From Bishop Jerry Ogles
Dear Friends: there has been a continuing interest in the nature of
the Lord's Supper - its nature, how it represents a Communion of the Body of
Christ with the Lord, how it must be individually prepared for, and precisely
what blessings ensue therefrom. Bishop JC Ryle was a courageous defender of the
faith and has many published works on the Holy Communion - one of which I
include below. I include the below in view of some serious questions regarding
this matter that have increasingly arising of late. Any postulation that
exceeds the clear definition of Scripture and the Thirty-Nine Articles is to be
discounted. This will represent the position of the AOC on the Lord's Supper.
Here is the paper by Bishop Ryle:
The Lord’s Supper
by JC Ryle
“A
man ought to examine himself before he eats of the bread and drinks of the cup.”
1 Corinthians 11:28.
The
words which form the tittle of this paper refer to the subject of vast
importance. That subject is the Lord’s Supper.
Perhaps
no part of the Christian religion is so thoroughly misunderstood as the Lord’s
Supper. On no point have there been so many disputes, strifes, and
controversies for almost 1800 years. On no point have mistakes done so much harm.
The very ordinance which was meant for our peace and profit has become the
cause of discord and the occasion of sin. These things ought not to be!
I
make no excuse for including the Lord’s Supper among the leading points of “practical”
Christianity. I firmly believe that ignorant views or false doctrine about this
ordinance lie at the root of some of the present divisions of professing
Christians. Some neglect it altogether; some completely misunderstand it; some
exalt it to a position it was never meant to occupy, and turn it into an idol.
If I can throw a little light on it, and clear up the doubts in some minds, I
will feel very thankful. It is hopeless, I fear, to expect that the controversy
about the Lord’s Supper will ever be finally closed until the Lord comes. But
it is not too much to hope that the fog and mystery and obscurity with which it
is surrounded in some minds, may be cleared away by plain Bible truth.
In
examining the Lord’s Supper I will be content with asking four practical
questions, and offering answers to them.
I.
Why was the Lord’s Supper ordained?
II.
Who ought to go to the Table and be communicants?
III.
What may communicants expect from the Lord’s Supper?
IV.
Why do many so-called Christians never go to the Lord’s Table?
I think
it will be impossible to handle these four questions fairly, honestly, and
impartially, without seeing the subject of this paper more clearly, and getting
some distinct and practical ideas about some leading errors of our day. I say “practical”
emphatically. My chief aim in this volume is to promote practical Christianity.
I. In the first place, “why was the Lord’s Supper ordained?”
It was ordained for the continual remembrance of the sacrifice of the death of
Christ, and of the benefits which we thereby receive. The bread which in
the Lord’s Supper is broken, given, and eaten, is meant to remind us of Christ’s
body given on the cross for our sins. The wine which is poured out and
received, is meant to remind us of Christ’s blood shed on the cross for our
sins. He who eats that bread and drinks that wine is reminded, in the most
striking and forcible manner—of the benefits Christ has obtained for his soul,
and of the death of Christ as the hinge and turning point on which all those
benefits depend.
Now,
is the view here stated the doctrine of the New Testament? If it is not,
forever let it be rejected, cast aside, and refused by men. If it is, let us
never be ashamed to hold it close, profess our belief in it, pin our faith on
it, and steadfastly refuse to hold any other view, no matter who teaches it.
In
subjects like this we must call no man master. It matters little what great
theologians and learned preachers have thought fit to put forth about the Lord’s
Supper. If they teach more than the Word of God contains—they are not to be
believed. I take up my Bible and turn to the New Testament. There I find no
less than four separate accounts of the first appointment of the Lord’s Supper.
Matthew, Mark, Luke, and Paul, all four describe it: all four agree in telling
us what our Lord did on this memorable occasion. Only two tell us the reason
why our Lord commanded that His disciples were to eat the bread and drink the
cup. Paul and Luke both record the remarkable words, “Do this in remembrance
of me.” Paul adds his own inspired comment: “For whenever you eat this
bread and drink this cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes.” (Luke
22:19; 1 Corinthians 11:25-26). When Scripture speaks so clearly, why can’t men
be content with it? Why should we mystify and confuse a subject which in the
New Testament is so simple?
The “continual
remembrance of Christ’s death” was the one grand object for which the Lord’s
Supper was ordained. He who goes further than this is adding to God’s Word, and
does so to the great peril of his soul.
