to call the communion table an
altar, because they believe that a true and proper, though unbloody
sacrifice, is offered up every time mass is celebrated. But for Protestants,
who profess to reject this Popish notion, to speak of "the altar," is
improper and inconsistent. Let us, then, confine ourselves, as much as
possible, to the phraseology of the Scriptures, and call it the Lord's
Supper, or the Communion.
The Lord's Supper serves various uses. It is, like
baptism, a standing witness for the authenticity of the Christian history—it
was instituted at the time of our Lord's death, has been continued in
uninterrupted observance ever since, and could not have been palmed upon the
world by imposture, at any subsequent period.
It is a permanent and strong proof to all Christians of
the Divinity and atonement of Christ—of his Divinity, for if he is not God,
the Deity is excluded from this prominent Christian observance, which would
be therefore on this account a species of idolatry paid to a creature. It is
an announcement of the atonement exhibited by his blood as the means of the
remission of sins, and it exhibits the unity of the Christian church. "We
being many," says the apostle, "are one loaf"—many parts of one loaf. 1 Cor.
10:17
But the more specific design of the Lord's Supper, is
to commemorate by the assembled church, the death of Christ as a
sacrifice of atonement for sin. It is of importance here to ascertain the
precise view we are to take of what we actually receive, when we partake of
what are called the elements, that is, the bread and the wine. The
Papists contend that by the prayer of consecration offered by the
priest, the bread and the wine are transubstantiated, that is, their
substance is changed into the true body, soul, and Divinity, of our Lord
Jesus Christ—so that the receiver of the bread and wine, truly eats the
body, soul, and Divinity of Christ. This astounding absurdity is called
transubstantiation.
The Lutheran church rejects this—but adopts
another absurdity almost as great, called consubstantiation, by which
is meant that the true nature of bread and wine remains—but that with
it, is the true nature of Christ in some way or other united.
Then come those Christians, who contend for what is
called the Real Presence; by which is intended, that Christ is
mystically present in, or with the bread and wine. But it is in their souls,
and not in the bread and wine; it is with their minds, and wills, and
hearts, as they receive the bread and wine, to render the reception thereof
strengthening, comforting, edifying; to strengthen their faith in the thing
signified, as they receive the sign. This is sacramental grace, and
sacramental efficacy; grace from God the Holy Spirit, accompanying the
reception of the elements, and blessing to the soul this appeal to the faith
of the Christian through the medium of his senses. The emblems of bread and
wine, then, are emblematic and commemorative;
the whole of their design and benefit, as to themselves, is to remind us of
Christ; and their efficiency for this purpose, is the work of Divine grace.
They are nothing, however duly administered, apart from the state of mind of
the receiver. They are 'truth in emblem', and as truth alone, thus presented
to us, they do us any good.
The gospel is truth in significant words; and the
sacraments, as they are called, are truth in significant emblems. In
both cases, it is the truth, whether in words or signs, that is
blessed by the Spirit of God to the soul. It is not as a sacrament having
some mystical efficacy in itself, some spiritual power in the bread and the
wine, that the Lord's Supper is a benefit to the soul; but it is as a
significant emblem of the body and blood of Christ, offered in sacrifice for
sin, that it does any good to the soul of the receiver. Thus the same
exercises of mind must be carried on in partaking of the Lord's Supper as in
hearing the gospel. We must, at the time, attend to the truth conveyed; this
we must understand; by this we must be instructed, comforted, and edified,
through faith; the bread and the wine can do us no more good, with whatever
superstitious reverence received, if our minds are not directed by them in
faith to Christ crucified, than the words of Scripture upon the tongue, can
do us good without any intelligent notions of their meaning in the mind.
When we meet at the Lord's table, then, it is to eat
bread and drink wine in remembrance of Christ; to be put in penitent,
believing, loving, grateful, obedient remembrance of him. In this
state of mind we are to go to the table of the Lord—not to expect grace in
some mystical way and manner, because an 'ordained minister' says to us,
"Receive the body and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ." We receive grace by
understanding and believing the truth of Christ's death for sinners, so
impressively set forth by the broken bread and poured out wine. This is what
the apostle calls "discerning the Lord's body."
There can be no doubt that the participation of the
Lord's Supper was designed, not only to be an act of communion in Christ's
body and blood with his chosen and redeemed flock—but an act of personal
communion also between the individual recipient and our crucified Lord.
