Profanation of the Lord's Supper. A. D. 57.
17 Now in this that I declare unto you I praise you not, that ye
come together not for the better, but for the worse. 18 For first of all,
when ye come together in the church, I hear that there be divisions among
you; and I partly believe it. 19 For there must be also heresies among
you, that they which are approved may be made manifest among you. 20 When
ye come together therefore into one place, this is not to eat the Lord's
supper. 21 For in eating every one taketh before other his own supper:
and one is hungry, and another is drunken. 22 What? have ye not houses
to eat and to drink in? or despise ye the church of God, and shame them
that have not? What shall I say to you? shall I praise you in this? I praise
you not.
In this passage the apostle sharply rebukes them for much greater disorders
than the former, in their partaking of the Lord's supper, which was commonly
done in the first ages, as the ancients tell us, with a love-feast annexed,
which gave occasion to the scandalous disorders which the apostle here
reprehends, concerning which observe,
I. The manner in which he introduces his charge: "Now in this that I
declare to you I praise you not, v. 17. I cannot commend, but must blame
and condemn you." It is plain, from the beginning of the chapter, that
he was willing and pleased to commend as far as he could. But such scandalous
disorders, in so sacred an institution, as they were guilty of, called
for a sharp reprehension. They quite turned the institution against itself.
It was intended to make them better, to promote their spiritual interests;
but it really made them worse. They came together, not for the better,
but for the worse. Note, The ordinances of Christ, if they do not make
us better, will be very apt to make us worse; if they do not do our souls
good, they do us harm; if they do not melt and mend, they will harden.
Corruptions will be confirmed in us, if the proper means do not work a
cure of them.
II. He enters upon his charge against them in more particulars than
one. 1. He tells them that, upon coming together, they fell into divisions,
schisms--schismata. Instead of concurring unanimously in celebrating the
ordinance, they fell a quarrelling with one another. Note, There may be
schism where there is no separation of communion. Persons may come together
in the same church, and sit down at the same table of the Lord, and yet
be schismatics. Uncharitableness, alienation of affection, especially if
it grows up to discord, and feuds, and contentions, constitute schism.
Christians may separate from each other's communion, and yet be uncharitable
one towards another; they may continue in the same communion, and yet be
uncharitable. This latter is schism, rather than the former. The apostle
had heard a report of the Corinthians' divisions, and he tells them he
had too much reason to believe it. For, adds he, there must be heresies
also; not only quarrels, but factions, and perhaps such corrupt opinions
as strike at the foundation of Christianity, and all sound religion. Note,
No marvel there should be breaches of Christian love in the churches, when
such offences will come as shall make shipwreck of faith and a good conscience.
Such offences must come. Note that men are necessitated to be guilty of
them; but the event is certain, and God permits them, that those who are
approved (such honest hearts as will bear the trial) may be set to view,
and appear faithful by their constant adherence to the truths and ways
of God, notwithstanding the temptations of seducers. Note, The wisdom of
God can make the wickedness and errors of others a foil to the piety and
integrity of the saints. 2. He charges them not only with discord and division,
but with scandalous disorder: For in eating every one taketh before the
other his own supper; and one is hungry, and another is drunken, v. 21.
Heathens used to drink plentifully at their feasts upon their sacrifices.
Many of the wealthier Corinthians seem to have taken the same liberty at
the Lord's table, or at least at their Agapai, or love-feasts, that were
annexed to the supper. They would not stay for one another; the rich despised
the poor, and ate and drank up the provisions they themselves brought,
before the poor were allowed to partake; and thus some wanted, while others
had more than enough. This was profaning a sacred institution, and corrupting
a divine ordinance, to the last degree. What was appointed to feed the
soul was employed to feed their lusts and passions. What should have been
a bond of mutual amity and affection was made an instrument of discord
and disunion. The poor were deprived of the food prepared for them, and
the rich turned a feast of charity into a debauch. This was scandalous
irregularity.
III. The apostle lays the blame of this conduct closely on them, 1.
By telling them that their conduct perfectly destroyed the purpose and
use of such an institution: This is not to eat the Lord's supper, v. 20.
It was coming to the Lord's table, and not coming. They might as well have
staid away. Thus to eat the outward elements was not to eat Christ's body.
