While they were eating, Jesus took bread, spoke a blessing and broke it, and gave it to the disciples, saying, "Take it; this is My body." Sermons I. IN RELATION TO THE PASSOVER. The general meaning of the Passover was perpetuated in a spiritual sense. There was: 1. A transfer. Not of the whole Passover, but of a portion. It was during the progress of that meal, "as they were eating," that this particular occurrence took place. "He took bread [or a loaf]," thus adopting that, and the cup which was passing round, as something distinct from the main portion of the Passover meal, viz. the eating of the lamb itself. The cup was usually passed round three times, the bread frequently. We can conceive Christ's manner unusually solemn and impressive, as he raised these otherwise subordinate elements of the Paschal feast into prominent distinctness. 2. An interpretation. He took the brittle cake of unleavened bread and broke it, saying, "This is my body;" and the cup, saying, "This is my blood." The doctrines of transubstantiation and consubstantiation are philosophical refinements upon the simple meaning of the phrases, and lead inevitably to contradiction and absurdity. Christ was alive before them, and using his body, as he spoke. It must, therefore, have been distinct from the bread. "When our Lord said that the bread which he took in his hands was his body, and that the wine which he held in the cup was his blood, he used a simple figure of speech, such as he often employed. He called himself bread, a door, a vine; meaning that these objects resembled and so represented him. The words are understood figuratively by all, and must be so. Controversies merely concern the nature of the figure.... The Romanist interpretation is figurative. It supposes a figure without a precedent, a miracle without a parallel; and it attributes the salvation of men, not to the actual death of Christ, but to what he did with the bread and wine. As the Passover was simply a symbolical service, the addition to it would be regarded as similar" (Godwin). "Note that, according to our Savior himself, the liquid contained in the cup was not literal blood, but the fruit of the vine" (Morison). II. IN ITSELF. 1. A covenant or testament. It was "a disposition of things," by virtue of which the good to be obtained through the obedience and sacrifice of Christ is secured to those who believingly partake. It is a "testament," inasmuch as it was to have effect after Christ's death, and through the fact and manner of that death believers were to become heirs of the blessings it secured. This "agreement," which is contained in the covenant-idea, is a mutual affair, and involves mutual obligations. It also, after the precedent of ancient Israel, constitutes the true recipients God's people and him their God. The thing handed over is not the body and blood, but that life and grace which they represented. 2. A communion. "Take ye." "He gave to them: and they all drank of it." It is only as a communion that the covenant has effect. To those who have received the life and spirit of Christ there is forgiveness and peace. Their sins are blotted out, and they are passed over in the mercy of God. And so the act of communion is a spiritual one, and involves fresh realization of the meaning of the great facts of atonement, and the duties of the reconciled children of God. 3. An anticipation. There is to be another feast, when the Savior comes to his people, and his people enter with him into the scene of the "marriage supper of the Lamb." It was Christ's last earthly Passover: he looked thence confidently forth to the final victory over sin and death, and the consummation of all things. 4. A thanksgiving. "Eucharist." In view of all the blessings to be conferred through Christ's death, and as acknowledging the mercy and love of God in common viands and (as symbolized by them) in the benefits of salvation. - M.