Then does the soul of the believer seem to have all its inlets opened for
the flowing in from the Divine source of the fullness that is in Christ
Jesus. It is then the attention is arrested with peculiar powers, the
judgment made clear for the perception of truth, and the heart softened to
receive its deepest impression. It is at his table that Jesus makes himself
known in the breaking of bread, and leads the astonished and delighted
disciple to exclaim in glad surprise, "It is the Lord!" What streams of
grace have then descended, at the solicitation of believing prayer, from the
Holy Spirit! And in the simple acts of receiving the significant emblems of
bread and wine, the intelligent Christian has entered deeply and joyfully
into the meaning of those wondrous, but much abused words, "those who eat my
flesh and drink my blood have eternal life, and I will raise them at the
last day. For my flesh is the true food, and my blood is the true drink."
John 6:54, 55. The glorious truth of a body broken, and its blood shed, as a
sacrifice for sins, with all the grace to render it a means of light, life,
and joy—came on, and spread through the soul, as the lips received the
symbols of the sacred realities.
There needed no such mystery as any incorporation of the
presence of Christ with the bread and wine—that impossible blending of what
is spiritual with what is material; much less, if possible, of any such
absurdity as the transmutation of the elements into the person of the
Savior. The soul realized in itself the vitalizing presence of its Divine
Lord, in a manner far above all the apprehensions of unenlightened,
unsanctified reason—but not opposed to all its powers of analysis and sober
conclusions. Were it possible to conceive of such a thing as eating the body
and blood, soul and Divinity, of Christ, and such an intercommunion between
the material and spiritual part of our nature as that what is received into
the stomach shall benefit the soul, what could it do more for the believer
in the way of personal and religious benefit, that is, in the way of
holiness, love, and joy, than he is conscious of in the reception of bread
and wine, viewed as the mere symbols of the body and blood of the Savior?
This view may be too plain and simple for those who wish
to exalt the ministry into a priesthood; and it may be too intelligible and
low for those people who have a love for the mystical and the marvelous;
whose piety is rather a thing of the imagination, than of the judgment,
heart, and conscience; and who are more pleased with the alternate 'awe and
ecstasy of superstition', than with the intelligible and tranquil peace of
simple faith. But for the spiritually-minded Christian, who walks by faith,
and desires to grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Savior
Jesus Christ, its simplicity is, next to its scriptural authority, its
highest commendation. All beyond it savors more of the Old Testament
patriarchs—than of the apostles; and presents the accumulating corruptions
of traditional and ecclesiastical authority—rather than the purity of the
faith once delivered to the saints.
Observe, then, my dear friends, what you have to do when
you assemble to partake of the Lord's Supper—TO REMEMBER JESUS CHRIST. And
what concerning him should you remember? What should you forget?
Remember his Divine nature, as the brightness of his Father's glory, and as
God over all—his incarnation, as the Word made flesh—his various and
complicated sufferings in body and soul—his agony in the garden—his atoning
death upon the cross—his resurrection for our justification—his ascension
into heaven—his sitting at the right hand of his Father—his perpetual and
prevailing intercession—his second advent to raise the dead, judge the
world, and receive his people to himself. Blessed topics! Delightful
employment to think of them! Approach the table at each time of access, with
new and deeper penitence for sin; livelier faith in Christ; more fervent
gratitude; more intense love—with more entire self-consecration to God; and,
at the same time, with more charity to the world, and more brotherly
kindness to the church.
Do not seek, nor covet the mere exercises of imagination;
as if you could derive no benefit unless Christ was seen by the eye of
the imagination, as hanging, bleeding, and expiring on the cross. The
Catholics have crucifixes for the bodily eye, and many Protestants covet
something like them for the eye of the imagination. But the proper exercise
of the mind at the time of receiving the Lord's Supper, is faith, not
fancy; faith in the doctrine of a Savior crucified for the sins of
the world. It is not the emotion that is produced by a tragedy, which is
appropriate at that solemn scene—but the affection awakened by believing the
report of some act of suffering love on our account. There should be a sweet
mixture of sorrow and joy; love and gratitude; faith and hope. All the
elements of true piety should be called into active and harmonious
operation. Superstitious awe and dread, mystical and unintelligible
raptures, are inappropriate at that scene, where faith looks back to
the first advent of Christ, when he paid the price of our redemption; and
hope anticipates his second appearance, when "he will appear a second
time, not to bear sin, but to bring salvation to those who are waiting for
him." Hebrews 9:28.