Now,
is it reasonable to suppose that our Lord would appoint an ordinance for so
simple a purpose as “remembering His death?” It most certainly is! Of all the
facts in His earthly ministry none are equal in importance to that of His
death. It was the great settlement for man’s sin, which had been appointed in
God’s promise from the foundation of the world. It was the great redemption of
almighty power, to which every sacrifice of animals, from the fall of man,
continually pointed. It was the grand end and purpose for which the Messiah
came into the world. It was the cornerstone and foundation of all man’s hopes
of pardon and peace with God. In short, Christ would have lived, and taught,
and preached, and prophesied, and performed miracles in vain, if He had not crowned
it all by dying for our sins as our Substitute on the Cross! His death was
our life. His death was the payment of our sin-debt to God. Without His death
we would have been the most miserable of all creatures!
No
wonder that an ordinance was specially appointed to remind us of our Savior’s
death. It is the one thing which poor, weak, sinful man needs to be continually
reminded. Does the New Testament authorize men to say that the Lord’s Supper
was ordained to be a sacrifice, and that in it Christ’s literal body
and blood are present under the forms of bread and wine? Most certainly not!
When the Lord Jesus said to the disciples, “This is my Body,” and “this is my
Blood,” He clearly meant, “This bread in my hand is an symbol of my
Body, and this cup of wine in my hand contains a symbol of my Blood.”
The disciples were accustomed to hear Him use such language. They remembered
His saying, “The field is the world, and the good seed stands for
the sons of the kingdom. The weeds are the sons of the evil one”
(Matthew 13:38). It never entered into their minds that He meant to say He was
holding His own body and His own blood in His hands, and literally giving them
His literal body and blood to eat and drink! Not one of the writers of the New
Testament ever speaks of the Lord’s Supper as a sacrifice, or calls the
Lord’s Table an altar, or even hints that a Christian minister is a sacrificing
priest. The universal doctrine of the New Testament is that after the one
offering of Christ on the cross, there remains no more need of sacrifice.
If
anyone believes that Paul’s words to the Hebrews, “We have an altar” (Hebrews
13:10), are a proof that the Lord’s table is an altar, I remind him “Christians
have an altar where they partake. That altar is Christ our Lord—who is Altar,
Priest, and Sacrifice, all in One.” Throughout the Communion Service the one
idea of the ordinance continually pressed on our attention is that of a “remembrance”
of Christ’s death. As to any presence of Christ’s natural body and blood
under the forms of bread and wine, the clear answer is that “the natural body
and blood of Christ are in heaven, and not here.” Those Roman Catholics who
delight in talking of the “altar,” the “sacrifice,” the “priest,” and the “real
presence” in the Lord’s Supper—would do well to remember that they are using
language which is entirely non-Biblical.
The
point before us is one of vast importance. Let us lay hold upon it firmly, and
never let it go. It is the very point on which our Reformers had their sharpest
controversy with the Roman Catholics, and went to the stake, rather than give
way. Sooner than admit that the Lord’s Supper was a sacrifice, they cheerfully
laid down their lives. To bring back the doctrine of the “real presence,” and
to turn the communion into the Roman Catholic “mass,” is to pour contempt on
our Martyrs, and to upset the first principles of the Protestant Reformation.
No, rather, it is to ignore the plain teaching of God’s Word, and do dishonor
to the priestly office of our Lord Jesus Christ! The Bible teaches expressly
that the Lord’s Supper was ordained to be “a remembrance of Christ’s body and
blood,” and not a sacrificial offering. The Bible teaches that Christ’s
substituted death on the cross was the perfect sacrifice for sin, which
never needs to be repeated. Let us stand firm in these two great
principles of the Christian faith. A clear understanding of the intention of
the Lord’s Supper is one of the soul’s best safeguards against the delusions of
false doctrine.
II. In the second place, let me try to show “WHO ought to
receive the Lord’s Supper?” What kind of people were meant to go to
the Table and receive the Lord’s Supper?
I
will first show, who ought NOT to be partakers
of this ordinance. The ignorance which prevails on this, as well as
on every part of the subject, is vast, lamentable, and appalling. If I can
contribute anything that may throw light upon it, I will feel very thankful.
The principal giants whom John Bunyan describes, in “Pilgrim’s Progress,” as
dangerous to Christian pilgrims, were two, Pope and Pagan. If the
good old Puritan had foreseen the times we live in, he would have said
something about the giant Ignorance!