Jesus took bread. I. LET US GLANCE AT THE GOSPEL FEAST, AS EXHIBITED TO OUR VIEW IN OUR PERIODICAL APPROACH TO THE TABLE OF THE LORD. What is it that we are to feast upon? What is it of which Jehovah Jesus says — "This is My Body, and this is My Blood"? It is His own Person — the glorious, perfect, complete God-Man. It is His redemption work, accomplished and perfected by Himself, which constitutes the gospel feast.1. The redemption which constitutes good for our souls is perfect. Christ has not done His work by halves. He has not left His work in an unfinished state. 2. Moreover, the redemption that is in Jesus Christ is personal; and if it be not so, there is no eating of it. If you come to a meal, to make it personal, you must participate; you must receive for yourself. 3. Moreover, it is a permanent redemption. II. LET ME PASS ON TO NOTICE THE ORDAINED GUESTS. He took and brake it, and gave to them — His disciples. I do not believe that Judas was there at that moment, though some people do. I shall not stop to argue that point, however. There are two things, and only two things, essential to a welcome guest. The first is, vital godliness, as an essential qualification; and the second is, the imputed righteousness of Christ as the essential robe. III. LET ME NOW PRESS ON TO SPEAK OF THE ORTHODOX VIANDS THAT WE EXPECT TO FEAST UPON, OF WHICH MY PRECIOUS LORD SAYS — "Take, eat, this is My Body, and this is My Blood." The sacrificed Lamb is the great feast itself. This was ordered under the Levitical dispensation every morning and evening — a lamb to be sacrificed and presented to the Lord — the lamb of the Passover; and the same sacred emblem, pointing to the precious Christ of God, is declared to be the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world; and just such persons as I have been describing were welcome to partake of it. This feasting on the Lamb, the atoning Blood, the perfect satisfaction, and the sacred acceptance thereof, is announced by God Himself as a thing with which He is well pleased; and the soul that is under the teaching and the operation of the Holy Ghost can find nothing to feast upon short of It. If I go to some places I have nothing but a dinner of poisonous herbs: I mean the beauties of rhetoric, the eloquence of the creature, heathenish morality, and nothing to profit the precious soul that is born from above. The believer is able to do what the Israelites were commanded to do: he is able to eat a whole lamb; he is able to partake of a whole Christ. So we may well say again, "having Christ, I possess all things." Do not talk to me of feeding upon frames and feelings, and groping amongst "ifs" and "buts," and "peradventures," and probabilities, and contingencies, and conditions and uncertainties — they are enough to make all the people of God like Pharaoh's lean kine, if they do not absolutely starve them to death. IV. LET ME NOW LEAD ON YOUR ATTENTION TO THE MASTER'S WORDS — "This is My body;" and "This is My Blood of the New Testament, which is shed for many." Mark, I beseech you, that this sacred gospel feast is intended to nourish not the fleshly, but the spiritual existence. (Joseph Irons, M. A.) It is hardly necessary to remark, that almost every transaction of human life has its appropriate ceremony, its established order and process. In our most familiar intercourse we have oar known forms of salutation. The system is natural in its origin, and beneficial in its effects. In religion above all other subjects, established forms are valuable. They fix attention on the duties which we assemble to perform. They give its due solemnity to the most interesting of all human concerns. They impress more deeply the sentiments of piety on the heart. They support uniformity and sympathy in the public worship of God. Would it not then be unwise and ungrateful if we did not commemorate by some appropriate ceremony the most important transaction of the gospel, the sacrifice and death of Jesus Christ. Such has been prescribed by Him who had the undoubted right to prescribe it, the Author of that religion, which it is intended to support. The fitness and propriety of a commemoration appointed by such authority will not be called in question.I. THE MEMORY OF THE MOST INTERESTING EVENTS IS APT TO FADE FROM THE MIND, UNLESS OCCASIONALLY REVIVED BY REFLECTION ON THEIR RESPECTIVE CIRCUMSTANCES, OR BY SOME SUITABLE AND REGULAR COMMEMORATION. Even the sentiments of friendship require to be kept alive by tokens of regard. The disciples had seen the miracles of Christ. From the minds of those who had not teen them, at the distance of almost two thousand years, the genuine religion of the gospel might have been lost, had it not been cherished by the ordinances of the Church. II. BEFORE THE PUBLICATION OF THE GOSPEL TO THE WORLD, THE NATIVES OF EVERY HEATHEN NATION HAD THEIR RESPECTIVE OFFERINGS