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A10398 Three and tvventie sermons, or, Catechisticall lectures upon the sacrament of the Lords Supper preached monthly before the Communion. By that late able, and painfull preacher, Master Iohn Randall Bachelour of Divinitie, pastor of Saint Andrewes Hubbart in little Eastcheape London, sometimes fellow of Lincolne Colledge in Oxford. Published by his executor Iosh. Randall, as he found it corrected by the authors one hand, in his study, since his death. Randall, John, 1570-1622.; Randall, Joshua, fl. 1630. 1630 (1630) STC 20682A; ESTC S115645 295,622 568

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when wee come to heare the word and receive the Sacrament there will be a sweet digesting and battening in the inner man Indeede the whole worke of the Spirit it is done meerly in the power of the death of Christ Iesus Gods Spirit doth nothing in the heart of any man or woman for the matter of salvation but it is done all in respect of the death of Iesus Christ Fourthly it will be a notable bridle to thee from sinne an excellent meanes to restraine thee from sin that howsoever thy corruption drawes thee on and Sathan hee tempts thee and the world that allures thee the flesh that provokes thee How shouldest thou stand against all these enemies Oh if thou have the death of Iesus Christ and the remembrance of it soundly in thy heart then all these speakers to thee they shall speake unto thee as to a stone-wall to a deafe man Gal. 6.14 The Apostle faith there God forbid that I should rejoyce in any thing save onely in Christ and him crucified whereby the world is crucified to mee and I unto the world Let the whole world set upon me to tempt me yet it shall not prevaile for the whole world is crucified to me and I unto the whole world by the Crosse of Christ I am as a dead man unto the world A man that hath the death of Christ soundly seated in his heart hee cannot wittingly and willingly sinne against God Indeed this light may be and is sometime darkened in us by the mist of corruption and temptation and then we may be and are oft-times over-taken with sinne but so long as this light is cleare within us sinne shall never bee able to overcome us There is such a strong stay against sinne in the serious thoughts of the death of Christ that so long as that these are within us sinne cannot prevaile against us A fift benefit is this it will furnish us and inable us to the dutie of prayer that we shall come to God at all times humbly and yet chearfully too humbly alwayes acknowledging and bewailing our sinnes and mourning that we are the parties that have crucified the Lord of life and of glory and yet cheerfully as resting upon the merits and death of Iesus Christ for our reconciliation And howsoever it be that we finde many infirmities and imperfections in our prayers and thinke with our selves that therefore God will not heare us yet let us comfort our selues in the remembrance of the death of Christ this being in thy heart and conscience be of good cheare the Lord Iesus Christ hee makes continuall intercession for thee and hee takes thy prayers and puts them up and presents them unto God in thy behalfe in his owne name and so makes thy prayers acceptable before the Lord. The last benefit is this this should be a singular meanes to make us fit and ready to die to worke in us an earnest looking for and hastning of the day of Christ Hee that hath the death of Christ soundly seated in his heart hee is fit and ready to die For first by this practice by the continuall remembrance of the death of Christ we alwayes looke death as it were in the face and being every day and every houre so well acquainted with it we are not afraid of it when it comes Againe hereby by the remembrance and sound meditation of the death of Christ wee dye daily as the Apostle saith our sinnes die in us and our lusts die in us and our affections and rebellions dye in us and so wee are halfe dead already that so when death comes to take hold upon us it hath not so much to doe with us as with other men Take this for a certaine truth that a man of mortification who hath his heart broken for sinne and that hath his lusts and affections and rebellions in some good measure mortified and crucified within him I say death is nothing so tedious and irksome to such a man as it is to another Wee see this by experience in the case betweene Christ and the two theeves that were executed with him Iohn 19. The manner of their death was thus They were to bee crucified and nailed upon the Crosse and then to hang till they dead wee cannot say of any one thing that it should give them their deaths wound but the custome was that when they were crucified they should have their legs broken thereby to make an end of them the Text saith that they came to the theeves and brake their legs but when they came to our Saviour Christ they brake not his for he was dead already he had none of those rebellions none of those resisting lusts within him to strive against the ordinance of God as the other had but he did sweetly yeeld up the ghost in obedience unto God and therefore Death had nothing to doe with him so much as with the other So likewise wee finde it with men of mortification Thirdly by this remembrance of the death of Christ continually we see all the evills and all the harmes of our death taken away in his death and so there is no cause to us to feare it at all Fourthly wee see by this that Christ himselfe who is our Lord and Master and Head hee hath undergone this before us and therefore wee are content in a holy resolution to undergoe that which he hath done shall the members fare better than the Head No surely Fiftly and lastly by the continuall remembrance of the death of Christ we see and behold that it was a full and finall end of all his afflictions and that thereby he entred into glory wee consider from thence as it was with him so it shal be with us when death comes it shall put an end to all trouble and affliction and the consideration of this should quicken us up to desire death to desire to be dissolved and to be with Christ O beloved when a man comes to lye upon his deaths bed he would give all that he had to be fitted for death and to be sure of comfort Oh let us make the death of Christ therefore our continuall meditation and this is that which will yeeld us such a gracious preparation for our death as that nothing in the world shall doe the like besides and therefore let these considerations stirre us up to a reverent and conscionable performance of this duty of the remembrance of the death of Christ Iesus so much good and so many benefits as are to be reaped by it why surely we are utter enemies to our owne good if we doe not travell conscionably in the faithfull practice of this duty let not the difficulty of this duty in it selfe let not the distastfulnesse of it to flesh and blood nor the losse of carnall pleasure and worldly profit nor let not the harsh censure of the gracelesse people of the world nor let not the bent of our naturall life which is utterly against it make it unpleasant
beleeuers Math. 26.28 This is my Blood shed for you for the remission of sinnes it was the shedding of his Blood it is the remission of our sinnes the smart was his the sweetnesse is ours he is wounded we are cured he is punished we are acquitted he dyes for vs and by his death we are made aliue Thirdly and lastly the acceptablenesse to God it was infinitely pleasing to God his Father there is God and Christ and Man Christ enduring the bitternesse of death Man redeemed and deliuered by it God himselfe therewithall infinitely pleased Man had sinned and thereby enthralled himselfe to Death and Hell and Damnation and except he be redeemed he perisheth without recouerie God was offended and his wrath did burne like fire against Mankind for their sinnes and except he be pacified they are all damned without mercie Christ Iesus came and tooke our Nature vpon him and dyed for our sinnes and by the bitternesse hath redeemed vs and pacified God His offering himselfe for vs was a Sacrifice of a sweet smelling sauour to God Ephes 5.2 Alwayes the beloued Sonne of God but then best-beloued if we may esteeme according to our apprehension when he was performing the highest and vtmost act of his filiall obedience Obedient to the death euen to the death of the Crosse Phil. 2.8 When is a Child best-beloued of his Father but when he is most obedient The Lord was alwayes well-pleased in him Math. 3.17 but then most of all if we may iudge by the effects when he was vpon the Crosse for then and thereby was the Lord well-pleased thorough him with all the Faithfull Col. 1.20 the Lord then smelling a sauour of rest whereby as in the dayes of Noah Gen. 8.21 he was pacified towards the World Spices are sweetest when they are broken and pounded and so was Christ when his Body was broken and pounded vpon the Crosse And as when Mary brake the Boxe of Oyntment the whole House was filled with the fauour of it Iohn 12.3 So when Christ who was full of good Oyntments Cant. 1.2 had his Body broken on the Crosse Heauen and Earth were filled with the sweet sauour thereof and many reasons may be alleaged why it should be so well pleasing to God First it was Gods pleasure and ordinance that Christ should dye for vs and he ordained it in the heighth of his loue to vs God so loued the world c. And he cannot chuse but be infinitely pleased with his owne worke specially the worke of his greatest loue Secondly he delights not in the death of a sinner but rather that they should be conuerted and liue therefore this being the Life and Saluation of sinfull beleeuers it must needs be delightfull and pleasing to God Thirdly it was as it were Gods owne Blood Act. 20.28 For howsoeuer God is not as Man made of Flesh and Blood yet the Person of Christ who was our Mediator being God and Man the Blood that came from him as he was Man by reason of the personall Vnion of both Natures in that his owne Person may iustly be said to be the Blood of God and how can it chuse but the Blood of God should be infinitely pleasing to God Lastly it must make amends for all the sinnes of all Beleeuers now all our sinnes euen the best of them are maruailous filthy and loathsome before the Lord our verie righteousnesse is as a filthy Clout before the pure Eyes of Gods Iustice and therefore there being so many Beleeuers to be saued and euerie Beleeuer hauing so many sinnes and euerie sinne being so loathsome and odious before the Lord it must needs be a verie sweet Sacrifice that must take away all that filthinesse and that obedience must needs be infinitely pleasing to God which makes perfect satisfaction and recompence for our infinite sinnes Now if it be so sweet and infinitely pleasing to God shall we neglect it Or come like Stockes and Stones vnto it without feeling and without life without a liuely and a sensible apprehension of the infinite excellencie of this sweet smelling Sacrifice Let vs stirre vp our selues to esteeme reuerently of it as it well deserues and to take delight in it as God delights in it and accordingly let vs be fitted to the celebration and memoriall of it in this Sacrament In my vnfained affection therefore to the Lord and our Sauiour Iesus Christ and to his precious Death and Blood-shedding so bitter to himselfe so comfortable to vs so pleasing to God that the honour thereof may be rightly and worthily aduanced in our Hearts as at all times so especially in the liuely commemoration of it in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper I haue vndertaken this taske of preparation earnestly desiring that the precious death of the Lord Iesus Christ may be preciously and graciously entertained answerable in some measure to the excellent worthinesse of that great Mysterie Let vs therefore labour to make some vse of these things Let vs consider first that it is one of the greatest parts of our Christian dutie to be well instructed and furnished for this Sacrament Secondly what daunger it is to our Soules if we come vnprepared for then we eat and drinke our owne damnation when we are eating and drinking the Diuell is blind-folding of vs and carrying our Soules to Hell Thirdly let vs looke withall to Gods glorie Is God most glorified by this Then let vs be best prepared to it Lastly let vs consider the preciousnesse of the death of Christ the greatest worke that euer was performed since the World began that Christ the Sonne of God should shed his Blood for the sinne of Man It ought therefore to be prepared vnto with much eleuation and with much affection of mind And when we haue it before our Eyes and come to shew forth the Lords death we must bring with vs all preparation reuerence faith and eleuation that we can by Prayer or any good endeuour attaine vnto and we must further consider the bitternesse of the death of Christ and must come as if then we were to be crucified with him euerie one of vs that looke for a part in his death for the forgiuenesse of sinnes the bitternesse of his death must goe to our Hearts we must looke vnto him whom we haue pierced by our sinnes with mourning Eyes and drouping Hearts and then we must consider how comfortable this his death is to vs it is the greatest blessing that euer can befall vs in this World Life Remission of Sinnes Saluation and what not It is all in all Lastly consider how infinitely pleasing it is to God and know that if it be so pleasing to him if we prophane it he will be infinitely displeased with vs. Let these things therefore stirre vs vp to a reuerent partaking of this holy Mystery Thus you haue some seasoning before hand see how you can profit by it in the weeke you haue some-what now to put you in mind what you are
