Who can break bread?
ID
gw004
Language
EN
Total length
00:24:01
Count
1
Bible references
unknown
Description
This sermon was held on the Bible Basics Conference in November 2007. See the other sermons of this conference at Bible Basics Conference (Catford 2007).
Automatic transcript:
…
Well, I suppose if there's one question that we have divided the meetings and
divided Christians since Pentecost, particularly in the last few years, it
has been the question, who should break bread? Or, who can break bread? And so this
afternoon, in the allotted space that I have, we're going to refer as much as we
can to the Word of God. Firstly, I want to suggest that every single person should break
bread. Every single person should be remembering the Lord. And the reason for that is, is that
God has given a commandment to everyone, to everyone in this room, to everyone in
Catford, to everyone in this world, to repent and accept the work of his beloved Son. Acts 16,
31. God has commanded we should respond. But as we all know, in the world in which we live,
we find, very often like Elijah, that the vast majority of our friends, or a vast majority of
those that we meet with, have never responded to God's call to repent. And I'll add to what
Andrew said, has everyone in this room responded to the call to repent of your sins and to believe
the gospel of the Lord Jesus, and to become a saved person, a born-again person, and as we've
already had before us, a member of the body of Christ. And so from a very, very wide circle of
those who should break bread, we narrow it down to those who have the privilege of breaking bread,
are those who have responded to the command of God, who have trusted the Lord Jesus as their
Saviour, are part of the body of Christ, you are the ones that should and can break bread. I wonder
if there's those here that are in this second group. You have trusted the Lord as your Saviour,
you know you're born again, you know that you're part of the body, but as yet do not
respond to the request of the Lord Jesus to remember him. That's the first challenge.
Now of that group that should break bread, and of that second group that can break bread,
we find that there are certain scriptures which teaches us that there are those who are truly
born again, are on their way to heaven, and yet because of their walk, which is inconsistent with
the Word of God, they are unable to remember the Lord to break bread. Now we've already quoted that
1 Corinthians chapter 5, and if you turn to the verse, 1 Corinthians 5, it is reported commonly,
verse 1, that there is fornication among you, and such fornication is not so much as named
amongst the Gentiles, and then in verse 13, therefore put away from among yourselves that
wicked person. At Corinth, there was a believer. Let us get this straight at the very beginning,
that the person that we're talking about in Corinthians chapter 5 was a believer. The person
that we're talking about in 1 Corinthians 5 has been with Christ for 1,900 years plus. He never
stopped being a believer, and yet as he was moving through this scene, he fell into sin, a moral sin.
What it was, as we could find as we read through, is obviously his father had remarried, and this,
he's the father's son, was having an affair with his stepmother, and the Apostle Paul writes to
him and says, this is something that ought not to be amongst the Christian company, and to put it
absolutely bluntly, what Paul is saying, that sexual intercourse between the unmarried is out
for the Christian company, and Paul tells them very, very straight what they should do, that
that person had to be put out from amongst the company. We read the verse, he actually says,
put away from among you that wicked person. In spite of the fact that he is a believer, in spite
of the fact that he's going to heaven, his walk was such as it was a damage into the testimony,
it was damaging to the company at Corinth, and it was not for the glory of the Lord Jesus. And so we
find that there are certain people that because of their walk, they are not in a right condition
to remember the Lord, to break bread. But then we move on and we find, it was very ably mentioned
by Andrew, that when we come into 2nd Timothy, we find there that there were those who said that the
resurrection had already passed. If the first group are ones that were morally wrong, in their walk
they were wrong, in the second company we find there were those who doctrinally were wrong. They
held truths about the person or the work of the Lord Jesus, which was fundamental against the
Christian position. And it is quite clear that the Apostle Paul would say that these people we
cannot walk with. Now you will have noticed there is a big difference between what we get in
Corinthians and what we get in 2nd Timothy. In Corinthians, written in the early days of the
church, it was quite possible for the little company that was at Corinth to put out the person
that was walking in an immoral way. But when we get to 2nd Timothy, the church period has moved
on several years, and we find that within that company there were a great deal who held defective
doctrine. So what are we going to do? If I'm in a church, if I'm in an assembly where everybody else
believes a truth, believes a doctrine which I consider to be wrong, if everybody in the church