TO THEIR GODS. They knew not from what authority their sacrifices were derived. They did but imperfectly understand the meaning of the ceremonies of their own worship. Their expectations were limited almost to temporal advantage. When we partake the sacrament we unite in an act of worship, of which we know the authority, intention, and benefit. III. THE SACRIFICES OF THE HEATHENS, AND THE FESTIVALS THAT FOLLOWED THEM, WERE USUALLY ATTENDED WITH CRUELTY TO INOFFENSIVE ANIMALS, DISGRACED BY IMMORAL PRACTICES, AND PERFORMED AT RUINOUS EXPENSE. The sacrifices of the Jews were designed to typify one efficacious sacrifice of the Redeemer of the world. Our sacrament is not the sacrifice itself. It is only the festival after it; commemorating the sacrifice, and urging our claims to the benefits, which it was intended to convey. By the prudent regulations of our Church no indecent excess can disgrace this act of our worship. The exhortations to repentance, faith, and charity are Scriptural. IV. The last recommendation of our ceremonies at the sacrament is THE FITNESS AND PROPRIETY OF THE SUBSTANCES EMPLOYED ON THAT SOLEMN OCCASION. From the wisdom and goodness of Him who prescribed them this was to be expected. Instead of the slaughter of animals, select and perfect, but within the reach of the poor; — instead of incense and spices which are only found in a few favoured regions of the earth, and which when found are more costly than appropriate, our Saviour has directed us to employ the simple elements of bread and wine; produced in every country; which may be obtained without delay or difficulty. These elements are fit emblems of the benefits to be derived from the solemnity; nay, "the strengthening and refreshing of our souls by the Body and Blood of Christ." (W. Barrow, LL. D.) I. THE BREAD. This signifies our need of spiritual food from Christ. We have a spiritual life within, as real as the physical life, and needing just as much a constant supply of nourishment. When General Grant took the Federal army at Chattanooga it was feeble and dispirited because it was almost destitute. The food of the army was hauled with difficulty over mountain roads and the supply was totally insufficient. His first movement, on assuming command — and it was that which eventually led to victory, — was to repair the railroads, and open up communication, so that the army soon had everything it needed. There is a like necessity in the spiritual life of Christ's army. We are worth very little in the service of Christ, except as we are spiritually nourished. The soul is easily starved by lack of appropriate food. And our spiritual nourishment must come from Christ.II. THE BREAD WAS BLESSED BY CHRIST. The significance of this act was that God the Father was recognized as having a part in the work of the Son. III. THE BREAD IS BROKEN BY CHRIST. Why is this? Here is a reminder of the sufferings of Christ. "This," said Christ, "is My Body which is broken for you" The broken bread is designed to bring to our minds His sacrificial work. And it is worthy of remark that our Lord broke the bread Himself. He did not delegate this to another. So did Christ voluntarily surrender Himself to death. "Therefore," He affirms in one place, "doth the Father love Me, because I lay down My life, that I might take it again. No one taketh it away from Me, but I lay it down of Myself. I have power to lay it down, and I have power to take it again." There is a peculiar value in the sacrifice of Christ, in the fact that He was not forced to it. All He did and suffered was voluntary. It was because He loved us. It was in the infinite tenderness of His heart that He became our Saviour. IV. THE BREAD WAS DISTRIBUTED TO THE DISCIPLES BY CHRIST. Here is suggested our complete dependence on Christ for salvation. V. THE SECOND PART OF THIS SYMBOL. The use of the cup, as well as the bread, gives the idea of completeness. The two necessities for life are food and drink. When both are given there is fulness in the provision. The spiritual food symbolized in the supper covers all the needs of the soul. He who has Christ has what causes want to cease. 2. The doubling of the symbol also serves for emphasis. Thus Elisha, Hannah, and Job received double portions, that is, an unusual amount. 