mee the conferrence of both these speeches together ministers this profitable observation namely that the true and right remembrance of our Saviour IESVS CHRIST is our affectionate and religious remembrance of the death of our Saviour Christ Remember me saith Christ verse 25. that is saith Paul the Lords death verse 26. Remember it so that you shew it forth that is religiously and affectionately Zach. 12.10 I will poure upon the house of David and upon the Inhabitants of Ierusalem the spirit of grace c. there is a promise of the Spirit to be poured downe on the faithfull under the Gospell and one principall effection of it there mentioned is this that they shall looke on Christ that is they shall remember him and meditate upon him Well what is the principall object in Christ that they shall set their meditations upon his piercing that is his death and sufferings when he was pierced with thornes and nailes and Speare and how shall they be touched with this remembrance of him Surely very religiously and affectionately grieving and lamenting as for their first borne Here then is the right remembrance of Christ that is our affectionate and religious remembrance of the piercing and death of Christ Rev. 13.8 Christ Iesus is the Lambe of God that takes away the sinnes of the world But how doe the faithfull whose names are written in the Lambes booke of life apprehend him Not simply as a Lambe but as a Lambe slaine that is in his death and crucifying that is the true and right apprehending of him Gen. 3.15 The seed of the woman c. when the Lord himselfe first published the Gospell he propounds the seed of the woman to be beleeved in that is CHRIST but with speciall reference to his death for that is the very bruising of the Serpents head CHRIST on his Crosse spoiled principalities and powers Col. 2.14 and the bruising of his heele there spoken of is an intimation of the death and sufferings that the Devill and his Instruments should bring upon CHRIST and yet these very sufferings of Christ shall break and destroy all their power this was Adam and all the faithfull to beleeve of Christ and this is their true and right remembrance of Christ This was shadowed in the sacrifices before the Law as in the Passeover Exod. 12.6 7. they should kill it and strike the blood on the two posts c. what is the meaning of this wee must carry the streames of our meditations on Christ towards his killing and death and blood And so under the Law Heb. 9.22 almost all things are by the Law purged with blood What is the meaning of this That all that beleeve in Chritst are thereby admonished still to have the eye of their mindes setled on the meditation of the blood of Christ if ever they looke to bee purged from their sinnes by Christ they must bee purged by the blood of Christ so the Prophets set forth Christ in this manner Esay 53. from the first to the seventh verse hee that of all the Prophets spake most plainly of him sets him forth principally in regard of his death as he was wounded and broken and oppressed and afficted the Prophet leaves them the best memoriall of Christ and therefore he acquaints them with the death of Christ The Apostles observed the same rule 1 Cor. 17.3 First of all I delivered unto you how that Christ dyed for our sinnes no doubt but hee would teach them Christ so as hee might worke a most affectionate impression and remembrance of Christ in their hearts and how doth he this By teaching them Christs death first of all as the chiefe and maine ground of all the rest And looke how he taught them so hee practised himselfe 1 Cor. 2.2 I esteemed not to know any thing amongst you save Iesus Christ and him crucified for his knowledge he esteemed to know nothing else and so Gal. 6.14 for his rejoycing God forbid that I should rejoyce in any thing but in the crosse of our Lord Iesus Christ and both these are spoken by way of exclusion disclaiming all other knowledge and rejoycing in comparison of that because that is the rise and ground of all the rest To conclude the Word and the Sacraments are purposely fitted to worke this remembrance in us 1 Cor. 1.18 the word is called the preaching of the Crosse that is it the Minister must specially preach and the people learne Gal. 3.1 the Apostle taught Christ and his death to them so plainly as if hee had beene crucified amongst them and so the Sacraments are fitted to this end first Baptisme Rom. 6.3 4. we are baptised into his death and buried with him in baptisme and so the Lords Supper as you see here is to set forth the Lords death c. The reasons First Christ in his death was most pleasing to God and wherein should wee or can wee bee better affected with the remembrance of Christ than in that state wherein hee was most pleasing to his and our heavenly Father God cannot properly be said to be pleased with his Sonne at any one time more than another but we speake it after the manner of men and by way of supposall if ever God could be better pleased with him at one time than at another it was at his death Ephes 5.2 then he was an offering and a sacrifice of a sweet smelling savour to God I but you will say then God was most angry with him pouring on him his fierce wrath and vengeance from heaven True he was most angry with him in regard of our sinnes which he beheld on him and punished in him but in regard of his owne decree thereby accomplished and Christ his perfect obedience therein yeelded and the absolute satisfaction for our sinnes there made by his precious blood even then God was best pleased with him we feele it through Gods mercy for we are sure it was his death and blood that we are reconciled to God by and that God was pleased with us for and therefore Christ himselfe must needs be most pleasing to him in that estate Secondly therein Christ shewed his greatest love and affection to us and how shall we remember him with our best affections but in that state wherein hee shewed most love and affection towards us Iohn 15.13 Greater love than this can no man shew than to give his life for his friend this love Christ hath shewed us he gave his whole state for us he spared not his precious body his precious blood his precious life his precious soule for us all these are precious yea infinitely precious in themselves yet hee thought nothing too precious to give for us but exposed them all in his death to the wrath of God for our redemption whosoever thou art that canst thus remember Christ thou hast many strong bonds and motives to binde thee fast to thankfulnesse and love and obedience to God in Iesus Christ and that is to remember him
saith vers 7. They being come together to breake bread the first day of the weeke Paul preached unto them The first day of the weeke what is that that is the Sabbath day the Lords day What is the breaking of bread what is meant by that why the receiving of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper The Disciples being come together that is to say after their usuall manner the first day of the weeke to breake bread Paul preached unto them The manner of speech declares that it was their practice their usual and ordinary practice at their comming together in their Christian assemblies to communicate in breaking of bread And it appeares to be so also by other circumstances there mentioned as namely the company many Disciples verse 4.5 being then in a strange place at Troas and in their journey travelling by the way If they did it abroad when they were travelling then much more would they doe it when they were at home and at rest and therefore these circumstances of the Text make it cleare that it was an usuall practice of the Church so to doe Act. 2.42 there it is said of them that were converted that they continued together in the Apopostles doctrine and fellowship and breaking of bread and prayers by breaking of bread we are to understand the participation in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper They continued in breaking bread Marke what the Text saith they continued in it not once or twice but they continued in it they made it their daily and continuall practice And see with what holy exercises it is ranged withall They continued together in the Apostles doctrine and fellowship breaking of bread and prayers as who should say it was as usuall and familiar with them to receive the Sacrament as to heare the word and to meet together in prayer and the ranging of this duty amongst other holy exercises seemes to give some secret intimation of a reason why they made this their ordinary and usuall practice because when these duties are performed together they are marvellous helpfull one to another one seconds and backs another they continued in the Apostles doctrine in fellowship love-meetings breaking of bread and prayer If we should looke into the state of the Church in succeeding ages we shall finde by stories that still the nearer the Church lived to the time of the Apostles the more frequent and more usuall was their practice in the receiving of this Sacrament often in so much that in some places it was every Sabbath in others at least every moneth the doctrine then is cleare both by the Commandement of Christ and also by the practice of the Church Reason 1 The first Reason is this The death of Christ is to be remembred often now the Sacrament of the Lords Supper is a cleare looking glasse to behold hold the death of Iesus Christ and the memoriall thereof most brightly and plainly and therefore that is oft to be received That the death of Christ is oft to be remembred I hope no Christian will deny the death of Christ a matter so weighty in it selfe the greatest businesse that ever was acted since the world stood the death of Christ being a matter of so great consequence to Mankinde that every man and woman so farre forth is saved or damned as they have their portion or have not their portion in the death of Christ the death of Christ being so comfortable to the faithfull that it is the very life of all the good that they have here or shall have hereafter and can we ever remember this oft enough and can we omit any occasion of the remembring of Christ his death without sin and without much dishonour to God much wrong and indignity to Christ and damage to our owne soules sturely we cannot I but some me wil say I can remember the death of Christ though not by receiving the Sacrament I can remember it in the word for there Christ is crucified before me and in my prayers and in all my good and holy meditations and in other things as well as in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper It is true thou maist and it is true thou must yet notwithstanding wee must conceive that the Sacrament of the Lords Supper is instituted of purpose for this meere end to remember the death of Christ and therefore if thou canst meditate profitably upon the death of Christ in other exercises then much more thou maist doe it in this yea we may be bold to expect a better blessing from God upon our remembrance of Christs death by the receiving of this Sacrament than by the hearing of the word and other good exercises because this Sacrament is ordained instituted meerly as it were of purpose for that end God will most blesse