Follow the apostolic directions, and tremble at
the apostolic warnings. "Whoever shall eat this bread, and drink this
cup of the Lord unworthily," that is, ignorant of its design; from improper
motives; in an irreverent manner; living in the commission of known and
unrepented sin, or in the neglect of known duty; holding anger to a brother,
or malice to any other, "shall be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord,"
that is, shall be guilty of profaning the signs of the body and blood of
Christ, and treating with contempt the crucified body itself. "But let a man
examine himself." Let him at his first and every subsequent approach,
inquire into his object, motives, and general state of mind in coming to the
Lord's table; let him pause and ask himself, whether he understands what he
is about to do, why he does it, and whether he is doing it in a right state
of mind—in penitence, faith, holiness, and love.
Let examination precede every approach to the table—set
apart some time on the Saturday evening, or Sabbath morning, when a solemn
survey of the conduct since the last observance of the Supper took place,
and an inquisitive scrutiny of the present state of the heart, shall be
instituted, that with due knowledge of your sins, deep penitence on account
of them, lively faith in the blood of Jesus for renewed forgiveness, and
fresh application for the Spirit's aid in newness of life, you might take
and eat. Do not rush thoughtlessly and irreverently to the table of the
Lord. A Christian, I know, should be always prepared—but is
he? Alas! no—then let him, by solemn meditation, examination, and prayer,
prepare for the sacred observance. "For he who eats and drinks unworthily,
eats and drinks damnation," that is, judgment or condemnation, "to himself,"
brings down upon himself the displeasure of the Lord. Yes, if he is in a
state of sin, or ignorance, and continues therein, and repents not, he does
eat and drink damnation, in the fullest and most awful sense of the
term. Every sin brings condemnation upon the soul, if not repented of, and
unworthily receiving the Lord's Supper. None will more certainly perish, and
none more awfully, than the sinful observers of this ordinance. Such people
do "not discern the Lord's body," that is, they do not distinguish the
design for which Christ died, and do not therefore either truly believe it,
or practically comply with it—but go on in sin, notwithstanding they comply
outwardly with an institute, which, as it represents the death of Christ
for sin, binds them to depart from sin. Fearful idea! To
prostitute the Lord's Supper by receiving it, while living in known sin; and
thus to oppose the design of Christ's giving his body to be broken, while
outwardly observing that ordinance in which his death for sin is set forth.
My dear friends, at each approach to the table, blend in
the state of your mind, a joyful celebration of the means by which you are
delivered from the guilt of all past sin, and as joyful and hearty a
celebration of the means by which you are to be delivered from the power and
dominion of all future sin. Enter into the full meaning of the word
redemption, as including not only deliverance from the punishment of sin
in hell—but from the present tyranny of sin on earth. As you take the cup,
realize in it the solemn pledge which every receiver gives, of a life of
holy devotedness to Christ.
Nor let your remembrance of Christ be confined to that
scene of devout commemoration. That act is not to be regarded as releasing
you from every other remembrance of Jesus—but as binding you to
every other kind of remembrance. Remember Jesus Christ habitually
as your Savior—for your comfort. Remember him as your example—for your
guidance. When, through the power of temptation and the lack of
watchfulness, you have fallen into sin, remember him with compunction and
contrition, and yet with faith, as willing to receive the penitent
backslider. Remember him in solitude—as a companion ever near. Remember him
amid the death and inconstancy of relatives or acquaintances—as a Friend
that sticks closer than a brother. Remember him in the dark hour of
sorrow—as a Divine Comforter. Remember him when tempted—as your support and
shield. And in the last hour of mortal conflict, fix your mind upon him—as
the Conqueror of death, the Destroyer of the grave, and the Lord of
eternity! Never let a day pass in which you have not some thoughts of Christ
to comfort, quicken, and edify your soul.
Among the rules for his daily conduct which the godly
Lavater suspended in his study, and seriously read every night and morning,
the following is far from being the least important, "I will not do or
design anything which I would omit, if Jesus Christ were standing visibly
before me, or which I suppose he would not perform, if he were in my
situation. I will, with the assistance of God, accustom myself to do
everything in the name of Jesus Christ; and as his disciple, to sigh every
hour to God for the blessing of the Holy Spirit, and be always disposed to
prayer."
Happy the believer who thus remembers Jesus Christ. This
is spiritual religion, and for this purpose we approach the table of the
Lord—not to confine our recollection of him to that one scene and season—but
that we may there gain strength and grace to remember him habitually!
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