Note, There is a careless and irregular eating of the Lord's supper which
is as none at all; it will turn to no account, but to increase guilt. Such
an eating was that of the Corinthians; their practices were a direct contradiction
to the purposes of this sacred institution. 2. Their conduct carried in
it a contempt of God's house, or of the church, v. 22. If they had a mind
to feast, they might do it at home in their own houses; but to come to
the Lord's table, and cabal and quarrel, and keep the poor from their share
of the provision there made for them as well as rich, was such an abuse
of the ordinance, and such a contempt of the poorer members of the church
more especially, as merited a very sharp rebuke. Such a behaviour tended
much to the shame and discouragement of the poor, whose souls were as dear
to Christ, and cost him as much, as those of the rich. Note, Common meals
may be managed after a common manner, but religious feasts should be attended
religiously. Note, also, It is a heinous evil, and severely to be censured,
for Christians to treat their fellow-christians with contempt and insolence,
but especially at the Lord's table. This is doing what they can to pour
contempt on divine ordinances. And we should look carefully to it that
nothing in our behaviour at the Lord's table have the appearance of contemning
so sacred an institution.
Design of the Lord's Supper. A. D. 57.
23 For I have received of the Lord that which also I delivered unto
you, That the Lord Jesus the same night in which he was betrayed took bread:
24 And when he had given thanks, he brake it, and said, Take, eat: this
is my body, which is broken for you: this do in remembrance of me. 25 After
the same manner also he took the cup, when he had supped, saying, This
cup is the new testament in my blood: this do ye, as oft as ye drink it,
in remembrance of me. 26 For as often as ye eat this bread, and drink this
cup, ye do show the Lord's death till he come. 27 Wherefore whosoever shall
eat this bread, and drink this cup of the Lord, unworthily, shall be guilty
of the body and blood of the Lord. 28 But let a man examine himself, and
so let him eat of that bread, and drink of that cup. 29 For he that eateth
and drinketh unworthily, eateth and drinketh damnation to himself, not
discerning the Lord's body.
To rectify these gross corruptions and irregularities, the apostle sets
the sacred institution here to view. This should be the rule in the reformation
of all abuses.
I. He tells us how he came by the knowledge of it. He was not among
the apostles at the first institution; but he had received from the Lord
what he delivered to them, v. 23. He had the knowledge of this matter by
revelation from Christ: and what he had received he communicated, without
varying from the truth a tittle, without adding or diminishing.
II. He gives us a more particular account of the institution than we
meet with elsewhere. We have here an account,
1. Of the author--our Lord Jesus Christ. The king of the church only
has power to institute sacraments.
2. The time of the institution: It was the very night wherein he was
betrayed; just as he was entering on his sufferings which are therein to
be commemorated.
3. The institution itself. Our Saviour took bread, and when he had given
thanks, or blessed (as it is in Matt. xxvi. 26), he broke, and said, Take,
eat; this is my body, broken for you; this do in remembrance of me. And
in like manner he took the cup, when he had supped, saying, This cup is
the New Testament in my blood; this do, as oft as you drink it, in remembrance
of me, v. 24, 25. Here observe,
(1.) The materials of this sacrament; both, [1.] As to the visible signs;
these are bread and the cup, the former of which is called bread many times
over in this passage, even after what the papists call consecration. What
is eaten is called bread, though it be at the same time said to be the
body of the Lord, a plain argument that the apostle knew nothing of their
monstrous and absurd doctrine of transubstantiation. The latter is as plainly
a part of this institution as words can make it. St. Matthew tells us,
our Lord bade them all drink of it (ch. xxvi. 27), as if he would, by this
expression, lay in a caveat against the papists' depriving the laity of
the cup. Bread and the cup are both made use of, because it is a holy feast.