his own ordinances to the same end whereunto he hath so nearly fitted and appointed them Besides that in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper there is a most sensible occasion offered unto us to remember the death of Christ the death of Christ is as it were acted before our eyes by the breaking of the bread and the pouring out of the wine wherby we may fitly and must of necessity bee stirred up to remember with our selves how freely the Lord Iesus Christ gave his body to be crucified and his blood to be shed for the taking away of our sinnes If therefore the death of Chris must be remembred then the Sacrament wherein wee behold the death of Christ as in a glasse must needs be oft received and participated in Reason 2 Secondly it is for the confirmation of our faith our faith we know had need to be confirmed everie day the Sacrament is a notable meanes to confirme cur faith That we had need to be confirmed in our faith every day is certaine for we know this by experience that in the strongest of us our faith is weake and in the greatest of us our faith is small and while we are here it is still but upon the growing hand we know our weake and crasie bodies because they are weake must have a continuall supply of bodily food so our weake soules because we are weake in faith and apt to unbeleefe and distrust through our owne corruption of heart and Satans remptations our soules I say being so weake in faith therfore the strength of it must be continually relieved and supported by a continuall supply of spirituall food which is ministred unto us especially in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper so much more in it than in the word by how much more the assurance is given to the truth of an evidence by the seale than by the writing without the seale a writing without a seale shewes that such a thing is done but if the seale be set unto it then it confirmes it unto us the more God tells us in his word that wee are reconciled to him in the blood of Christ it is true we beleeve this and this begets and
honoured by vs in the performance of this businesse He will be sanctified in all that come neere him Leuit. 10.3 In this action we approach nearest to God euen to become one with Christ Iesus and hereby to be incorporated into his Body as Bone of his Bone and Flesh of this Flesh and therefore we must sanctifie and glorifie God in this exercise aboue all other It grieues me to see the Transgressors in this kind how horribly the Lord is dishonoured amongst Men euen in this most glorious and sanctified Ordinance some comming onely for fashion sake few for consciences not one amongst a great many with that due preparation that may make their seruice herein acceptable to God and Gods holy Sacrament comfortable and profitable to their owne Soules In zeale therefore for the Lord of Hoasts that his great Name and Maiestie may be rightly and truly glorified in the right and true vse of this his sauing Ordinance I desire to fit you to a reuerent and faithfull participation of this holy Sacrament as not knowing wherein either I or you may honor God more and doe him better seruice The fourth Reason is the preciousnesse of the death of the Lord Iesus Christ the greatest and weightiest and most vnualuable businesse that euer was performed since the Worlds Creation He the Lambe vndefiled and without spot a sinlesse Man the Holy One of God his owne glorious Sonne the Liquor that is prest out of such goodly Grapes must needs be a sweet and pleasant Iuice the Blood that issues out of his blessed Body and from his sacred Wounds must needs be most pure and most precious euerie drop of this heauenly Dew is worth a worlds ransome therefore not to be thought or spoken of much lesse to be purposely remembred and solemnely represented in the Sacrament but with all holy preparation and affection and eleuation of Spirit For the deepe impression of the death of Iesus Christ into our Hearts let vs consider rightly these three things which will be as so many spurres vnto vs to stirre vs vp to a more reuerent estimation and embracing of this Sacrament First the bitternesse of his death to him Secondly the sweetnesse of it to vs Thirdly the acceptablenesse of it to God First the bitternesse of it to himselfe It was exceeding bitter to him it cost him many a deepe sigh and groane many teares and strong cryings Hebr. 5.7 A sore Agony in the Garden with a bloody sweat in his Body Luke 22.44 And a deadly heauinesse in his Soule Math. 26.38 A hard conflict with the terrors of Death and the wrath of God vpon him for our sinnes for that grieuous trouble spoken of Math. 26.37 could not arise from any bodily feares or paines but he was then coping and closing with the very terrors of God due to vs but to be endured by him God set him as a Marke before him to shoot at him and to spend vpon him all the Arrowes of his Vengeance which were prepared for all beleeuing sinners from the beginning to the end of the World For many Men haue suffered a bodily death without any such daunting Christ is of a more valorous spirit then so many a sore blow did he receiue both from God and Man Men smot him and buffeted him Math. 26.67 They platted a Crowne of Thornes and put it on his Head and smot him on the Head Math. 27.29 30. And all this and a great deale more came vpon him yet there was none to pitty him Ps 69.20 The Lord from Heauen he smot him and brake him and layd vpon him Esay 53.6.10 as it were stroake vpon stroake till he had reuenged himselfe to the full vpon him He did not spare him though he were his owne Sonne Rom. 8.32 For when Christ was vpon the Crosse then he was reputed the common sinner of the World and so all the Vials of the wrath of God were to be poured out and emptied vpon him Was this Death so bitter to him and shall we be lightly affected toward it Shall we come coldly and vnpreparedly to the memoriall of it Shall we see this bitter Death of his acted as it were in a holy Tragedy before our Eyes and shall not we be much moued and yearne in our Bowels at the sight and thought and memoriall of it Put the case we should be condemned to dye and another Man in loue should take our death vpon him for vs how compassionately would wee bee affected towards him and the death that hee suffers for vs Wee would goe into our Chambers and mourne and waile and melt in our selues at the thought of his suffering for vs and his loue to vs and our wretchednesse that hath brought him to such a death much more should we be stirred vp to a thorough feeling of the sufferings and death of Christ Iesus which we wretched sinners haue brought vpon him For it was more that the Sonne of God should dye then if the whole World should dye The bitternesse of his death was caused by the bitternesse of our sins and therefore the thought of his death should alwayes stirre vs vp to true repentance to a hatred and detestation of our sins and to looke vpon the Lord Iesus with a broken Heart and a mourning Spirit and a wounded Conscience and a sighing Soule whom we haue so grieuously pierced with our sinnes Zach. 12.10 They shall looke vpon him whom they haue pierced they shall mourne for him c. Secondly the sweetnesse of it to vs it is maruailous cordiall and comfortable to vs Gaule and Vineger to him but Milke and Hony to vs his abasing is our exalting his sufferings are our victorie his torments our ease his wounds our cure his crosse our crowne his shame our glorie his death our life he dying in our stead looke how bitter our death was to him so comfortable is his death to vs looke how much he was disparaged by our death so much are we aduantaged by his it was but one death in it selfe but it is double in effect as our death that is being due to vs so it was a bitter death to Christ but as his death that is to say as being endured in his Person for vs so it is to vs most comfortable We were healed by his stripes Esay 53.5 He bore our stripes and thereby are we healed we changed states with our Sauiour and he with vs he receiued our sinnes we receiue his righteousnesse he our miserie we his happinesse he our death we his life a blessed change for vs that in stead of Sinne Death and Hell thereby deserued we should find Righteousnesse and Life and Heauen purchased by the death of Christ Iesus when the Life and Blood of Christ Iesus gusht out of his Body by his wounds then were all the Fountaines of Heauen as it were all the Flood-gates of Gods Mercie set wide open and then was all Grace and Comfort and Life and Saluation showred downe vpon all
carrie the businesse wholly and plainly before vs whereas there be foure witnesses of this Truth it is needfull and profitable for vs to compare all these testimonies together for by this meanes if there be any seeming difference betwixt them they shall be accorded and so the Scripture shall bee iustified from contradiction Secondly so that which is defectiue in the one shall be supplyed in the other Thirdly so shall we be more fully perswaded of the truth hereof being confirmed out of the mouth of many witnesses and so we shall vnderstand the whole mind of God touching this businesse And because the Euangelist Mathew is more copious then any of the other his testimonie shall be the rule that we will compare reduce the rest vnto Math. 26.28 This is my Blood of the New Testament that is shed for many for the remission of sinnes This that is this Cup or this Wine or this Sacrament as we heard the meaning was before and herein they all agree Is my Blood which if it be grossely and carnally to be vnderstood as the Capernaits did vnderstand it Iohn 6.51 and as the Papists doe in this verie case it is impossible in euerie Mans vnderstanding that Christ should giue them his Blood whilest he was aliue but if it were possible yet the speech is fearfull and the action sauage both on his part and theirs that he should poure out the Blood of his owne Body into the Cup and they should drinke of it If they had so taken his meaning trembling and horror would haue beene vpon them euen to death that they should drinke Mans Blood yea the naturall Blood of their louing Master and the Sonne of God this had beene a sauage thing But vnderstand it as he meant it spiritually and sacramentally then it is full of comfort This is my Blood that is the Signe and Seale and Pledge of my Blood as if he should haue said to them If ye drinke of this Wine and withall lift vp your Hearts and haue Faith in my Blood the Wine shall be thorough Gods ordinance and the liuely operation of the Holy Ghost as effectuall to you to all sauing purposes as if my owne Blood were as naturally or certainly in you as in my selfe The New Testament which is spoken in opposition to the former Testament There was a Testament before but that is old this is new and there was Blood before but that was of Beasts and Birds this is of himselfe My Blood of the New Testament Here is some seeming difference betwixt them Mathew and Marke agree This is my Blood of the New Testament Luke and Paul differ from them Luke 22.20 1 Cor. 11.25 This is the New Testament in my Blood This is onely in the manner of the speech not in the meaning the ioynt entendment of them all is to shew that this Blood is proper and peculiar to the New Testament in respect of the full exhibition of it whereby it is ordained ratified and confirmed and wherein the whole force and power of the New Testament consists as the former Testament was by the Blood of Buls and Goats so this is by the Blood of Christ and this we may see Hebr. 9.10 c. This is the Blood of the Testament which God hath appointed to you And hereto answers the speech of Mathew and Marke This is my Blood of the New Testament which is shed for you and in Verse 18. the Apostle saith The Old Testament was not ordained without Blood and so also the New Testament is not ordained without Blood So we see that though the witnesses differ in words yet their meaning is one and the same which is shed It was not then actually shed yet it was effectuall then and alwayes from the beginning It was the Blood of the Lambe slaine from the beginning of the World Times breake no square with God for there is no difference of times with him at all This is added purposely to shew that it is not simply the Blood of Christ that saues vs but his Blood shed And that when we come to the Lords Table we come not to celebrate his Incarnation so much whereby he tooke our Blood on him but his Death whereby he shed his Blood for