(a) It is not right to urge all professing Christians to go to the
Lord’s Table. There is such a thing as fitness and preparedness for the
ordinance. It does not work like a medicine, independently of the state of mind
of those who receive it. The teaching of those who urge all their congregation
to come to the Lord’s Table, as if the coming must necessarily do everyone good—is
entirely without warrant of Scripture. No, rather, it is a teaching which is
calculated to do immense harm to men’s souls, and to turn the reception of the
Lord’s Supper into a mere religious form. Ignorance can never be
the mother of acceptable worship, and an ignorant communicant who comes to the
Lord’s Table without knowing why he comes—is altogether in the wrong
place!
“A
man ought to examine himself before he eats of the bread and drinks of the cup.”
“Recognizing the body of the Lord,”—that is to understand what the elements of
bread and wine represent, and why they are appointed, and what is the
particular use of remembering Christ’s death—is an essential qualification of a
true communicant. God commands all people everywhere to repent and
believe the Gospel (Acts 17:30), but He does not in the same way, or in
the same manner, command everybody to come to the Lord’s Table. No! this thing
is not to be taken lightly, or carelessly! It is a solemn ordinance, and
solemnly it ought to be used!
(b) But this is not all. Sinners living in open sin, and determined not
to give it up, ought never to come to the Lord’s Table. To do so is a positive
insult to Christ, and to pour contempt on His Gospel. It is nonsense to profess
we desire to remember Christ’s death, while we cling to sin—the accursed thing
which made it needful for Christ to die! The mere fact that a man is continuing
in sin is clear evidence that he does not care for Christ, and feels no
gratitude for the offer of redemption. The ignorant Roman Catholic who goes to
the priest’s confessional and receives absolution, may think he is fit to go to
the Roman Catholic mass—and after mass may return to his sins. He never reads
the Bible—and knows no better! But the professing Christian who habitually
breaks any of God’s commandments, and yet goes to the Lord’s Table, as if it
would do him good and wipe away his sins—is very guilty indeed. So long as he
chooses to continue his wicked habits—he cannot receive the slightest benefit
from the Lord’s Table—and is only adding sin to sin! To carry unrepented sin to
the Lord’s Table, and there receive the bread and wine, knowing in our own
hearts that we and wickedness are yet friends—is one of the worst things man can
do, and one of the most hardening to the conscience. If a man must have his
sins, and can’t give them up, let him by all means stay away from the Lord’s
Supper! There is such a thing as “eating and drinking in an unworthy manner”
and to our own “judgment.” To no one do these words apply so thoroughly, as to
an unrepentant sinner.
(c) Self-righteous
people who think that they will be saved by their own works, have no
business to come to the Lord’s Table. Strange as it may sound at first, these
people are the least qualified of all to receive the Lord’s table. They
may be outwardly correct, moral and respectable in their lives, but so long as
they trust in their own goodness for salvation they are entirely in the wrong
place at the Lord’s Supper. For what do we declare at the Lord’s Supper? We
publicly profess that we have no goodness, righteousness, or worthiness of our
own, and that all our hope is in Christ. We publicly profess that we are
guilty, sinful, corrupt—and naturally deserve God’s wrath and condemnation. We
publicly profess that Christ’s merit and not ours; Christ’s righteousness
and not ours—is the only cause why we look for acceptance with God. Now what
has a self-righteous man to do with an ordinance like this? Clearly nothing at
all.
One
thing at any rate, is very clear: a self-righteous man has no business to
receive the Lord’s Supper. The Communion Service of the Church bids all
communicants declare that “they do not presume to come to the Table trusting in
their own righteousness, but in God’s numerous and great mercies.” It tells
them to say, “We are not worthy so much as to gather up the crumbs under Your
table,” “the memory of our sins is grievous to us; the burden of them is
intolerable.” How many self-righteous professing Christians can ever go to the
Lord’s Table, and take these words into his mouth—is beyond my understanding!
It only shows that many professing Christians use the “forms” of worship
without taking the trouble to consider what they mean.
The
plain truth is that the Lord’s Supper was not meant for dead souls, but for
living ones. The careless, the ignorant, the willfully wicked,
the self-righteous, are no more fit to come to the Lord’s Table than a
dead corpse is fit to sit down at a king’s feast! To enjoy a spiritual feast we
must have a spiritual heart, and taste, and appetite. To suppose that the Lord’s
Table can do any good to an unspiritual man—is as foolish as to put bread and
wine into the mouth of a dead person! The careless, the ignorant, and the
willfully wicked, so long as they continue in that state, are utterly unfit to
come to the Lord’s Supper. To urge them to partake is not to do them good, but
harm.
