The Lord's Supper
ID
eb011
Idioma
EN
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00:42:51
Cantidad
1
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Transcripción automática:
…
Gott, all is free, we live with love and rest,
in the joy of imperfection.
With holy drops of tears and crying
we contemplate thy holy castle.
O, take your leave, let us both remember
where we held your grace, O, take your leave.
We thank the Holy Spirit,
for the people who died in your name.
Thy name we sing in high exultance,
the crown of glory and of grace,
where every heart a voice unites it,
for that is worthy of its fame.
It's not often that I have the privilege
of being able to attend the Catford Lectures
on two succeeding months.
But I'm glad I was able to be here in October
and in particular for three things.
First of all, we were reminded
that the Catford Lectures are intended to be
or intended to include basic Christian teaching.
In line with that, in the afternoon we had an address
on the role of man and woman in creation and in the assembly.
And then in the evening we had an address
on the privileges and responsibilities
connected with having access into the sanctuary
based on a sanctuary psalm, Psalm 73.
So, in the spirit of those three things,
I felt that I should spend today
going over in a straightforward, simple way
practical matters related to the breaking of bread,
the Lord's Supper.
I've read most of the relevant scriptures
and because of that I read more than I normally would
at the beginning of a meeting.
Not with the intention of expanding them all,
there won't be time for that,
but just to make some basic practical remarks
against the scriptures that have been read.
Now, in that scripture, in Acts 2,
we read that the early disciples
continued steadfastly in the apostles' doctrine and fellowship
and in the breaking of bread and in prayers.
Now, the basic concept there is the fellowship.
The apostles' doctrine regulates the fellowship.
The breaking of bread is the sweetest privilege of the fellowship.
Prayers sustain us in the fellowship,
but they are all related to the fellowship
to which we have been called,
the fellowship of God's Son, our Lord Jesus Christ.
And so we enter then in that Corinthian epistle
which gives us basic teaching about assembly order
in so many ways and we shouldn't be surprised
that from chapters 10 to 14 matters of fellowship
and relating to the fellowship are taken up.
In particular, if in chapter 10 we have the responsibilities
of those who break bread, in chapter 11
we have the privilege of breaking bread itself.
Now, I feel I should just take up this matter of breaking bread,
the elements of it, in answer to some simple questions.
First of all, why? Then when? Then what?
Then how? And then with whom?
First of all, then why?
I learned a lot many years ago
when a young Christian woman of a very tender age, a girl still,
she asked the brethren if she could break bread,
if she could remember the Lord in the breaking of bread.
Two very mature brothers interviewed her
to see whether she really knew why she wanted to break bread
and they said to her in all simplicity,
why do you feel you want to remember the Lord in the breaking of bread?
And her answer couldn't really be bettered
and the mature brothers were happy to say afterwards
when she gave that reply, what could we say?
Now, this is what she said.
The Lord Jesus is my saviour, I love him
and I know he wants me to remember him.
Now, you couldn't get a better exposition
of a good answer to the question why.
It is certainly the sweetest privilege
and it's the normal response of every committed Christian.
It's not the portion of an elite,
not a question of achievement or performance,
it is a question of understanding that the Lord who loves you
and gave himself for you, that it is his request to you.
Now, if that's the answer to the question why,
again keeping it at this basic level,
when is it proper to remember the Lord?
We've read the scripture.
It was the common practice of the early disciples
to gather together on the first day of the week.
Now, again, we cannot do better
than follow the example of the early believers.
Now, that scripture in Acts 20
tells us about other things that happened when they came together.
But the first and the primary reason that they came together,
they came together, they assembled to break bread.
Now, the other matter relating to time
concerning the breaking of bread
is what the apostle Paul adds
that you don't get in the synoptic gospels
where you get the record of the Lord
initiating and instituting the feast.
Paul adds a little rider as to time scale and as to opportunity.
He says, till he come.
And in addition, he adds the point that Gentiles as well as Jews,
all who've called upon the name of the Lord,
we'll come back to that,
are included in the request and in the invitation.