vs and for many It is not for all the World in generall as some foolishly immagine but it is restrayned to some nor yet it is not limited to the Disciples onely nor yet to the Iewes onely as the former Testament was but to many If you will know who this many is looke into the first of Iohn To as many as receiued him To as many as beleeue in his Name euen to the whole many of the World that receiue Christ and beleeue in his Name Of all Nations some The Euangelist Luke and Paul add one thing further Which is shed for you Which is not meant of the Disciples onely but for the whole Church for the benefit of all the Faithfull And it giues vs further to vnderstand that whosoeuer comes to the Lords Table must receiue particularly for himselfe as if Christ were there present and should say vnto them This is for you and for you Lastly For the remission of sinnes there is the benefit of it I but will some say haue we no other benefit by it Haue we not our Regeneration and our Iustification c. by the shedding of Christs Blood Yes surely but that is set downe for all the rest I but haue I not remission of sinnes by his Body as well as by his Blood Yes surely but it is rather said so of his Blood because of the Sacrifices of the Law which were a Type of Christs Sacrifice and were offered by Blood Secondly howsoeuer his Body is auaileable to remission of sinnes yet it is so farre forth as it is crucified and his Blood shed and thus we are to conceiue of these things Now we come to the points of Doctrine and Instruction that arise from hence The first thing that our Sauiour speakes of is the New Testament that is the ground of all Doct. 1 The point we obserue from hence is this The state of all the Faithfull that haue liued or doe liue or shall liue from the death of Christ to the Worlds end doth stand and hold by a new Testament or Couenant betwixt God and them Testament and Couenant are not all one amongst Men but in matters of Grace and Saluation betwixt God and Man they are all one Gods Couenant is his Testament and his Testament is his Couenant Circumcision though it were a bare Couenant not ratified by the death of the Testator and therefore properly no Testament yet it is called a Testament Act. 7.8 All the interest that euer any Man had in the free grace and saluation of God they had it meerely by force and vertue of a Couenant For Man hauing nothing but what he receiues from God he can haue no assurance to nor any good by any thing but what he
is ascribed to the Blood of Christ so our Redemption is ascribed to the Blood of Christ Ephes 1.7 Reuel 5.9 and in the 1 Pet. 1.19 all runs vpon the Blood of Christ Reuel 1.5 We are washed from our sinnes in his Blood 1 Iohn 1.7 The Blood of Christ cleanseth vs from all our sinnes The fetching of vs within the Couenant of Grace is by the Blood of Christ Ephes 2.13 and so indeed is the whole worke of our Redemption ascribed to the Blood of Christ You see then how rich and plentifull the Scripture is in this Argument all tending wholly to this effect to teach vs that the verie matter whereupon the New Testament and the worke of our Redemption is founded and stablished is the Blood of the Lord Iesus I am bold to insist so long vpon the proofe of this point because the Scripture is so plentifull in it Wee will come now to the Reasons Reas 1 The first Reason may be drawn from the nature of a Couenant amongst Men Wherein stands it Not in the making and writing of it but in the sealing of it Here is a Couenant made betweene God and Man that he will forgiue vs our sinnes and that he will sanctifie vs and it is sealed by the Blood of Christ and therefore it is called the Blood of the New Testament It is true indeed that all the Couenants and Promises of God are firme and sure in themselues because God hath made them and they need no Seale yet because God hauing made this Couenant respectiuely that he would haue it sealed and confirmed by the Blood of Christ Iesus Therefore looke whatsoeuer force and benefit it is of to vs it is by vertue of the Blood of Christ And hence it is that whosoeuer can shew this Seale for themselues that they haue part in this Blood of Christ they may challenge that they haue their part in the Couenant and whosoeuer cannot they haue no part in it Reas 2 The second Reason is drawne from the nature of a Testament which must alwayes be confirmed by the death of the Testator and is not of force before the partie be dead the Apostle applyes it so in Hebr. 9.16 17. Reas 3 The third Reason is drawne from the nature of a Sacrifice a burnt Offering a propitiatorie Sacrifice a Sacrifice for sinne No Sacrifice that was to be offered for sinne but it was to be killed and offered in Blood Leuit. 1.7 and therefore Christ comming to be a Sacrifice for the sinnes of the World he must be killed and slaine Reas 4 The fourth Reason it holds by way of proportion betweene the New Testament and the Old The Old Testament was confirmed by Blood and so must the New In the Old Testament the Pascall Lambe must be slaine and killed and so in the New Testament Christ must be killed and slaine Likewise the Sacrifice of the Law must be killed slaine and Blood shed so the Sacrifice of the New Testament Christ must be slaine and shed his Blood Reas 5 The fifth Reason is drawne from the rigour of the Law which did necessarily require it and could not be dispenced withall but whosoeuer sinnes must dye the death and therefore Christ being our Redeemer he must endure that death which we must haue suffered else the Law could neuer haue beene satisfied Reas 6 Againe it stands with the Iustice of God which must haue an absolute and perfect satisfaction It cannot be satisfied with any thing in the World but with the Blood of the Sonne of God Acts 20.28 Take heed therefore vnto your selues and to all the Flocke ouer the which the Holy Ghost hath made you Quer-seers to feed the Church of God which he hath purchased with his owne Blood Marke now this stands with the Iustice of God God was offended and he must receiue full satisfaction therefore when Christ came to satisfie he could not satisfie but onely by his Blood Nay I say more Christ could not haue satisfied but that it was by the Blood of the Sonne of God that the infinitenesse of the Person satisfying might be answerable to the infinitenesse of the Person offended and that is the chiefe reason of the Doctrine Reas 7 Then another Reason is the haynousnesse of sinne The reward of sinne is death and where is no shedding of Blood there is no remission and therefore whosoeuer comes as a Mediator of the New Testament to procure for vs the remission of our sinnes his Blood must be shed else our sinnes still remaine vnpardoned And so much for the Reasons The Vses Vse 1 First It teacheth vs what it is that the Eye of our Faith should principally respect and looke vpon Christ and the hand of our Faith principally lay hold on when we doe imbrace Christ namely the Blood of Christ the Crosse of Christ the Obedience and Suffering of Christ c. in a word Christ crucified that is the subiect that our Faith must take hold vpon Christ crucified is the obiect of our knowledge 1 Cor. 2.2 I desire to know nothing but Christ and him crucified And the same is the matter of our reioycing Gal. 6.14 God forbid that I should reioyce but in the Crosse of Christ The Blood of Christ is the ground and verie foundation of our Faith Rom. 3.25 Through Faith in his Blood c. What is it that the Faith of a beleeuing Man doth most properly embrace but the Blood of Christ The Iewes reuile vs because we beleeue in a crucified God and the Gentiles they deride and mocke vs because we trust to be saued in him that could not saue himselfe but sufrered such a cruell death Well howsoeuer it be saith the Apostle that he is to the Iewes a stumbling blocke and to the Grecians foolishnesse yet vnto vs he is the power of God and the wisedome of God He is the verie power of God without which God cannot ordinarily saue a Man And the verie wisedome of God without which God will not ordinarily saue a Man It is a world of heauenly comforts that a spirituall minded Man may gather vnto himselfe in the meditation and the beholding of the death of Christ when we thinke of Christ crucified and of Christ shedding his Blood there you may see First our sinnes punished to the full Secondly there we may see our sinnes pardoned to the full Thirdly there we may see our sinnes crucified and mortified and subdued by his Blood and by the power of the death of Christ soundly applyed to our Soules and Considences our sinnes begin to dye and to be mortified and to be crucified in vs. Fourthly in Christ crucified we may behold the Flesh crucified Gal. 5.24 we may see our wicked humors to be mortified and to be beaten downe and crucified within vs. Againe when as we thinke vpon Christ crucified why there we doe find indeed the verie crucifying of our selues to the World and the World to vs Gal. 6.14 Before we were caried after the things
We left in Math 26.28 This is my Blood of the New Testament that is shed for many for the remission of sinnes which place as I shewed you doth most copiously and plainly proue vnto vs this title that belongs to the Sacrament of the Lords Supper namely that it is called the New Testament for that is the head we did reduce this place vnto Wherein we haue shewed you First concerning the New Testament the Matter and Subiect here spoken of Secondly we haue shewen concerning the Blood of the New Testament whereby this the Testament is confirmed and sealed This is the Blood of the New Testament Thirdly the benefite both of this Testament and of the Blood of Christ Remission of sinnes Lastly the Persons that are partakers of this benefit That is many The whole World of Beleeuers This is the Blood of the New Testament shed for many So much then shall suffice to be spoken of these words as they are considered absolutely in themselues so as they concerne the death of Christ We are now further to consider of them as they are respectiuely intended and applyed to the Sacrament of the Lords Supper for you shall vnderstand that our Sauiour here performed two businesses in one First he sheweth the redemption of the beleeuing World by his sauing Death This is my Blood shed c. This Blood of the New Testament it is the onely procuring cause of remission of sinnes and of the Saluation of you and of all that are or shall be saued and to this effect tends all that hitherto hath beene spoken The second thing our Sauiour performes here in this case is the confirmation or applycation of this his sauing Death to the Disciples and the rest of the beleeuing World in and by the Sacrament of the Lords Supper This is the Blood of the New Testament c. That is to say This Sacrament which I now haue in hand is a speciall and excellent meanes whereby to apply this my sauing Death to you and to euerie beleeuing Receiuer And thus and in this sence we are now to treat vpon it This is the Blood c. As it is spoken respectiuely by applycation to the Sacrament of the Lords Supper Thus we must conceiue of it that it is vttered by our Sauiour by a kind of maiestie and speciall grace of speech This these Elements this Bread and Wine this Sacrament this Action we now haue in hand For indeed it imports an institution of a new Sacrament and of a most excellent Sacrament As if he should say All the Faithfull that euer haue liued from the beginning of the World haue had some Sacrament or other as the Cognisance of their profession as the nourishment of their Faith as outward testifications of the mutuall Couenant betwixt God and them But this saith our Sauiour is the Blood of the New Testament This is a new Sacrament such as none of them euer had this is a more liuely and sensible representation of your reconciliation vnto God then euer the Faithfull before you were made partakers of This is the Blood of the New Testament To make our Sauiour his meaning plaine and perfect to euerie Mans vnderstanding we must supply two Rules that are here implied and presumed vpon The first is this That euerie Couenant betwixt God and Man must be confirmed by some outward signe and Sacrament The second that there must be a due proportion betwixt the Couenant that is confirmed and the Sacrament that doth confirme the Couenant The first Rule euerie Couenant betwixt God and Man must be ratified and confirmed by some Sacrament and outward signe God deales with vs herein in great wisedome and mercie meeting both with