The
Lord’s Supper is not a converting or justifying ordinance. If a
man goes to the Table unconverted or unforgiven, he will be no better when
he comes away (actually worse due to the associated judgments for coming
unworthily).
But,
after all, the ground having been cleared of error, the question still remains
to be answered, Who are the sort of people who
ought to receive the Lord’s Supper? I answer that by saying, people
who have “examined themselves to see whether they have truly repented of their
former sins, steadfastly purposing to lead a new life—have a true faith in God’s
mercy through Christ, with a thankful remembrance of His death—they are in love
with all men.”
In a
word, I find that a worthy communicant is one who possesses three simple marks
and qualifications—repentance, faith, and love. Does a man truly repent of
sin and hate it? Does a man put his trust in Jesus Christ as his only
hope of salvation? Does a man live in love towards others? He who can
truly answer each of these questions, “I do,” he is a man that is Scripturally
qualified for the Lord’s Supper. Let him come boldly. Let no barrier be put in
his way. He comes up to the Bible standard of communicants. He may draw near
with confidence, and feel assured that the great Master of the banquet is not
displeased.
Such
a man’s repentance may be very much imperfect. Never mind! Is it
real? Is he truly repentant? His faith in Christ may be very
weak. Never mind! Is it real? A penny is as much true currency as is a one
hundred dollar bill. His love may be very defective in quantity and
degree. Never mind! Is it genuine? The grand test of a man’s Christianity is
not the quantity of holiness he has, but whether he has any true
holiness all. The first twelve communicants, when Christ Himself gave the bread
and wine, were weak indeed—weak in knowledge, weak in faith, weak in courage,
weak in patience, weak in love! But eleven of them had something about them
which outweighed all defects—they were real, genuine, sincere, and true!
Forever
let this great principle be rooted in our minds—that the only worthy
communicant is the man who has demonstrated repentance toward God, faith
toward our Lord Jesus Christ, and practical love toward others. Are
you that man? Then you may draw near to the table, and take the ordinance to
your comfort. Anything less than this I dare not change in my standard of a
communicant. I will never encourage someone to receive the Lord’s Supper—who is
careless, ignorant, and self-righteous! I will never tell anyone to keep away
until he is perfect, and to wait until his heart is as holy as an angel’s. I
will not do so, because I believe that neither my Master nor His Apostles would
have done so. Show me a man that really feels his sins, really leans on Christ,
really struggles to be holy—and I will welcome him in My Master’s name. He may
feel weak, erring, empty, feeble, doubting, wretched, and poor. But what does
that matter? Paul, I believe, would have received him as a right communicant,
and I will do likewise.
III. In the third place, let us consider “what BENEFIT
communicants may expect to get by receiving the Lord’s Supper.” This
is a point of grave importance, and one on which many mistakes abound. On no
point, perhaps, connected with this ordinance are the views of Christians so
vague and indistinct and undefined. One common idea among men is that “receiving
the Lord’s Supper must do them some good.” Why, they can’t explain. What good,
they can’t exactly say. But they have a loose general notion that it is the
right thing to be a communicant, and that somehow or other it is of value to
their souls! This is of course nothing better than ignorance. It is
unreasonable to suppose that such communicants can please Christ, or receive
any real benefit from what they do.
If
there is any principle clearly laid down in the Bible about any act of
religious worship, it is this that it must be with understanding. The
worshiper must at least understand something about what he is doing.
Mere bodily worship, unaccompanied by mind or heart—is utterly worthless. The
man who eats the bread and drinks the wine, as a mere matter of form, because
it is the “right” thing to do, without any clear idea of what it all means,
derives no benefit. He might just as well stay at home!
Another
common idea among men is that, “taking the Lord’s Supper will help them get to
heaven, and take away their sins.” To this false idea you may trace up the
habit in some churches of going to the Lord’s Table once a year, in order, as
an old farmer once said, “to wipe off the year’s sins.” To this idea again, you
may trace the too common practice of sending for a minister in time of
sickness, in order to receive the ordinance before death. Yes, how many
take comfort about their relatives, after they have lived a most ungodly life,
for no better reason than this, that they took the Lord’s Supper when they were
dying! Whether they repented and believed and had new hearts—they neither seem
to know or care. All they know is that “they took the Lord’s Supper before they
died.”