3. There is also climax. The giving of the cup presents not only the old thought suggested in the giving of the bread, but something more, which is even more important. VI. THE CUP. The cup is symbolic of the Blood of Christ; and the blood of life. The juice of the grape, as it is violently pressed from the grape and procured by the grape's destruction, fittingly represents the Blood of Christ poured out for us. VII. EATING THE BREAD AND DRINKING THE CUP. Our Saviour's directions to His disciples regarding the Supper were very simple. They were, "Take, eat." "Drink ye all of it." And the one hint our Saviour gave as to the meaning of this reception of the Supper was in His words: "This do in remembrance of Me." To this the apostle added the inspired comment: "For as often as ye eat this bread and drink this cup, ye proclaim the Lord's death till He come." From this language several things are plain. We are taught that our eating the bread and drinking the cup is a confession of Christ, a pledge to serve our Lord, and an act of fellowship as Christians. But it is, above all, a reception of Christ by faith. Our very act of taking the bread symbolizes the way in which we are to be benefited by Christ. We can not have Christ except as we open our hearts to Him. We are to give Him loving welcome. We are to rejoice in Him and accept Him, just as we do the food for the body, in the assurance that He will build us up in life and health. We must cherish the thought of Christ with the same loyalty with which we cherish earthly friendships. We remember earthly friends when they are out of our sight, recognizing their interests and rights, keeping ourselves in proper attitude towards them, and allowing no one else and nothing else to come between them and us in such way as to make us forgetful of them or indifferent towards them. The mother of Professor Louis Agassiz lived in Switzerland. In her beautiful old age Professor Silliman and wife called upon her and were charmed with her character. The morning they were leaving Switzerland she met them, and giving them a bunch of pansies said, with a beautiful play upon words, speaking of course in the French language: "Tell my son that my thoughts (mes pensees) are all for him, they are all for him." Now this is the way we should feel towards Christ. If we give Him all our heart, all our thoughts, we are communing with Him, we are receiving Him to ourselves, as He desires. As the elements of the Supper are taken into our system, so do we receive Christ into our souls. (Addison P. Foster.) Because the sacraments of the gospel are only two in number, it has sometimes been thought that they must be ordinances of minor importance. No mistake can be greater, or more calculated to depreciate the value of these divinely-appointed ordinances, which, from their very fewness, as well as from having received Christ's explicit command, should receive the Christian's strictest gard. The passage before us leads to inquiries respecting the meaning and design of this great sacrament.I. THE RELATIONS IN WHICH CHRIST HERE PRESENTS HIMSELF TO HIS DISCIPLES. 1. Propitiation. The object of the Lord's Supper is not to commemorate Jesus as a Teacher, though in this He was unlike any other; nor to perpetuate the memory of His example, although His was the only perfect one ever afforded. It is, to keep constantly in mind that He who was the one illustrious Teacher, and the only perfect Exemplar, employing these together with His incarnate Deity, to add efficacy to the offering, yielded up His life a sacrifice for sinners. 2. The whole benefit of His death is available to those for whom He died. All He did is placed to our credit. II. THE RELATIONS WHICH CHRISTIANS BY RECEIVING THIS SACRAMENT ASSUME TOWARDS CHRIST. 1. They confess their need of Christ. At the Holy Table supply and demand meet. Christ proffering and the disciple needing forgiveness, and all the attendant blessings purchased by His blood. 2. They confess their personal faith in Christ. At the Lord's Table disciples individually appropriate Christ's work to themselves. By receiving Christ they gain inward strengthening. 3. They consecrate themselves to Christ. Eating at His Table, they proclaim themselves His friends, and consent to His claims as their Saviour and Lord. Christ there enters into covenant with them, and they with Him. III. THE RELATIONS INTO WHICH BY THIS SACRAMENT CHRISTIANS ARE BROUGHT TOWARD EACH OTHER. 1. Brotherhood. The bond which unites disciples to the Master links them to each other. 