that I was, let's say for instance, believed that the Lord could sin, what could I do? Carry on with
it? Put them all out? It would be impossible for me to put them out. And so according to 2nd Timothy,
I moved out myself. The statement is given that if we purge ourselves from those that hold this
evil doctrine, we shall be a vessel to honour meat for the Master's use. So we find that the second
quality, the second thing that is required of those that remember the Lord is that our doctrine
is pure. There may be some that will bring questions about different types of doctrine that
we might have, and we don't all agree on various things. Some of us would disagree perhaps on
baptism, some of us may disagree on the aspects of the Lord's coming. But the point that I think
he's brought out, which is things which are fundamental. If we deny the resurrection, the
Apostle Paul says in 1st Corinthians 15, we have denied the faith, and our faith is vain. And things
that affect the person and the work of the Lord Jesus are absolutely fundamental and are
absolutely vital as far as our Christian fellowship is concerned. And so we have those that are
walking in a way which is morally wrong. And then we have those which are holding doctrines
which are against the teaching of Scripture. Let us take another example. If a person said
that the whole of the Word of God was not inspired by the Spirit of God, would you carry
on with them? Could we carry on with them? I'm absolutely confident that if we are to
obey the Word of God, we could not carry on with anybody who denied the inspiration of
all the Scriptures. And there are many, many different doctrines which we would have to
separate from if we are to be true to the teaching of the Word of God. But then we come
to the third reason, and perhaps this is the reason that most people will say, well, I
don't see it. But I personally think it is the clearest of the three. And that is the
question of association with evil. In the second epistle of John, John writes to a sister
and he says to her, he says, if somebody comes to your door and they bring a doctrine which
is not of Christ, and you say to them, you bid them Godspeed, you say, have a good day.
John says, not me, John says, you are a partaker of their evil deeds. And if we're in an assembly
where there are those that hold doctrine contrary to the Word of God, if we're in an assembly
where there are those who are walking morally wrong, what is our position? Do we stay in
that assembly and speak against it? Is that what the scriptures would teach us? The scripture
would teach us, a little leaven leaveneth the whole lump. So if there's moral evil,
the whole assembly becomes level. If there's doctrinal evil, the same thing applies. The
statement is from 1 Corinthians and Galatians, we get the same references, a little leaven
leaveneth the whole lump. And if we are associated with that, we too are leavened.
There is an interesting verse, and you will see on the notes, there were a number of verses
that refer to this. In Haggai, there is the question asked in relation to the priest and
the Haggai 2.13, the question is asked about a priest and whether it takes place in the
church in something that is unclean, would he be holy and vice versa. We get there, clearly
brought forth this idea that association with evil defiles. So there are three things that
we should apply to ourselves and ask ourselves the question, is there in my life that which
is morally wrong? We mention fornication because that is what is mentioned in 1 Corinthians
but you will notice also if we read down that chapter, there are other things which we might
not think are quite as bad but the word of God says they are and if we are habitually
a drunkard, it is publicly known we should not be in fellowship. If we are doing something
which is dishonouring to the company and the testimony, we should not be in fellowship.
And if we hold doctrines which are contrary to the word of God, as I hope we have seen
from 2 Timothy, we too should not be in fellowship. But then if we are associated, if we are linked
with those that do such, we too should question our position of fellowship.
Now on the notes it says,
I believe it is important that as we have already had before us, the Apostles in Acts
chapter 2, they continued steadfast in the Apostles doctrine, fellowship, prayers and
the breaking of bread. Adding to these things that we have had already, I think that one
of the important things, our life should be a continuous Christianity. There is no good
having Christianity on the Lord's day and the rest of the week we can do as we like.
And this is not something that I can judge but each one of us individually, we have to
judge our own lives as to how we act during the rest of the week. Are we consistent with
the truth that we have and with what we express on a Lord's day morning? Here are challenges
that each one of us has to look at and has to think about. And the second and the next
point was, who decides after all?
I would suggest that any decisions that are made as to whether we can break bread, must
come, first of all, from the Word of God. And if you are told by somebody that you are
not fit to remember the Lord, let them return to the Scriptures and find the reason in the
Scriptures. Because there may be many that have questions.