our Infidelitie and with our Apostacie our slipperinesse to fall from him with our Infidelitie because we hardly will beleeue him vnlesse he bind himselfe to vs by some outward signe with our slipperinesse to fall from him because we easily start and budge from him except we be bound to him by some outward signe as by a continual remembrancer calling vpon vs to hold fast our hope we haue in him The second Rule There must be a due proportion betwixt the Couenant that is sealed and the Sacrament which ratifies and seales it Old and weake Couenants and well enough if they be sealed with old and weaker Sacraments But saith our Sauiour This is a New Testament and then here must be a new Sacrament An old Couenant an old Sacrament A new Couenant a new Sacrament A new Sacrament and a new Couenant agree But a new Sacrament and an old Couenant are mis-matcht they must be sorted in their kind our Sauiour giues the Rule Marke 2.21 22. which by application may be alleaged in the case No Man puts new wine into an old Vessell c. Old Sacraments doe not agree with the New Testament let them goe with the old This New Testament must haue new Sacraments This Testament saith our Sauiour which I come to make and to seale with my Blood Is the New Testament and therefore here is also anew Sacrament The Testament being better then the former the Sacrament must therefore be better then the former And here it is that he speakes with such a maiestie as if he should say This is such as neuer any of the Faithfull had before my comming in the Flesh And so much for the fitting of this speech of our Sauiours to the Sacrament of the Lords Supper For in the words there is no difference Apply them to the Death of Christ and then the case is plaine This is my Blood c. That is My Blood of the New Testament is effectuall for the forgiuenesse of sins Apply them to the Sacrament and in a Sacramentall sence It is the very Blood of Christ shed for the remission of sinnes We come to such obseruations as here arise for our instruction when it is said This is my Blood speaking of the Sacrament hence obserue that Doct. The Sacrament of the Supper is proper to the state of the New Testament onely This is my Blood of the New Testament Our Sauiour appropriates this Sacrament to this Testament onely 1 Cor. 10.21 It is called there by the name of the Lords Table which very name proues the point in hand the Lords Table that is the Table of the Lord Iesus not onely such a Table as where in Christ was the Food fed vpon for so he was in some sort in the Sacraments of the former Testament but such as wherein the Lord Iesus himselfe was bodily present in his Flesh such as he himselfe with his bodily presence did speed ordaine and institute for a memoriall of those things he had done and suffered alreadie for the worke of our Redemption as a Mediator and therefore may well be called the Table of the New Testament as Luke 22.20 Christ already come Christ bodily present amongst vs this belongs to the New Testament Hebr. 10.7 c. Loe I come In the
serve for all nor to say they will doe it hereafter though they omit it now but as often as they doe the one they must doe the other as often as they doe receive they must thinke upon the Lords death But some will say What are we never to remember Christs death but then when we communicate Yes this is not spoken by negation as if we should never remember him but then but by affirmation that we must specially remember it then above all other times as that Sacrament being instituted and sanctified specially for that purpose next it is said So oft as yee shall eate c. ye shall shew where you see the Holy Ghost presseth it upon every one for his owne particular shewing thereby that it is not enough that the Minister shew forth the Lords death for all them that bee there present but every one is to shew it forth for himselfe Further it is said Shall eate this bread c. you see here hee speakes of the Sacrament and he describes it by the use or the actuall participation of it thereby shewing that the benefit of this Sacrament doth not consist in the seeing or the having of it but in the use and communicating in it And note here further that the Apostle calls it bread even after the words of consecration it is bread still and yet it is the body of Christ in regard of the use it is altered and is the body of Christ but in regard of the nature of the creature it is bread still Consider yet further that he nameth not onely the eating of the bread but the drinking of the cup together with it he saith not Or drinke this cup but And drinke this cup whereby we may see that they who separate the cup from the bread in the use of this Sacrament as the Papists doe they doe wickedly put asunder that which God hath joyned together and this being spoken directly to the people doth extend the words of our Saviour when he said Drinke ye all of this as well to the people as to the Ministers next it is said You shew forth the Lords death that is to say you set it forth after a speciall and eminent manner you shew it forth by your practice for all they that truly receive the Lords Supper doe as it were act the death of Christ as a holy Tragedy upon a holy and spirituall stage the word may either be expounded affirmatively you doe shew forth or imparatively as enjoyning them that they must shew forth both tend to the same effect that this Sacrament is the very shewing forth of the Lords death the word in the originall entends a shewing forth in the highest degree with much seriousnesse and earnestnesse as prescribing a zealous and affectionate setting forth of Christs death in the use of this Sacrament It is said further the Lords death which we must not understand as if it were meant barely of his dying or of his crucifying but his death together with the benefit and fruit of his death and whereas hee calls it here the Lords death it may seeme some contradiction For if Christ suffer death how should he be Lord or if Christ be Lord how should he dye but if wee consider it well we shall finde that it is a sweet medley that the Apostle here makes when hee saith it is the Lords death Christ dyed as being man but Christ even in his death shewed himselfe to bee the Lord that had the power over death And because he that dyed was the Lord thence it comes that his death is beneficiall unto us As it is said Acts 20.28 God hath purchased his Church with his owne blood as his blood being therefore effectuall for the purchasing of the Church because it was the blood of him who being man is God also Lastly it is here said till he come that is to say in bodily presence to judge the world Therefore he is now absent in body even from the Sacrament if he were bodily present at the Sacrament as the Papists say then what need a memoriall of him till his comming Hereby we see also that so long as we are here we need the helpes of Sacraments to strengthen our faith and God hath provided that we shall have them so long as we need them even till the end of the world but when he comes then we shall have no further use of them and therefore then they shall cease all things are for us and for our good so long as we need them we shall have them but the things that are the Sacraments Gods saving ordinances shall utterly cease to bee when wee shall have no further use of them So much for the meaning The third point is the parts of the Text first an action to be performed in the former part of the verse secondly a caution or condition in the latter part First an action to be performed the receiving of the Lords Supper wherein the Apostle offers to our consideration these things First the parts of the action secondly the frequenting of the action the parts eate and drinke things diverse in themselves yet both together making up one and the same action of receiving as in our ordinary suppers wee eate and drinke and each differs from other our eating is not our drinking nor our drinking is not our eating yet in the generall both make but one action the taking of our supper Secondly the frequenting of this action often as this action is to bee performed and done so the doing of it is to be frequented as often c. we must not make an annuall thing of it to be performed once a yeare a prophane thing amongst Christians but there must be an often frequenting of it In the latter part of the verse is a caution or condition that we must performe in receiving wherein principally is to be observed first the caution it selfe shew forth the death of Christ secondly the frequenting of it which is to be borrowed from the first part of the verse as often as you eate shew forth the Lords death c. for this is a particle common to the whole verse and serue each part alike as who should say As often as you eate this bread and drinke this cup so often you shall shew forth the Lords death Lastly here is the continuance of this caution or condition till he come How long is it to continue even so long as the world stands till the Lord come to judgement Whosoever thou art thou must shew forth the Lords death in receiving this Sacrament till his comming that is for the parts of the verse Now we come to the Doctrines For as often as you shall eate of this bread and drinke of this cup you shew forth the Lords death till he come Where you see that this speech of Paul is inferred by way of reason from the words of our Saviour verse 25. Doe this as often as do it in remembrance of
as thou shouldest remember him he that can once speake by experience in his owne heart as the Apostle doth Gal. 1.20 that Christ hath loved mee and gave himselfe for me will empty himselfe also and say as the Apostle did I live and yet not I now but Christ Iesus lives within me his love to us in dying for us stirres up our love to him in dying with him and as the nature of true love is to transanimate or transforme the lover into the thing loved so we are turned as it were into Christ we live not but he lives in us and surely we can never be perswaded to give over our selves thorowly to God service till wee be brought unto it by the thorow meditation and remembrance of Christs death Thirdly therein Christ hath beene most beneficiall to us and wherein is he most worthy of our remembrance but in that whereby we have most benefit by him and that is his blood or his death We have reconciliation by his blood Rom. 3.23 Redemption by his blood Heb. 9.12 and forgivenesse of sinnes by his blood 1 Iohn 1.7 all good things temporall and eternall are purchased to us by the merit of his death and contrary all evill things are thereby turned away Why doe wee remember Christ Not because of any good that he receives from us but because of the good that we receive from him now his death is that whereby we receive greatest good from him yea in some sort all the benefit that ever we enjoy by him his Incarnation Resurrection Ascension are so farre forth beneficiall unto us as they have reference to his Death and therefore except we remember Christ in his death howsoever we remember him otherwise it is no true remembrance of him at all Lastly therein he shewed himselfe most powerfull and victorious over his and our enemies Heb. 2.14 He hath destroyed through death him that had the power over death that is the Devill 2 Col. 14 15. He hath nailed our sinnes upon the Crosse and there hath spoiled principalities and powers how can we remember him better than in state wherein he gave the utter overthrow and deadly stroke to all our enemies he told them that it was then their very houre and power of darknesse and it is true to doe what they could but not what they would for that was but as it were a mocke to them for indeed it was their very houre to be destroyed and his very houre to triumph over them as our Saviour himselfe speaking of his death shewes plainly Iohn 12.31 Now is the judgement of this world now shall the Prince of this world be cast out If there were a Champion that should undertake a combat for us and overcome our enemies wee would not consider so much other circumstances of his person or state but specially his cariage and behaviour in managing our combat and his act of overcomming Christ our Champion hath overcome all our enemies in his death upon the Crosse and therefore that is the fittest object for our hearts to be set upon in the remembrance of Christ The Vses The first use serves for reproofe of those that are so nice and dainty that they cannot endure to meditate on Christs death the matter of his