My
heart sinks within me when I hear people resting on such evidence as this.
Ideas like these are sad proofs of the ignorance which fills the minds of men
about the Lord’s Supper. They are ideas for which there is not the slightest
warrant in Scripture. The sooner they are cast aside and given up—the better
for the Church and the world. Let us settle it firmly in our minds—that the
Lord’s Supper was not given to be a means either of justification or of conversion.
It was never meant to give grace—where there is no grace already; or to provide
pardon—when pardon is not already enjoyed. It cannot possibly provide what is
lacking, with the absence of repentance to God, and faith toward the Lord Jesus
Christ. It is an ordinance for the penitent, not for the impenitent; for the
believing, not for the unbelieving; for the converted, not for the unconverted.
The
unconverted man, who fancies that he can find a “shortcut” to heaven by taking
the Lord’s Supper, without treading the well-worn steps of repentance and
faith—will find to his cost one day, that he is totally deceived! The Lord’s
Supper was meant to increase and help the grace that a man has—but not
to impart the grace that he does not have. It was certainly never
intended to make our peace with God, to justify, or to convert. The simplest
statement of the benefit which a truehearted communicant may expect to receive
from the Lord’s Supper, is the strengthening and refreshing of our souls—clearer
views of Christ and His atonement, clearer views of all the offices which
Christ fills, as our Mediator and Advocate, clearer views of the complete
redemption Christ has obtained for us by His substituted death on the cross,
clearer views of our full and perfect acceptance in Christ before God, fresh
reasons for deep repentance for sin, fresh reasons for lively faith—these are
among the leading returns which a believer may confidently expect to get from
his attendance at the Lord’s Table. He who eats the bread and drinks the wine
in a right spirit—will find himself drawn into closer communion with Christ,
and will feel to know Him more, and understand Him better.
(a)
Right reception of the Lord’s Supper has a “humbling”
effect on the soul. The sight of the bread and wine as emblems of Christ’s body
and blood, reminds us how sinful sin must be, if nothing less than the death of
God’s own Son could make satisfaction for it, or redeem us from its guilt.
Never should we be so “clothed with humility,” as when we receive the Lord’s
Supper.
(b)
Right reception of the Lord’s Supper has a “cheering”
effect on the soul. The sight of the bread broken, and the wine poured out,
reminds us how full, perfect, and complete is our salvation! Those vivid
emblems remind us what an enormous price has been paid for our redemption. They
press on us the mighty truth—that believing on Christ, we have nothing to fear,
because a sufficient payment has been made for our debt. The “precious blood of
Christ” answers every charge that can be brought against us. God can be “just
and the one who justifies, those who have faith in Jesus” (Romans 3:26).
(c)
Right reception of the Lord’s Supper has a “sanctifying”
effect on the soul. The bread and wine remind us how great is our debt of
gratitude to our Lord, and how thoroughly we are bound to live for Him who died
for our sins. They seem to say to us, “Remember what Christ has done for you—and
ask yourself whether there is anything too great to do for Him!”
(d)
Right reception of the Lord’s Supper into hearts, has a “restraining” effect on the soul. Every time a
believer receives the bread and the wine, he is reminded what a serious thing
it is to be a Christian, and what an obligation is laid on him to lead a
consistent life. Bought with such a price as that which the bread and wine call
to his recollection, ought he not to glorify Christ in body and spirit, which
are His? The man that goes regularly and intelligently to the Lord’s Table
finds it increasingly hard to yield to sin and conform to the world.
Such
is a brief account of the benefits which a right-hearted communicant may expect
to receive from the Lord’s Supper. In eating that bread and drinking that cup,
such a man will have his repentance deepened, his faith increased,
his knowledge enlarged, his habit of holy living strengthened. He
will realize more of the “real presence” of Christ in his heart. Eating, that
bread by faith, he will feel closer communion with the body of Christ. Drinking
that wine by faith, he will feel closer communion with the blood of Christ. He
will see more clearly what Christ is to him, and what he is to Christ. He
will understand more thoroughly what it is to be “one with Christ, and Christ
one with him.” He will feel the roots of his soul’s spiritual life watered, and
the work of grace in his heart established, built up, and carried forward.
All
these things may seem and sound like foolishness to a natural man, but to a
true Christian these things are light, and health, and life, and peace. No
wonder that a true Christian finds the Lord’s Supper a source of blessing!