Nor is it here, or any where, made necessary, that any particular liquor
should be in the cup. In one evangelist, indeed, it is plain that wine
was the liquor used by our Saviour, though it was, perhaps, mingled with
water, according to the Jewish custom; vide Lightfoot on Matt. xxvi. But
this by no means renders it unlawful to have a sacrament where persons
cannot come at wine. In every place of scripture in which we have an account
of this part of the institution it is always expressed by a figure. The
cup is put for what was in it, without once specifying what the liquor
was, in the words of the institution. [2.] The things signified by these
outward signs; they are Christ's body and blood, his body broken, his blood
shed, together with all the benefits which flow from his death and sacrifice:
it is the New Testament in his blood. His blood is the seal and sanction
of all the privileges of the new covenant; and worthy receivers take it
as such, at this holy ordinance. They have the New Testament, and their
own title to all the blessings of the new covenant, confirmed to them by
his blood.
(2.) We have here the sacramental actions, the manner in which the materials
of the sacrament are to be used. [1.] Our Saviour's actions, which are
taking the bread and cup, giving thanks, breaking the bread, and giving
about both the one and the other. [2.] The actions of the communicants,
which were to take the bread and eat, to take the cup and drink, and both
in remembrance of Christ. But the external acts are not the whole nor the
principal part of what is to be done at this holy ordinance; each of them
has a significancy. Our Saviour, having undertaken to make an offering
of himself to God, and procure, by his death, the remission of sins, with
all other gospel benefits, for true believers, did, at the institution,
deliver his body and blood, with all the benefits procured by his death,
to his disciples, and continues to do the same every time the ordinance
is administered to the true believers. This is here exhibited, or set forth,
as the food of souls. And as food, though ever so wholesome or rich, will
yield no nourishment without being eaten, here the communicants are to
take and eat, or to receive Christ and feed upon him, his grace and benefits,
and by faith convert them into nourishment to their souls. They are to
take him as their Lord and life, yield themselves up to him, and live upon
him. He is our life, Col. iii. 4.
(3.) We have here an account of the ends of this institution. [1.] It
was appointed to be done in remembrance of Christ, to keep fresh in our
minds an ancient favour, his dying for us, as well as to remember an absent
friend, even Christ interceding for us, in virtue of his death, at God's
right hand. The best of friends, and the greatest acts of kindness, are
here to be remembered, with the exercise of suitable affections and graces.
The motto on this ordinance, and the very meaning of it, is, When this
you see, remember me. [2.] It was to show forth Christ's death, to declare
and publish it. It is not barely in remembrance of Christ, of what he has
done and suffered, that this ordinance was instituted; but to commemorate,
to celebrate, his glorious condescension and grace in our redemption. We
declare his death to be our life, the spring of all our comforts and hopes.
And we glory in such a declaration; we show forth his death, and spread
it before God, as our accepted sacrifice and ransom. We set it in view
of our own faith, for our own comfort and quickening; and we own before
the world, by this very service, that we are the disciples of Christ, who
trust in him alone for salvation and acceptance with God.
(4.) It is moreover hinted here, concerning this ordinance, [1.] That
it should be frequent: As often as you eat this bread, &c. Our bodily
meals return often; we cannot maintain life and health without this. And
it is fit that this spiritual diet should be taken often tool The ancient
churches celebrated this ordinance every Lord's day, if not every day when
they assembled for worship. [2.] That it must be perpetual. It is to be
celebrated till the Lord shall come; till he shall come the second time,
without sin, for the salvation of those that believe, and to judge the
world. This is our warrant for keeping this feast. It was our Lord's will
that we should thus celebrate the memorials of his death and passion, till
he come in his own glory, and the Father's glory, with his holy angels,
and put an end to the present state of things, and his own mediatorial
administration, by passing the final sentence. Note, The Lord's supper
is not a temporary, but a standing and perpetual ordinance.