resurrection and ascension and glorification are pleasing unto them but the matter of his death that is harsh and distastfull all of us could be content to goe with Christ to Mount Tabor where he was transfigured that we might see his glory but we are loth to goe with him to mount Calvery where hee was crucified to taste of his sufferings the Iewes bewrayed this humour in the corrupt nature of man when they said Let him come downe from the Crosse and we will beleeve in him If Christ could be separated from his crosse and sufferings and from his death generally all would be forward enough to take hold upon but let us know that except we have our part in Christ crucified we shall never have our part in Christ glorified the crosse of Christ was his way to glorie and our due meditation and participation on his Crosse is the onely way for us to come to the participation of his glory But some will say to thinke upon Christ crucified and slaine and murdered and tormented these be bloody thoughts how should we digest them I answer First it is needfull for us that we should bee possessed with such bloody thoughts that thereby we may bee brought to see and take notice of the uglinesse and fearfulnesse of our sinne but secondly wee doe not dwell in the grosse and carnall meditation of his wounds and blood-shedding as the Papists doe but we are spiritually minded in the meditatiō of his death and therein we behold Gods decree in giving his Son for our redemptiō his wrath against sinne and his mercy to us in the forgivenesse of our sins and this is it that makes our meditations and thoughts of Christs death to be most comfortable and heavenly thoughts Secondly this teacheth us that wee should labour to bee skilfull and well practised in the meditation of Christs death and to have our eye continually upon Christ crucified That which our Saviour said to Thomas Iohn 20.27 Put thy finger here and see my hands and put it forth and put it into my sides though it were spoke there of his materiall wounds yet every one of us must take it spiritually to be spoken to our selves wee must put our fingers our hands into the holes of his sides we must dive deep by our meditatiōs into the secret mysteries of his death that therby we may become his true beleeving Disciples the death of Iesus Christ is of all other things most serviceable and profitable and comfortable to us even in respect of all the parts of Religion Wouldest thou behold the love of God towards thee and know how dearly hee loves thee See it in the death of Christ God hath given his Sonne not onely to become man for us but even to dye for us and to endure the greatest extremities for us that ever could be thought upon here is a cleere glasse wherein we may behold the height and the depth and the length and the bredth of Gods love towards us touching the forgivenesse of our sinnes every one would faine bee perswaded of it but we can never attaine to any sound perswasion thereof till wee search and see thorowly into the death of Christ Gods wrath against sin is infinite and it passeth all our apprehension to conceive how hee being so just and righteous can possibly forgive a sinner till by our thorow acquaintance with the death of Christ we finde therein infinite matter of satisfaction to Gods infinite justice so in our hatred to sinne we can never loath sinne as we should doe but by looking into the death of Christ where we see that it was so loathsome and so odious to God that it did kindle Gods infinite wrath even against
So oft as you eate this bread and drinke this cup you shew the Lords death till he come The precept is they must shew the Lords death and that precept is built upon this their practice their oft receiving of the Sacrament and this is a generall rule that God never builds any precept but upon a good ground foundation the foundation must be his owne as well as the building else he never builds upon it but the Lord builds a precept upon this practice and therefore their practice is good and indeed a matter that God approves of so that you see that the Text makes it cleare that it is a commendable thing and if we should goe further to speake of the last clause of the verse Doe it till he come that also shewes that it is a matter commendable because it must continue to be done to the worlds end Lastly it is a matter of necessity that they must doe it it is an admonition to a necessary duty for the rise of this speech of the Apostle is fetcht from our Saviours owne words in the institution verse 25. now that is spoken by way of command Doe this in remembrance of me Marke it here you see that our Saviour plainly doth deliver this by way of a command unto them Doe this as oft as you doe it in remembrance of me he delivers it I say in the nature of a commandement as also by and by we shall shew more plainly Now if so be that Christ commanded it therefore it must needs be done and it is a matter of necessity the Commandements of God are not arbitrary to us to doe them or not to doe them but every Commandement imports a necessity that therefore it must be done because it is commanded And where it is said You shew forth the Lords death c. that clause shewes that it is not once to be done that will not serve the turne but oft the continuall repetition of it is necessary from time to time even to the worlds end So then this is the thing that here we are co seize upon that the frequent receiving of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper was a common and continuall use Doctr. The observation is this That the Sacrament of the Lords Supper is an ordinary exercise of Christians oft-times to be frequented and usually to be communicated in by the faithful The circumstances of the text well waighed laid together afford this doctrine clearly for the proofe of this doctrine take the cōmandement of Christ and the practice of the Church the Commandement of our Saviour Christ enjoines this frequent use of the administration of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper and of the receiving of it Luke 22 19. Doe this in remembrance of me saith Christ which words of our Saviour Paul in the 25. verse of this Chapter rehearseth thus Doe this as oft as you drinke it in remembrance of me Paul knew well the meaning of our Saviour therefore he sets it downe in these plaine termes So then when our Saviour faith Doe this in remembrance of me these words of his they cary in them the force of a double charge or command First of a thing antecedent or going before that is the receiving of the Sacrament and secondly of a thing consequent that this is to be done in remembrance of me see you remember me alwayes in the performance of this worke the Apostle adding this clause by way of explication Doe this as oft as you doe it in remembrance of me he makes it cleare that surely each of these are to be performed and that oft Doe this that is receive the Sacrament oft remember me that is remember mee oft by this clause Christ shewes his meaning that both of them is to be done oft the Sacrament oft to be received and the death of Christ oft to bee remembred and surely the necessity of the consequent doth inferre the necessity of the antecedent the necessity of the often remembrance of Christ inferres the necessity of the often receiving the Sacrament because the Sacrament is ordained for the memoriall of Christ if we must remember Christ oft and that in the Sacrament then we must receive the Sacrament oft Now those words of our Saviour as they bee applyed in that case to the Disciples though they are in effect the same with these words of my Text yet they are a more cleare and a more exceptionlesse proofe of this doctrine than my text is for some cavill at the words of my Text thinking them not sufficient to prove that the frequent use of the Sacrament is necessary for Christians for the Apostle say they doth but mention it as a thing done or if he doe commend it that is all it proves not the necessity of it the Apostle saith not that they must doe it but speakes of it as a thing already done by them Well put case it be so here but when Christ spake to his Disciples he said to them Doe this as oft as you doe it in remembrance of me now they had never eaten of this bread nor dranke of this cup before and therefore it could not be spoken as of a thing usually done by them therefore our Saviours words cannot be so eluded as they would elude the words of my Text. Now seeing Pauls speech and our Saviours goe together as both containing one and the same thing therfore when Christ saith doe this in remembrance of me and when Paul saith As oft as you doe this you shew the Lords death till he come both these testimonies prove this namely that it is a matter of necessity that the death of Christ is oft to be remembred and that the Sacrament is oft to be received And surely in all ordinary understanding this clause here where the Apostle saith As oft c. must necessarily imply a necessity of eating it oft as if so be this I should say to a Christian friend whensoever you pray pray for me or as oft as you pray pray for me if I should thinke that such a one would pray but once in his life time or but very seldome then I would not say As oft as you pray pray for me but If ever you do pray pray for me So if the Apostle had had an intent to give liberty to them to receive it oft if they would or seldome if they would not then he would have said If ever you receive it then doe it in remembrance of Christ but in faying As oft as you doe this that shewes it is a matter of necessity there is a necessity implyed as well in the oft receiving of the Saerament as well as a necessity of the oft remembring bring of the death of the Lord Iesus Christ The other proofe is the practice of the Church which ratifies and continues this besides the practice of this Church of Corinth Act. 20.7 there Paul and other of the Disciples being at Troas going to Macedonia the text
blood to put it selfe to such examination and tryall to such sifting and ransacking and rippings up and denying of our selves this is tedious but must we refuse to come to the sacrament of the Lords Supper for this tediousnesse No surely the old man must be trodden down under our feet scorned that God may have the honour of his owne ordinance many maysay so for hearing of the Word that it is a tedious thing to heare twice a day so also for prayer it is a tedious thing to pray twice day morning and evening so faith the Devill so saith the old man and the naturall corruption that is within us but must swallow downe all his hardnesse and the old man must be crucified and mortified if ever wee looke to bee saved and to come to heaven we must dispence with and wee must devoure many of those tediousnesses if ever we looke to have any portion in Christ tediousnesse must not fright us from that which God commands but if God command we must obey whatsoever flesh and blood alledge to the contrary Againe another exception is this if we come oft say they we shall degenerate into a kinde of formality and make it a matter of fashion I that comes from the carnality and hypocrisie of thy heart we cannot be conversant in any holy duty but in time we settle upon our lees and grow into a kinde of formality alas if we did consider our selves wee had need to be ript up daily and if we should put our selves daily to this duty we should be freer from this formality than those that use it so seldome Is this it that makes us doe it formally because we doe it oft No surely As in die matter of prayer because wee pray daily doe we therefore pray formally No. For if we doe it conscionably it will make us farre from formality for the frequent use of it brings us into that awe dread and reverence of Gods Majestie that it will make us call our wits together and ransacke every corner of our hearts that so wee may be fitted to come into the presence of God at all times Some other allegations they have but I will not now stand upon them The last Vse is this It teacheth all of us thankfulnesse to God that live here in this Land and in this place where through Gods mercy wee have opportunity and may have accesse to come to this Sacrament at least once a month to feast our selves and to make our selves merry with this spirituall food the body and blood of Christ it is a thing that if we had it not we would give all wee have to enjoy it and therefore having it let us make use of it and reverently esteeme of it and neglect no good