Remember, I do not pretend to say that all Christians experience the full
blessing of the Lord’s Supper, which I have just attempted to describe. Nor do
I say that the same believer will always find his soul in the same spiritual
frame, and always receive the same amount of benefit from the ordinance. But I
boldly say this: you will rarely find a true believer who will not say that he
believes the Lord’s Supper is one of his best helps and highest privileges. He
will tell you that if he were deprived of the Lord’s Supper on a regular basis he
would find the loss of it a great detriment to his soul. There are some things
of which we never know the value of, until they are taken from us. So I believe
it is with the Lord’s Supper. The weakest and humblest of God’s children gets a
blessing from this ordinance, to an extent of which he is not aware.
IV. In the last place, I have to consider “why it is that so
many so-called Christians never come to the Lord’s Supper.”
It is a simple matter of fact, that myriads of people who call themselves
Christians never come to the Table of the Lord. They would not endure to be
told that they deny the faith, and are not in communion with Christ. When they
worship, they attend a place of Christian worship; when they hear religious
teaching, it is the teaching of Christianity; when they are married, they use a
Christian service. Yet all this time they never come to the Lord’s Supper! They
often live on in this state of mind for many years, and to all appearance are
not ashamed. They often die in this condition without ever having received the
ordinance, and yet profess to feel hope at the last, and their friends express
a hope about them. And yet they live and die in open disobedience to a plain
command of Christ! These are simple facts. Let anyone look around him, and deny
them if he can.
Now
why is this? What explanation can we give? Our Lord Jesus Christ’s last
injunctions to His disciples are clear, plain, and unmistakable. He says to
all, “Eat, drink: do this in remembrance of Me.” Did He leave it to our discretion
whether we would obey His injunction or not? Did He mean that it was not
significant whether His disciples did or did not keep up the ordinance He had
just established? Certainly not! The very idea is absurd, and one certainly
never dreamed of in apostolic times. Paul evidently takes it for granted that
every Christian would go to the Lord’s Table when it was available. A class of
Christian worshipers who never came to the Table, was a class whose existence
was unknown to him.
What,
then, are we to say of that number which fail to receive the Lord’s Supper,
unabashed, unhumbled, not afraid, not the least ashamed? Why is it? How is it?
What does it all mean? Let us look these questions fairly in the face, and
endeavor to give an answer to them.
(1) For one thing, many fail to go to the Table because
they are utterly careless and thoughtless about true religion, and ignorant of
very first principles of Christianity. They go to church, as a
matter of form—but they neither know, nor care anything about what is done at
church! Christianity has no place either in their hearts, or heads, or
consciences, or wills, or understandings. It is a mere affair of “words and
names,” about which they know little—and have little concern. There were very
few such false Christians in Paul’s times, if indeed there were any. There are
far too many in these last days of the world. They are the dead-weights of the
Churches, and the scandal of Christianity. What such people need is light,
knowledge, grace, a renewed conscience, a changed heart. In their present state
they have no part of Christ; and dying in this state they are thrown into hell.
Do I wish them to come to the Lord’s Supper? Certainly not, till they are
converted. No one can enter the kingdom of God unless he is born again.
(2) For another thing, many professing Christians
do not receive the Lord’s Supper because they know they are living in the
habitual practice of some sin, or in the neglect of some Christian duty.
Their conscience tells them so long as they live in this state, and do not turn
away from their sins, they are unfit to come to the Table of the Lord. Well,
they are so far quite right! I wish no man to be a communicant if he cannot
give up his sins. But I warn these people not to forget that if they are unfit
for the Lord’s Supper in that condition, they will be lost eternally. The same
sins which disqualify them for the ordinance, most certainly disqualify them
for heaven. Do I want them to come to the Lord’s Supper as they are? Certainly
not! But I do want them to repent and be converted, to cease to do evil, and to
break off from their sins. Forever let it be remembered, that the man who is
unfit for the Lord’s Supper—is unfit to die!
(3) For another thing, some are not communicant because
they imagine that it will add to their responsibility. They are not,
as many, ignorant and careless about religion. They even attend church
regularly and listen to the preaching of the gospel. But they say they dread
coming to the Lord’s Table and making a confession and a profession. They fear
that they might afterwards fall away, and bring scandal on the cause of
Christianity. They think it wisest to be on the safe side, and not
commit themselves at all. Such people would do well to remember, that if they
avoid responsibility of one kind by not coming to the Lord’s Table, they incur
responsibility of another kind, quite as grave, and quite as injurious to the
soul. They are responsible for open disobedience to a command from of
Christ. They are shrinking from doing that which their Master continually
commands His disciples—confessing Him before men.