When? The first day of the week.
And it is an opportunity which is only available till he come.
Now, time is short, but I will say this.
I'm always impressed with the way scripture puts it.
They came together on the first day of the week.
Doesn't say they came together on the first day of each week
or the first day of every week.
It seems to me that what the Holy Spirit envisages
in recording it in this way, in Acts 20, is this.
We are not entitled to look further ahead than the week
on which we are embarking by entering into the first day of the week.
So, we meet together, we remember the Lord on the first day of the week
in the expectation that it's the only opportunity available to us
because the coming of the Lord is imminent.
Now, that's what I read into the expression,
the first day of the week.
What do we do?
Oh, I'm glad we are not left to our own devices.
The Lord said, take a loaf.
It's on the table.
Take it and break it and pass it round.
And each of you who is responding to the Lord's request
partakes from that loaf.
Now, there are deep things connected with that
which there isn't time for today.
I'm speaking of the activity itself.
Taking bread and as an expression of the fellowship we are having
in responding to the Lord and as a token of that fellowship
to which we've been called,
each of us takes part in that remembrance in that way.
And then, as a distinct matter,
I think this must be of great importance.
The Lord said, take the bread and think of my body given.
And then, as a distinct matter, the Lord said, take the cup.
The cup of blessing which we bless,
he said, oh yes, it's full of blessing for you.
It was full of sorrow for him,
but we can extol his virtues and his graces
in the presence of the blessed God
because there was a time when his body was given
and as a distinct matter, at the same time,
his blood, his precious, precious blood was shed.
How are we to do it?
Oh, thankfully, we remember the Lord with thankful spirits
as we consider the length to which his love could go.
But we also do it in a spirit of self-judgment.
I feel that one of the least understood scriptures
is that which says, let a man examine himself
and so let him eat.
It doesn't say, let a man or a woman examine himself
and if he's pleased with the results of the examination,
so let him eat, or just the reverse.
If you or I thought that we were competent
to remember the Lord in the breaking of bread
as a result of our performance or achievement
or our state of soul,
we'd better get rid of that idea right away.
We never would be able to break bread
on the grounds of what we deserve.
But what the scripture does say is this.
You think of the Lord and what he did.
You think of yourself and in the light of the teaching
of chapters one and two of the Corinthian epistle,
you know that there's nothing in you
that ever could be worthy before God
and the only possible grounds for remembering the Lord
in the breaking of bread is on the grounds of his worthiness
and the fact that you have accepted the condemnation of God
on what you are and what you've done,
that that condemnation was carried out at the cross
and that only because of the righteousness of God
imputed to you, put to your credit
on the grounds of the work of Christ
could there be any blessing for you at all.
We rule ourselves out of court
having briefly considered ourselves
that we could never be worthy on those grounds
having come to the right conclusion
we don't think about ourselves at all,
we think about the Lord.
If that's what we do and how we do it,
with whom do we remember the Lord?
Well, the Corinthian epistle itself
in the opening salutation
says that potentially
this is with all them who in every place
call upon the name of Jesus Christ as Lord.
We need to be aware that
in what we might call second Timothy days,
second Timothy chapter two,
that there is that joint amendment
to the potential and we get the word there
them who call upon the Lord
out of a pure heart.
But potentially it's those who like
believers with us
have taken Christ as our saviour.
Now,
if that's the activity
I want to spend a little time now
talking about practical impediments
to the enjoyment of the remembrance of the Lord.
Now, I'm not going to talk
about principles of reception,
and I'm certainly not going to talk
about principles of rejection.
But as you listen to my suggestions
about things which in a practical way
impede
the enjoyment of the Lord's supper
and prevent us giving to him what he deserves,
you might well conclude
that these are the reasons
why some of the things that I'm going to mention
may well be classified or thought of
if we were to try to establish
principles of reception.
Now, fundamentally,
they are things which dishonour the Lord.