opportunity to come to it if we knew the benefit of it wee would desire to receive it not onely once a month but every Sabbath yea every day if it were possible and the reason why we doe frequent it no oftner not thirst after it is because we know not the benefit nor sweetnesse of it Let us not lay any impediment to hinder us from it for none will serve the turne to be justifiable before God but those that God layes upon us I say we having just occasion and opportunity to come to the Lords Table being members of this Congregation without wee can give some good reason to the contrary for it is not enough to say I am not prepared nor I am not in charity these are no sufficient nor just occasions to hinder us were to sin grievously therein against God and against our owne soules The end of the fifteenth Lecture THE SIXTEENTH LECTVRE VPON THE SACRAMENT OF THE LORDS SVPPER WE are now to proceed through Gods assistance because the next Sabbath is a Communion Sabbath in that very business that we have in hand 1. Cor. 11.26 For as often as you shall eat this bread and drink this cup ye shew forth the Lords death till he come You heard even now the division of this Scripture into two parts the former part shewes an action to bee performed the receiving of the Lords Supper the latter part prescribes a caution that this action is to be performed withall You shew forth the Lords death As oft as you eate this bread and drink this cup ye shew forth the Lords death till he come We have finished the former part that which is contained in the former words of the verse namely the action here to be performed We are now to proceed to handle the latter part namely the caution or the condition that this action is to be performed withall Ye shew the Lords death c. Wherein first we are to consider the caution or the condition it selfe that is the shewing forth of the Lords death Secondly we are to consider the frequenting or the often observing of this caution For though it be not said here you often shew forth the Lord death yet that is necessarily implyed for the word often used in the beginning of the verse is common to the latter part of the verse as well as to the former as if the Apostle should say As oft as you eate of this bread and drinke of this cup so oft you shew forth the Lords death Then here is lastly the continuance of it how long this caution or conditiō is to be observed surely so long as the world stands till Christ come to judgment As oft as you eate this bread and drinke this cup you shew the Lords death c. or shew ye the Lords death till he come First to begin w th the caution or cōdition it selfe you shew forth wherein first consider the matter that is to be remembred it is the Lords death Secondly you must consider the manner how it is to bee remembred by a shewing of it forth by a kinde of lively representing and expressing of it ye shew forth the Lords death till he come this is our remembring of Christ his death for Christ saith in the former verse Doe this in remembrance of me and Paul in this verse shewes how that is by shewing forth the Lords death till he come or by a lively expressing of it First therefore to begin with the matter that is to be remembred or shewed forth and that is the Lords death Wherein first when the Apostle here names death wee are to understand hereby these two things first the act of death in respect of Christ himselfe secondly the benefit of Christ his death in respect of us we must remember the Lords death that is the act of his death in respect of himselfe we must remember and shew forth his sufferings in his soule and in his body his agony his obedience his woundings his nayling to the Crosse his shedding of his blood his giving up the ghost Secondly withall we must understand by the death of Christ the benefit thereof arising unto us the forgivenesse of our sinnes the satisfaction
to be Lord. Rom. 1.4 there it is said that Christ was declared mightily to be the Sonne of God He speakes there of our Saviour Christ and calls him the Sonne of God that is to say the Lord. He saith He was declared mightily to be Sonne of God and how I pray you By the spirit of sanctification by the resurrection from the dead Now this you must understand that the power whereby Christ raised himselfe from death was in him whilest he was in the state of death and whilest Christ lay in the grave then was this power in him to raise up himselfe now by this power hee shewed himselfe to be the Sonne of God to bee the Lord and it is a mighty declaration of him to be the Sonne of God and therefore Christ declared himselfe mightily to be the Lord even in the state of his death Luke 23.42 the Thiefe he gives testimony to this truth our Saviour being upon the Crosse he saith O Lord remember mee when thou commest into thy kingdome Those that crucified him did not see nor take notice that hee was the Lord but the poore Thiefe did see him to be the Lord and did know that hee was the Lord and he beleeved in him and called upon him as the Lord wee never reade that ever he did know before that he was the Lord nothing brought him to know Christ to be the Lord but that which he discerned in him upon the Crosse So the Centurion in Matth. 27.44 the Text saith that the Centurion and others that saw those fearfull things that came to passe at the death of Christ Of a truth say they this man was the Sonne of God The Centurion for ought we know did never know nor take notice that this man was the Sonne of God till he came to behold his death but when he came to behold him on the Crosse by the eye of Faith he saw such evident signes of him to be the Lord that hee perswaded himselfe and takes his oath of it and saith Of a truth this man is the Son of God howsoever it is that they killed him yet of a truth this was the Sonne of God In the 51. and 52. verses those fearfull accidents that are mentioned there as the veile renting the Rockes cleaving asunder the graves opening and many of the bodies of the Saints that slept arose what did all this shew but that Christ did clearly manifest himselfe and prove himselfe to bee the Lord even in his death that the dead and insensible creatures were sensible of it the earth the stones and graves discerned it and the bodies of the Saints that were dead discerned it and did acknowledge it in their kinde What a fearfull upbraiding to the Iewes was this that either they did not see Christ to be the Lord or would not see him nor acknowledge him when the very stones and other insensible creatures were sensible of it So then you see the Doctrine is clearly proved by Scripture that Christ Iesus howsoever he was shamefully crucified and put to a most cruell and ignominious death as ever any man could be putunto yet notwithstanding even in that state of his death he was the Lord and shewed himselfe to be the Lord the glorious Lord of heaven and earth The Reasons of the Doctrine are these Reason 1 The first is this Hee was the Lord and shewed himselfe to be the Lord over his Church The first Reason I say is drawne from his Church Christ Iesus in his death was Lord over his Church and so shewed himselfe to be for then indeed by his death he did purchase and redeeme his Church he bought his Church then the faithfull were his owne by actuall redemption You know that those things which a man purchases and buyes at a deare rate and gives for them as much as they are worth they are his owne by a true title If so be that any man do redeem a man out of the gallies he is truly his Lord in the right kind of owning and the other is his servant Christ when he was upon the crosse then did he purchase and buy his Church by his blood and then therein he shewed himselfe in a most right sense to bee the Lord of his Church then were they his owne by actuall redemption and this is that which the Saints did acknowledge Revel 5.9 Oh worthy art thou to take the Booke and to open the seale thereof and why is he worthy more than any other Because thou wast killed and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood and therefore thou hast a true interest into us and thou art surely our Lord and worthy art thou so to bee acknowledged And our Saviour gives some intimation of it in the 18. of Iohn If I were lifted up from the earth saith our Saviour I would draw all men unto me What is meant by lifting up that is to say his crucifying If I were crucified I would draw all men after me The reach of the place is this That Christ by his crucifying and his death drawes all men and gathers all his Church to himselfe he purchases them and makes them his owne by redemption that he may be acknowledged their Lord and they his people and servants and surely as Christ did gather all beleevers from the beginning of the world by the power of his word and death and blessed Spirit so specially in the actuall performance of his suffering then chiefly did he draw all men unto him for then his Lordship after a speciall manner was advanced and the territories of his kingdome were much inlarged and now no longer was it to be bound and to be contained within the borders of Iudea but to have dominion from sea to sea unto the worlds end Oh what a mighty Lord did he shew himselfe to be even in his death Reason 2 Secondly as he was Lord over the Church so he was and so hee shewed himselfe to be even a Lord over his enemies What is the greatest honour of a Lord or whereby doth a man come to be most justly and rightly called Lord but by subduing his enemies under him Psal 110. The Lord said unto my Lord sit at my right hand till I make thine enemies thy footstoole Here is a true and a right Lord when he can subdue and trample his enemies under his feet Christ being upon the crosse in his death then indeed did he especially vanquish and trample his enemies under his feet Satan and all his instruments Then he tooke them downe to their greatest shame to their irrecoverable losse and utter ruine for ever See how the Apostle speakes of it Coloss 2.15 Hee hath spoyled Principalities and Powers and hath made a shew of them openly and hath triumphed over them in the Crosse What bee the enemies that our Saviour Christ hath why they are Principalities and Powers he hath vanquished them all the Devill and his Angells not onely as a man would say petty Devills but
Belzebub himselfe Principalities and Powers and if there be any stronger and mightier and greater than the rest Christ hath subdued them all And how hath hee subdued them He hath spoiled them saith the Text he hath subdued them even as a man should take away all that a man hath so Christ he hath spoyled these Principalities and Powers he hath taken away their weapons their forces and power from them yea and their hearts too in some sort they know they shall never overcome Gods children He hath spoiled Principalities and Powers and made shew of them openly It is speech that is drawn from a Conqueror and hath beene in warre and gotten the victory and comming into the Citie hee brings thofe that hee hath taken captives with him and he rides in great jollity up and downe as who should say these are my captives that I have overcome so hath Christ spoiled Principalities and Powers and made shew of them openly and triumphed over them saith the Text he hath gotten himselfe agreat victory Christ did not onely overcome them but hee triumphed over them that is to say he trode them under foot as a base thing never able to rise up againe But where how and when and by what meanes was all this done Why upon the Crosse saith the Text So then Christ shewed himselfe to be a Lord in his death upon the crosse Consider the state of the businesse as then it was consider Satan and all the powers of darknesse they were then in the greatest hope that could bee as they thought when they had once gotten Christ upon the cross the greatest possibility that ever they had against him On the other side Christ was in the most unlikeliest condition to overcome and to deliver us and most likeliest to have beene overcome and to be made a prey unto them Consider againe in the next place the Devill and his instruments were in the height of their malicious pride and power as Christ saith Now is the very houre and power of darknesse and Christ on the otherside he was in the deepest of his insirmitie forsaken of God in his apprehension forsaken of all the world made a prey to his enemies no way to acquit himselfe or to raise up himselfe his soule being heavie euen to the death consider these