No
doubt it is a serious step to come to the Lord’s Table and receive the bread
and the wine. It is a step that none should take lightly and without
self-examination. But it is “no less a serious step to walk away and refuse the
ordinance,” when we remember Who invites us to receive it, and for what purpose
it was appointed! I warn the people I am now dealing with—to be careful what
they are doing. Let them not flatter themselves that it can ever be a wise,
a prudent, a safe line of conduct to neglect a plain command of Christ! They
may find at length, to their cost, that they have only increased their guilt
and forsaken their mercies!
(4) For another thing, some false Christians stay away
from the Lord’s Supper because they believe they are not yet worthy. They
wait and stand still, under the mistaken notion that no one is qualified for
the Lord’s Supper unless he feels within him, something like perfection. They
pitch their idea of a communicant so high that they despair of attaining to it.
Waiting for inward perfection they live, and waiting for it they die. Now such
people would do well to understand that they are completely mistaken in their
estimate of what “worthiness” really is.
They
are forgetting that the Lord’s Supper was not intended for unsinning angels,
but for men and women subject to weakness, living in a world full of
temptations, and needing mercy and grace every day they live! A sense of our
own utter unworthiness is the best worthiness that we can bring to the Lord’s
Table. A deep feeling of our own entire indebtedness to Christ for all we
have and hope for, is the best feeling we can bring with us. The people I now
have in view, ought to consider seriously whether the ground they have taken up
is defensible. If they are waiting until they feel in themselves perfect
hearts, perfect motives, perfect feelings, perfect repentance, perfect love,
perfect faith—they will wait forever. There never were such communicants in any
age—certainly not in the days of our Lord and of the Apostles—there never will
be as long as the world stands. No, rather, the very thought that we feel
literally worthy, is a symptom of secret self-righteousness, and proves us
unfit for the Lord’s Table in God’s sight. Sinners we are, when we first are
saved—sinners we will be—until we die! Converted, changed, renewed, sanctified—but
sinners still (though not like before—sin is not the pattern of a
believer’s new life). In short, no man is really worthy to receive the Lord’s
Supper who does not deeply feel that he is a “miserable sinner.”
(5) In the last place, some object going to the Lord’s
Table because they see others partaking who are not worthy, and not in a right
state of mind. Because others eat and drink unworthily, they refuse
to eat and drink at all. Of all the reasons taken up by those refusing to come
to the Lord’s Supper to justify their own neglect of Christ’s ordinance, I must
plainly say—I know none which seems to me so foolish, so weak, so unreasonable,
and so unscriptural as this. It is as good as saying that we will never receive
the Lord’s Supper at all! When will we ever find a body of communicants on
earth, of which all the members are converted and living perfect lives? It is setting
up ourselves in the most unhealthy attitude of judging others. “Who are you,
that you judge another person?” “What is that to you? You must follow me” (John
21:22). It is depriving ourselves of a great privilege, because others profane
it and make a bad use of it. It is pretending to be wiser than our Master
Himself. It is taking up ground for which there is no warrant in Scripture.
Paul
rebukes the Corinthians sharply, for the irreverent behavior of some of the
communicants; but I cannot find him giving a single hint that when some came to
the Table unworthily, others ought to draw back or stay away. Let me advise the
non-communicants I have now in view, to beware of being wise above that which
was written. Let them study the parable of the Wheat and Tares, and mark how
both were to “grow together until the harvest” (Matthew 13:30). Perfect
Churches, perfect congregations, perfect bodies of communicants, are all
unattainable in this world of confusion and sin. Let us covet the best gifts,
and do all we can to check sin in others; but let us not starve our own selves,
because others are ignorant sinners, and turn their food into poison. If others
are foolish enough to eat and drink unworthily, let us not turn our backs on
Christ’s ordinance, and refuse to eat and drink at all.
Such
are the five common excuses why myriads in the present day, though professing
themselves Christians, never come to the Lord’s Supper. One common remark
may be made about them—there is not a single reason among the five,
which deserves to be called “good,” and which does not condemn the man who
gives it. I challenge anyone to deny this. I have said repeatedly that I want
no one to come to the Lord’s Table who is not properly qualified. But I ask
those who stay away never to forget that the very reasons they assign for their
conduct, are their condemnation. I tell them that they stand convicted before
God of either being very ignorant of what a communicant is, and what the Lord’s
Supper is; or else of being people who are not living right—and are
unfit to die.