III. He lays before the Corinthians the danger of receiving unworthily,
of prostituting this institution as they did, and using it to the purposes
of feasting and faction, with intentions opposite to its design, or a temper
of mind altogether unsuitable to it; or keeping up the covenant with sin
and death, while they are there professedly renewing and confirming their
covenant with God. 1. It is great guilt which such contract. They shall
be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord (v. 27), of violating this
sacred institution, of despising his body and blood. They act as if they
counted the blood of the covenant, wherewith they are sanctified, an unholy
thing, Heb. x. 29. They profane the institution, and in a manner crucify
their Saviour over again. Instead of being cleansed by his blood, they
are guilty of his blood. 2. It is a great hazard which they run: They eat
and drink judgment to themselves, v. 29. They provoke God, and are likely
to bring down punishment on themselves. No doubt but they incur great guilt,
and so render themselves liable to damnation, to spiritual judgments and
eternal misery. Every sin is in its own nature damning; and therefore surely
so heinous a sin as profaning such a holy ordinance is so. And it is profaned
in the grossest sense by such irreverence and rudeness as the Corinthians
were guilty of. But fearful believers should not be discouraged from attending
at this holy ordinance by the sound of these words, as if they bound upon
themselves the sentence of damnation by coming to the table of the Lord
unprepared. Thus sin, as well as all others, leaves room for forgiveness
upon repentance; and the Holy Spirit never indited this passage of scripture
to deter serious Christians from their duty, though the devil has often
made this advantage of it, and robbed good Christians of their choicest
comforts. The Corinthians came to the Lord's table as to a common feast,
not discerning the Lord's body--not making a difference or distinction
between that and common food, but setting both on a level: nay, they used
much more indecency at this sacred feast than they would have done at a
civil one. This was very sinful in them, and very displeasing to God, and
brought down his judgments on them: For this cause many are weak and sickly
among you, and many sleep. Some were punished with sickness, and some with
death. Note, A careless and irreverent receiving of the Lord's supper may
bring temporal punishments. Yet the connection seems to imply that even
those who were thus punished were in a state of favour with God, at least
many of them: They were chastened of the Lord, that they should not be
condemned with the world, v. 32. Now divine chastening is a sign of divine
love: Whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth (Heb. xii. 6), especially with
so merciful a purpose, to prevent their final condemnation. In the midst
of judgment, God remembers mercy: he frequently punishes those whom he
tenderly loves. It is kindness to use the rod to prevent the child's ruin.
He will visit such iniquity as this under consideration with stripes, and
yet make those stripes the evidence of his lovingkindness. Those were in
the favour of God who yet so highly offended him in this instance, and
brought down judgments on themselves; at least many of them were; for they
were punished by him out of fatherly good-will, punished now that they
might not perish for ever. Note, It is better to bear trouble in this world
than to be miserable to eternity. And God punishes his people now, to prevent
their eternal woe.
IV. He points out the duty of those who would come to the Lord's table.
1. In general: Let a man examine himself (v. 28), try and approve himself.
Let him consider the sacred intention of this holy ordinance, its nature,
and use, and compare his own views in attending on it and his disposition
of mind for it; and, when he has approved himself to his own conscience
in the sight of God, then let him attend. Such self-examination is necessary
to a right attendance at this holy ordinance. Note, Those who, through
weakness of understanding, cannot try themselves, are by no means fit to
eat of this bread and drink of this cup; nor those who, upon a fair trial,
have just ground to charge themselves with impenitency, unbelief, and alienation
from the life of God. Those should have the wedding-garment on who would
be welcome at this marriage-feast--grace in habit, and grace in exercise.
2. The duty of those who were yet unpunished for their profanation of this
ordinance: If we would judge ourselves, we should not be judged, v. 31.
If we would thoroughly search and explore ourselves, and condemn and correct
what we find amiss, we should prevent divine judgments. Note, To be exact
and severe on ourselves and our own conduct is the most proper way in the
world not to fall under the just severity of our heavenly Father. We must
not judge others, lest we be judged (Matt. vii. 1); but we must judge ourselves,
to prevent our being judged and condemned by God. We may be critical as
to ourselves, but should be very candid in judging others.
V. He closes all with a caution against the irregularities of which
they were guilty (v. 33, 34), charging them to avoid all indecency at the
Lord's table. They were to eat for hunger and pleasure only at home, and
not to change the holy supper to a common feast; and much less eat up the
provisions before those who could bring none did partake of them, lest
they should come together for condemnation. Note, Our holy duties, through
our own abuse, may prove matter of condemnation. Christians may keep Sabbaths,
hear sermons, attend at sacraments, and only aggravate guilt, and bring
on a heavier doom. A sad but serious truth! O! let all look to it that
they do not come together at any time to God's worship, and all the while
provoke him, and bring down vengeance on themselves. Holy things are to
be used in a holy manner, or else they are profaned. What else was amiss
in this matter, he tells them, he would rectify when he came to them.