A brother was asked a few weeks ago, which meeting or which company shall I go to? And
his reply was not, come where I am. His reply was, study the Scriptures, read through the
New Testament, particularly the epistles to the church, and there you will see the sort
of company that we should go to. There you'll see the sort of company that the Lord would
have us to be at. And when you've done that, go to that particular company.
One of the problems that I feel that we have in our assemblies is that we tend to think
that the breaking of bread is there for our convenience. We tend to think that if we have
our friends and if our relatives come, it's much more convenient to take them along to
the breaking of bread than to take them elsewhere. And I would suggest that we are having low
thoughts of our Christian friends. As far as I'm concerned, if somebody before the Lord,
having read through those New Testament Scriptures, come up with a conclusion that they believe
that the Baptist church is the place for them, why does that change when they come on holiday
to my house? If you believe that it's right at Catford to have fellowship with the company
that meets here, why would that change when you went to Lowestoft? Surely what Andrew
has been bringing out in relation to the assemblies and the truth of assembly being responsible
together would be clearly brought out in this time.
So that's all I've basically got to say.
The reasons why somebody can break bread. Who can break bread? You need, first of all,
to be saved. Acts 1 Corinthians 10, when we take the loaves, it's a picture, it speaks
about of the one body. So the first conditions, the first thing that we can say is that you
need, first of all, to be saved. Secondly, your life needs to be morally right. You need
to be walking in a pathway which is right according to the Word of God. Thirdly, you
need to be right in relation to the doctrines and the person of Christ. And fourthly, we
should not be associated either with those that are holding evil doctrine or those who
are morally wrong.
Now I expect there are plenty of questions, if not about what I've said, about the connotations
from what was said. Perhaps, do you want to raise them now or later?
I've got a quick question. In Titus 3.10 it speaks about heretic. You have to reject him.
Wouldn't you put that as another category besides the three that you've had? Titus 3.10.
Isn't that an additional reason for not allowing fellowship with the Christians? Because a
heretic doesn't necessarily mean a false teacher, it just means a sectarian or an opinionated
person. So he may be quite sound in doctrine, he may be sound morally, and he may not be
associated with false, but he may be very strongly opinionated. Now according to Titus
it says you've got to reject such a person. How do you see that in your little scheme?
Let's say after the first and second abomination.
Well while you're talking amongst yourselves, I'll give you what I gleaned. I have a note
here which says there are seven steps before excommunication. The first one is Galatians 6.1.
If any man be overtaken by a fault, you it to spiritual restore. If someone has a fault,
we wouldn't put them out of fellowship. The second one is 1 Thessalonians 5.14. You'll
have to look that one up. The third one is 2 Thessalonians 3.6. The fourth one is 1 Timothy
5.20. And the fifth one is Titus 3.10. And then the sixth one is Matthew 18.16-18 when
you take it to the assembly. So excommunication from an assembly is a very, very serious matter.
And we certainly shouldn't put someone out of the assembly without very, very good reason.
That probably doesn't answer your question. But put it in the box.
Why didn't we speak?
Okay. In 1 Corinthians we have the case of the person being put out of fellowship. But
if we were to turn to 2 Corinthians chapter 7, this is what the Apostle Paul said. 2 Corinthians
7 verse 8. Wherefore, though I wrote unto you, I did it not for his cause that I had
done the wrong, that's the man who had sinned, nor for the cause that suffered wrong, that's
his father, but that our care for you in the sight of God might appear unto you. That's
the assembly at Corinth. Paul writes to them and in the end he says, he carries on. What
Paul is saying in this letter, you were perfectly right when I wrote to you, you were sorrowful
because I told you to put someone away. You obeyed, you put that person away, but now
since that person has repented, he should be brought back into the assembly. And in
this 7th chapter of 2 Corinthians, the Apostle Paul is telling them that that person should
be put back, brought back and restored to the assembly. I think it is absolutely true
that all discipline in the church, although primarily it's in order to maintain the holiness
of the name of the Lord and his person, it's to maintain the holiness of the assembly,
but it is also to restore that person and bring him back into the assembly.
It's Galatians 6 verse 1. …