If we knowingly dishonour the Lord
or allow things which dishonour the Lord,
we cannot expect our remembrance of him
on the first day of the week,
in the breaking of the bread
and the taking of the cup,
we cannot expect glory for the Lord,
praise to God,
or blessing for us
if we are knowingly involved in
or allowing, condoning,
things which basically are dishonouring to the Lord.
And so I would say
it's a very practical matter
that evil doctrine, evil teaching,
is dishonouring to the Lord
and is a practical impediment
to the enjoyment of the Lord's supper
and that which should flow from it.
Likewise, evil practice,
bad behaviour,
whether evil personal behaviour
or association with those
whose doctrine and practice is evil,
is a practical impediment
to the enjoyment of the Lord's presence
and responding to him
in the breaking of bread.
Again, I would label
as a practical impediment
based against that potential circle
where fellowship is to be enjoyed,
those who call upon the name of Jesus Christ
out of a pure heart,
well, I would say sectarianism
with a small s
is an impediment.
The idea that you and I
and a group of our personal friends
should closet ourselves together
and even if we don't say it,
if we should even think the thought
we are the people
and nobody else is up to our standard,
that is a practical impediment
to remembering the Lord
in the way that he would have us do.
Now, we balance that
against the earlier remark
that evil doctrine
and evil practice
and association with those
who are involved in such
is a major impediment
to the remembrance of the Lord.
I would go further and say
any negative thinking
along the line of no and don't
and looking for things to criticise
rather than things to approve of
again would be a practical impediment
to the remembrance of the Lord.
Having said all that,
my personal experience
which is now approaching 50 years,
I suppose,
is that the greater care
taken in those
with whom we are free
to remember the Lord
in the breaking of bread,
in the Lord's Supper,
the greater the care,
the sweeter the worship.
Now, I must inject a comment here.
Notwithstanding the notice boards
in certain parts of the world,
the Lord's Supper is not a worship meeting.
Now, you may like that remark, you may not.
The Lord's Supper is not a worship meeting.
It is the remembrance of the Lord
in the death that he died.
Now, having said that boldly,
I will also go on to say
in Old Testament and New Testament
the clear pattern that emerges
is that worship in any dispensation,
worship is the outcome
of the completion of a sacrifice
which is acceptable to God.
There has never ever been a sacrifice
more acceptable to God
than the death of our Lord Jesus Christ at Calvary.
We should not then be at all surprised
if the breaking of bread, the Lord's Supper,
leads as a matter of spiritual flow
to true Christian worship.
The personal worth and the value to God
of the work of our Lord Jesus Christ in death
is the substance and the content
of true spiritual worship.
But I would distinguish in my own mind
between the Lord's Supper as an occasion
and that to which it leads.
It is spiritual flow
when the consideration of the Lord in his death
and the love that he showed in going into such a death
for the glory of God to meet his every claim
and for our blessing that this leads the soul
into spiritual worship.
Indeed, in our day, the worship of the Father.
Now, I have gone at a fair rate there
to leave myself time for some practical considerations.
Perhaps the greatest practical impediment to me
in gaining what I can gain,
in giving to the Lord what I can give
in the Lord's Supper,
perhaps the greatest impediment
is lack of personal preparation.
I don't prepare what I may think or say.
I don't decide what him to give out.
I don't decide on a line of ministry.
But I prepare myself.
Now, how do I do that?
Overall, I would say,
how I spend the rest of the week
governs my response to the Lord
on the first day of the week.
Simple but clear, isn't it?
How I spend my life.
I cannot in a superficial way
adopt a pseudo-spiritual veneer
on the first day of the week,
which is not true of my spiritual condition
as evidenced on the other six days of the week.
How sad it would be
if I thought I could switch something on
on the first day of the week
and then when that day was over
put it away with my best suit of clothes
and then live to please myself the rest of the week.
Now, again, an amalgam of many years, I suppose,
of personal experience,
I want to make some suggestions,
not in any flippant way,
but in a serious practical way,
of things which affect my response to the Lord
on the first day of the week.
Having said what I have said in meaning it
about the whole of the week,
it is a question, isn't it,
how I spend my Saturday.
How I spend my Saturday night
will very much govern my spiritual state
on the Lord's Day morning
in the way I respond to the Lord.