2. Love. Ill-will is banished by the very desire to sit with Christ at this feast, and in its warm and sacred atmosphere animosities can no more exist than an iceberg in the gulf stream. (P. B. Davis.) Picture the scene: our Lord's last night on earth — He fully aware of it — the Paschal supper, commemorative (through fifteen centuries) of the deliverance of Israel from Egypt — our Lord surrounded by twelve persons, one of whom He knew to be His betrayer, and who went out from this meal to execute his purpose — our Lord full of thoughts, not for Himself, but for them, and in this instance leaving them something to do for Him when He was gone. Holy Communion is —I. THE COMMEMORATION OF THE DEATH OF CHRIST AND OF ALL CONTAINED AND IMPLIED IN THAT DEATH (1 Corinthians 11:26). In that act of worship we express our faith in (1) (2) (3) II. A TOKEN OF THE MANNER IN WHICH ALONE OUR SPIRITUAL LIFE IS MAINTAINED. The bread and wine are not merely gazed upon, but eaten and drunk; and that in church, as a religious act. This would be, not merely unprofitable, but irreverent also, if there were not a deep meaning in it. The key is John 6, which expresses in words the same truth the sacrament expresses in act. If we are to have life through Christ, it must be, not merely by hearing of Him, or contemplating Him as an external object, but by receiving Him into heart and soul as by a process of spiritual digestion. III. THE CHIEF OPPORTUNITY OF SO EXERCISING AND MAINTAINING THE SPIRITUAL LIFE (1 Corinthians 10:16; Matthew 26:26-28). Application 1. Form a high estimate of this ordinance, It is what we make it; great or small, according as we seek and expect much or little from it. 2. But let your high estimate be a spiritual estimate. Reverence, not superstition. "Feed on Him, in thy heart, by faith." 3. Realize Christ's presence. 4. Make due preparation. 5. Beware of delay in becoming a communicant. 6. Beware of coming once or twice and then ceasing. 7. Beware of becoming familiar with the sign and not with the thing signified. (Dean Vaughan.) (S. Baring Gould, M. A.) (Prebendary Gibson, M. A.) (M. A. Lewis.) 1. It was a covenant, inasmuch as there is, inherent in it, an element of reciprocity. God, on His part, does something. He does much, But the blessing involved in what He does is suspended, so far as men's enjoyment of it is concerned, on acquiescence on their part, or cordial acceptance, or faith. 2. It is also of the nature of a testamentary deed. For there is involved in it a disposition or disposal of the effects or goods which constitute the property of God; in virtue of which disposition it is that men, who acquiesce or believe, become His "heirs." The deed is a real testament, for it is duly and solemnly attested and testified. 3. And it is also really a last will, for it is a final expression of the will and wish of God. (J. Morison, D. D.) (Dr. John Clifford.) (Rev. Charles P. Dorset, rector of the Church of the Ascension, Chicago, Illinois.) (The Fireside Parish Almanack.) (Student's Handbook of Scripture Doctrines.) II. THE SPECIAL FORM OF LIFE IN THE FATHER'S KINGDOM HERE ANTICIPATED. "I will drink it with you new." This implies — 1. Close and intimate association between the Redeemer and the redeemed. 2. The mutual presence and intercourse of the redeemed. 3. Their sacred employment. The Saviour says He will drink, and they shall drink, the wine of the Pascal feast new in the Father's kingdom. He had just said: "This cup is the new covenant in My blood." The heavenly festival is a memorial celebration of redeeming love. To the redeemed it will be a cup of grateful love, and of grateful retrospection. (The Preacher's Monthly.) 2360 Christ, prayers of 1670 symbols 1346 covenants, nature of July 18 Evening February 7 Evening 'Is it I?' The Sleeping Apostle A Secret Rendezvous The New Passover 'Strong Crying and Tears' The Captive Christ and the Circle Round Him The Condemnation which Condemns the Judges The Alabaster Box Questions About the Lord's Supper That He who is About to Communicate with Christ Ought to Prepare Himself with Great Diligence Twenty-Eighth Lesson. Father! not what I Will;' Letter xiii. Christian Activity. Mark. "She Hath done what She Could. " Mark 14:8. Jerusalem Watch and Pray. --Mark. xiv. 38 As the Rind of a Pomegranate are Thy Cheeks, Besides that which is Hidden Within. |