In
short, to say, I am a noncommunicant, is as good as saying one of three things—
I am
living in sin—and cannot come;
I
know Christ commands me—but I will not obey Him;
I am
an ignorant man—and do not understand what the Lord’s Supper means.
I
know not in what state of mind this book may find the reader of this paper, or
what his opinions may be about the Lord’s Supper. But I will conclude the
whole subject by offering to all some WARNINGS,
which I venture to think are highly required by the times.
(1) In the first place, “do not neglect” the Lord’s
Supper. The man who coolly and deliberately refuses to use an
ordinance which the Lord Jesus Christ appointed for his profit—may be very sure
that his soul is in a very wrong state. There is a judgment to come; there is
an account to be rendered of all our conduct on earth. How anyone can look
forward to that judgment day, and expect to meet Christ with comfort and in
peace, if he has refused all his life to commune with Christ at His Table, is a
thing that I cannot understand. Does this hit home to you? Be careful what you
are doing!
(2) In the second place, do not receive the Lord’s Supper
“carelessly, irreverently, and as a matter of form.” The man who
goes to the Lord’s Table, and eats the bread and drinks the wine, while his
heart is far away—is committing a great sin, and robbing himself of a great
blessing. In receiving the Lord’s Table, as in every other means of grace,
everything depends on the state of mind and heart, in which the ordinance is
used. He who draws near without repentance, faith, and love—and with a heart
full of sin and the world—will certainly be nothing better, but rather worse!
Does this hit home to you? Be careful what you are doing!
(3) In the third place, “do not make an idol” of the Lord’s
Supper. The man who tells you that it is the first, foremost, chief,
and principal precept in Christianity, is telling you that which he will find
it hard to prove. In the great majority of the books of the New Testament the
Lord’s Supper is not even named. In the letter to Timothy and Titus, about a
minister’s duties, the subject is not even mentioned. To repent and be
converted, to believe and be holy, to be born again and have grace in our
hearts—all these things are of far more importance than to be a communicant.
Without them we cannot be saved. Without the Lord’s Supper we can be saved. Are
you tempted to make the Lord’s Supper override and overshadow everything in
Christianity, and place it above prayer and preaching? Be careful. Pay
attention what you are doing!
(4) In the fourth place, “do not use the Lord’s Supper
irregularly.” Never be absent when the Lord’s Supper is
administered. Make every effort to be in attendance. Regular habits are
essential to the maintenance of the health of our bodies. Regular use of the
Lord’s Supper is essential to the well-being of our souls. The man who finds it
a burden to attend on every occasion when the Lord’s Table is spread, may well
doubt whether all is right within him, and whether he is ready for the Marriage
Supper of the Lamb. If Thomas had not been absent when the Lord appeared the
first time to the assembled disciples, he would not have said the foolish
things he did. Absence made him miss a blessing. Does this hit home to you? Be
careful what you are doing!
(5) In the fifth place, “do not do anything to bring
discredit” on your profession as a communicant. The man who after
attending the Lord’s Table runs into sin—does more harm perhaps than any
unsaved sinner. He is a walking sermon on behalf of the devil! He gives
opportunity to the enemies of the Lord to blaspheme. He helps to keep people
away from Christ. Lying, drinking, immoral, dishonest, selfish communicants—are
the helpers of the devil, and the worst enemies of the Gospel. “For the grace
of God that brings salvation has appeared to all men. It teaches us to say “No”
to ungodliness and worldly passions, and to live self-controlled, upright and
godly lives in this present age!” Titus 2:11-12. Does this hit home to you? Be
careful what you are doing!
(6) In the last place, “do not despair” and be cast down,
if with all your desires you do not feel that you get a lot of good from the
Lord’s Supper. Very likely you are expecting too much. Very likely
you are a poor judge of your own state. Your soul’s roots may be
strengthening and growing—while you think that you are not growing. Very
likely you are forgetting that earth is not heaven, and that here we walk by faith
and not by sight, and must expect nothing perfect. Lay these things
to heart. Do not think harsh things about yourself without cause.
To
every reader into whose hands this paper may fall, I commend the whole subject
of it as deserving of serious and solemn consideration. I am nothing better
than a poor or fallible man myself. But if I have made up my mind on any point
it is this—that there is no truth which demands such plain speaking, as truth
about the Lord’s Supper!