So, again, on the first day of the week,
what time do I get up?
Now, that's a very practical matter, isn't it?
What time do I get back?
Do I begin the first day of the week
saying, well, oh, I've had a hard day,
I'll get up such a time which is convenient to me,
and, well, if all the things I have to do
mean that I get to the meeting late,
well, that's a pity.
Or do I say, no,
if I'm going to be composed
for the remembrance of the Lord in the Lord's Supper,
do I take account of all that I need to do
before I get there,
do I work backwards,
and do I say, I will need to get up at such a time
in order that, in a composed way,
I can do what I need to do,
meet my domestic responsibilities,
and arrive early enough to compose myself
to be ready when I get there.
Again, what time do I leave home?
By choice.
I might get up early,
meet my commitments,
and then I could still leave home at a time
which would get me to the meeting in a fluster.
I trust I wouldn't do that.
How can I really discern the Lord's voice,
this do,
in remembrance of me,
if everything, all the preliminaries of my day,
are done with such an indecent haste
that I'm all of a fluster
when I gather together with the Lord's people?
And how can I remember the Lord as he would wish me to
if my mind is all full of other kinds of things?
Could I give a word of exhortation to the brothers?
Fathers,
husbands,
brothers,
sons,
do you do all that you can
to ensure that not only you,
but the womenfolk,
get to the meeting in a state and a condition
where they can really concentrate
on listening to the Lord's voice,
this do,
for a remembrance of me?
Again, let me say in practical terms,
I'm not necessarily speaking about my home, my family,
or those many houses and homes
that I've stayed with amongst the brethren for many years,
but isn't it a practical matter?
Do I take my share of responsibility?
Do I help to clean the shoes
and to prepare the vegetables
and do the jobs about the home that need to be done
in order that the whole family get to the meeting
in a time when we can be suitably composed?
It's a practical thing.
I fear,
when I read some books of the last century,
this idea of the father in Victorian times
who was with his master in the study,
but well and good,
the rest of the household had to tiptoe,
almost in fear of their lives,
making sure that father wasn't disturbed.
My practical response to that would be,
think of the extra strain that was put upon the mother
because she had to tiptoe doing everything that was left undone
because father was in that Victorian study.
Thankfully, I think we've got a little bit away from that.
I would also say, as another practical matter,
I find it very, very difficult
to see any spiritual sense
in the Judaistic idea of the segregation of the sexes.
Scripture says, and it's a universal truth
applying to all generations,
God setteth the solitary in families.
Families are God's idea.
What a good thing that families are together
and they sit together
and they respond to the Lord together
when they break the bread and they remember the Lord.
That in that family situation, identified together,
and if there's any little practical matter
that needs to be attended to,
it's done within the little group,
the family sitting together.
That's merely another practical point.
Now, I've given a word to the brothers,
sisters, so far ye thus far.
Again, not necessarily any home I've been in.
But wouldn't it be a shame
if a sister or a brother
insisted on vacuuming right through the house
starting five minutes after the time
that you should have left to get to the meeting
to be in good time and composed to remember the Lord?
You sisters, all bear in mind,
it's sometimes difficult enough for the brothers
to take part in any coherent way,
shy men that they are,
without getting to the meeting all of a fluster
three minutes after the time we should have all been sitting there.
Sisters, we have a part.
As I read the offerings in scripture,
the subjective state of the Lord's people,
the spiritual condition,
is very often a matter of the spiritual state
of the sisters that are present.
If things go well in the assembly,
we are happy to give the sisters the credit and say,
well, of course, they provide the tone, and so they do.
But if things were not to go so well,
we might have to take account of the whole teaching
of Old Testament and New Testament
that the spiritual tone of the whole company
and the matter of personal and collective response to the Lord
may well be regulated by the spiritual tone
of the sisters who are present.
Oh, I trust, sisters,
that if the remembrance of the Lord in the Lord's Supper
is not quite going as you would think it would or should,
I trust you are not thinking,
why doesn't somebody do something?
Come in or at least give out a hymn.
Why doesn't such and such a brother give thanks?
We are not there to think about each other
for good or for ill.
Brothers and sisters,
but I would particularly appeal to the sisters,
and it's for this reason that we sang those two lovely hymns.
For, Savior, we would contemplate thee,
and again, oh, come my soul and gaze
on that great grief, that crown of thorns.
May I ask, sisters,
that you don't even pray for the brothers,
that they'll be led to do something.
Think about the Lord.
Now, I think it's excellent,
and it's time that we got to this point.
It's an excellent thing that in the Lord's Supper
that the Lord introduced and initiated,
he's given us an aid to concentration.
Most of us have butterfly minds, grasshopper minds,
flipping from one thing to another.
If I find it a difficult matter
to concentrate on why I'm there,
I have the bread to encourage me
to think about the Lord's body.
I have the wine to enable me
to concentrate upon his bloodshed.
Men speak of visual aids,
helps to concentration.
We couldn't have better than that
which the Lord has given us,
the bread which we break,
the cup which we bless.
At any time, any of us find our thoughts wandering.
Before or after the elements have been taken,
it will help us to contemplate,
to consider well the Lord in all his beauty,
and that's what we are there for
if we look upon the elements,
the bread and the wine.
And again, sisters,
it's true, it works.
The brothers in their functioning role,
as we had last month,
the brothers express your response,
our response on your behalf.
How often a word of a hymn,
a verse of scripture,
a thought process that is going on
in a brother or a sister's mind
is given voice by somewhere else, someone else.
And that occurs when we are all thinking about the Lord
which is why we are there.
A word of exhortation to the brothers.
Younger brothers,
join in simply, reverently,
in words natural to your own vocabulary.
Older brothers, and I feel for this,
older brothers, time and again,
encourage younger brothers
to say just a few words of appreciation.
I feel that younger brothers
would be more likely
to give a few words of simple thanksgiving
if we older brothers led by example.
Wouldn't it be good
if just now and again
a brother who may have something substantial to offer
that might take some time to develop
would just consider this
the best way to teach us by example
and in just a few simple,
heartfelt words of thanksgiving
give that response to the Lord
and through the son to the father
to demonstrate that what we encourage one another to do
is indeed right.
My time has gone.
I would only say this.
The sweetest privilege
connected with the fellowship
to which we've been called
is the breaking of bread.
Every privilege brings responsibility,
and I do feel that if we meet our responsibilities,
if we pull our weight in the local assembly,
if we show our loyalty,
if we get on in a constructive, positive way
with getting on with the tasks that need to be done,
the tone of the fellowship will be all that sweeter.
The tone of the worship that issues
from the remembrance of the Lord
and the breaking of bread
would be all that sweeter
for your practical, positive contribution.
May the Lord help us to live it out.
Now, our closing hymn is number 436.
The result of thinking about the Lord
and the death that he died
comes out in hymns like this,
God and Father, we adore thee,
now revealed in Christ the Son.
436.
God and Father, we adore thee,
now revealed in Christ the Son.
Glory be to thy holy presence
Through the world the King has come
Filled with grace we bow before thee
Now and evermore we'll stay
With thy holy house we rest
With thy holy house we rest
Glory, honor, praise, and glory
To thee render unto thee
Life from strength and death from death
In thy wonderful house we sleep
For thy glory shall transcend earth
In the presence of the Son
Jesus Christ, our worthy Lord
Let glory and health pour in all
Jesus, thy presence we behold thee
Open, Lord, thy house below
Come, let's sing of adoration
Sing, let's sing of joy around
In thy grace, our powers pour
Share, Lord, thy joys with me
And with all the blessed secret
Of his precious blessing to thee
O God, our Father, we thank thee for thy word.
We hear again the words of the Lord Jesus.
Ye know these things, happy are ye if ye do them.
We commend ourselves now to thee for the interval.
Pray that when we come together again to hear thy word,
we might be attentive and obedient to what thou shalt say to us.
We ask it in the name of the Lord Jesus. Amen. …