things I say they being in this faire hope and upon the top of their pride and Christ in the deepest of his misery now that Christ should free himselfe from them all so that not a bone of him was broken nor a haire off his head did perish and not onely so that he should so acquit himselfe from the Devill but should acquit all Gods children and that this hee should doe to the utter breaking of the power of Satan for all those that have true right and interest into the death of Christ oh what a glorious Lord did Christ shew himselfe to bee when hee was upon the Crosse there he did breake the Serpents head Iudges 16.12 13. when the Philistimes had gotten Samson and had him in their power that they could doe with him what they list and had plucked out his eyes and insulted over him in that miserable desolation now were the Princes of the Philistims in their greatest jollity the servant of God at least for that businesse he was the servant of God what doth he in this case He said unto the servant that led him by the hand Lead mee that I may touch the pillars that the house standeth upon and that I may leane to them and after his prayer he bowed himselfe with all his might saith the Text and the house fell upon them all and so they were slaine and he killed more at his death than in all his life So Christ hee was in the hands of Satan and his instruments and they had him upon the crosse they mocked and scoffed at him and did unto him as they would but then he bowed himselfe upon the Crosse and yeelded up the ghost and brought destruction upon them all and those that he slew at the houre of his death were infinitly more than those whom he overthrew all his life time Reason 3 The third Reason is in respect of death it selfe death we know is the commander of every creature that it hath any power over no creature could ever overcome it Christ overcame death by death therfore he was the Lord no creature that is subject to death can rid himselfe from death but Christ hee by death overcame death and therefore he is the Lord of death Act. 2.24 marke what the Text saith He loosed the sorrowes of death because it was unpossible that he should be holden of death There is no creature in the world that is subject to death that can possibly bee rid of death but Christ being subject to death cannot be held of death and therefore he was Lord even in his death Heb. 2.14 Christ through death hath overcome him that had the power of death that is the Devill Hosea 13.14 O death I will bee thy death 1 Cor. 15.54 Oh death where is thy sting Mark the triumphing of Christ upon the crosse by his death that he suffered upon the crosse hee overcame Death none can overcome Death but the Lord of Life Death and Deaths sting that is sin Death and Deaths master that is the Devill Christ hath overcome them all together upon the crosse and triumphed over them through the power of his humiliation Reason 4 The fourth Reason as it was so that Christ was the Lord and Christ shewed himselfe to be the Lord in his death upon the crosse so we will adde one reason to prove the necessity of it that it must be so namely because of his office he must be the head of the Church hee must be our Mediator and Redeemer and that in his very death therefore he must be the Lord. It is true that there be some things that he was to performe as he was man and belonged to him as he was a Redeemer but yet there were some things belonging to him as Redeemer that could not be performed but as he was the Lord of heaven and earth it was part of our Saviours office as hee was Mediator to reveale the will of the Lord unto us who knowes the will of the Lord but the Lord himselfe It was part of our Saviours office to forgive sinnes who can forgive sinnes but God alone It is a part of his office to redeeme us and deliver us out of the power of damnation except he had beene the Lord he could not have done it who can redeeme us but the Lord to deliver himselfe out of that great extremity that he was in was more than the worke of a man but if hee could have rid himselfe as being a man of extraordinary grace and strength to passe thorough such pikes as never any other man could yet he could not have beene our Redeemer by delivering himselfe to deliver us without he
should wee love the glorious Lord of heaven and earth seeing the Lord of heaven and earth hath so loved us as to dye for us Also it teacheth us patience seeing Christ the Lord hath dyed for us therefore we must not thinke much to suffer temptation and affliction yea death it selfe Christ the Lord hath gone through these before and therefore no doubt but he will bring us through the like with joy and with comfort Christ the Lord hath dyed for us this will breed and worke faith and boldnesse in us we may be bold to hazard our soules upon Christ knowing that our salvation is sure and firme it is the Lord that hath wrought it by his death and it is not all the Devills in hell can disanull that salvation which the Lord hath wrought for us Againe it ministers matter of rejoycing that we doe not onely beleeve in Christ crucified but we rejoyce in Christ crucified Gal. 6.14 God forbid that I should rejoyce but in the crosse unto me and I unto the world this Crosse I oppose against all my feares afflictions and temptations and persecutions against all that ever can come I am crucified to the world and the world to me because the Lord hath dyed for me Lastly this is a matter of excellent comfort to Gods children for hereby we may discerne the infinite worthinesse of the death of Christ and the infinite preciousnesse of his death Why was the death of Christ so precious why because it was the death of Christ the Lord not the death of Christ as he was man but of Christ the Lord of life and glorie When wee consider that so many thousand shall be saved wee thinke with our selves how shall these bee saved why the infinite blood of the Lord is sufficient for us al this death being the Lords death it must needs be of force and power and vertue and merit to procure mercy and grace and forgivenesse of sinnes to all those that have a true faith and doe earnestly endeavour and desire to be conformable to this death of Christ The end of the sixteenth Lecture THE SEVENTEENTH LECTVRE VPON THE SACRAMENT OF THE LORDS SVPPER NOw wee are to proceed as God shall inable us in the handling of the 26. verse of the 11. chapter of the first Epistle to the Corinthians because this afternoones exercise we must spend in the matter of preparation against the next Sabbath for the receiving of the Lords Supper 1 Cor. 11.26 For as often as ye shall eate this bread and drink this cup ye shew forth the Lords death till hee come We divided this Scripture as you may remember into these two parts first an action to bee performed in the former part of the verse namely the receiving of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper set forth here by the name of eating this bread and drinking this cup. Secondly the caution that this action is to bee performed withall that we have in the latter part of the verse ye shew forth the Lords death till he come In this caution in the latter part of the verse we observed the caution it selfe namely to shew forth the Lords death secondly the often using or the often observing of this caution For though that be not here expressed yet it is to be supplyed out of the former part of the verse and is in common understanding to be read thus As often as ye shall eat this bread and drinke this cup so often yee shew forth the Lords death till he come Thirdly and lastly here is the continuance of it how long this is to continue why till the end of the world till the day of Iudgement till the comming of our Lord Iesus Christ ye shew forth the Lords death till he come In the caution first we observed the matter that is to be remembred that is the Lords death then secondly we told you here wee must consider of the manner of the remembring of it how must it be remembred by a shewing forth by a lively and a kinde of sensible expressing of it yee shew forth the Lords death till he come Concerning the matter to bee remembred namely the Lords death there wee shewed you first what is meant by the death of the Lord namely both the act of his death in respect of himselfe and likewise the benefit of his death in respect of us for that also must be remembred in the receiving of the Sacrament Then when as it is said here it is the Lords death I shewed you that howsoever Christ as he was Lord could not dye yet notwithstanding the death that Christ did suffer is rightly called the death of the Lord because Christ being man was also God and Lord yet by reason of the union of both these natures in one and the same person therefore that which is proper to Christ as he is man is rightly affirmed of him as being God and Lord. And thence we drew this observation in that it is here called the Lords death namely that howsoever Christ Iesus was cruelly and shamefully crucified and put to a most cruel and ignominious death upon the Crosse as ever any man could bee put unto yet notwithstanding even in that state of his death he was the Lord and shewed himself to be the glorious Lord of heaven and earth It followes now that we are to goe on Wee have spoken hitherto touching the Lords death as it is considered absolutely in it selfe we are yet further to speake of the Lords death by way of application or by way of reference of it to the Sacrament of the Lords Supper for so you see here the Apostle speakes of it respectively unto this Supper As often as ye shall eate this bread and drinke this cup ye shew forth the Lords death till he come where by it is plaine that looke what the Apostle speakes here concerning the Lords death the same is confined expressety to the reference of the Lords death to the Lords Supper we must alwayes remember the death of the Lord Christ Iesus every one of us that looke to have any part or to have any benefit by it must remember it at all times but yet when as we come to communicate in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper then there is required of us a more speciall meditation thereof than generally at other times Again even in the participation of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper we must meditate upon whole Christ Christ borne Christ living Christ dying Christ buried Christ risen againe for Christ was given wholly for us upon the Crosse and Christ is given wholly unto us in the Lords Supper and therfore there we must receive Christ wholly and meditate upon whole Christ I but yet in this case when wee come to receive the Sacrament then wee must more meditate and our hearts and our mindes must more runne upon the death of Christ than upon any thing else that ever Christ did or suffered for us it is the death
of the Lord that we must take speciall notice of in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper Doctr. The Doctrine then and the observation that here arifeth for our instruction is this namely The principall object the chiefe matter that is to be considered and meditated upon in the participation of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper is the Lords death or the death of the Lord Christ Iesus In the 22. of Luke at the 19. verse our Saviour being instituting and administring the Sacrament of the Lords Supper takes the bread and breaks it and gives it to his Disciples saying This is my body which is given for you doe this in remembrance of me it is not enough for us when we come to the Sacrament to meditate upon Christ his body as being the body of a living man but This is my body which is given for you doe this in remembrance of me we must meditate upon the body of Christ as it is given for us as it was broken for us as it was crucified for us as it was put to death for us and this is the right remembrance of the death of Christ in the sacrament of the Lords Supper and likewise concerning the other part namely the cup and the wine it followes in the twentieth verse This cup is the New Testament or this is my blood in the New Testament which is shed for you this is my blood which is shed for you When we come to receive the Sacrament of the Lords Supper we come to receive the blood of Christ spiritually sacramentally we doe not receive the blood of Christ there as being a living thing within Christ we doe not receive the blood of Christ as it is contained within the vessell and veines of his body but we receive the blood of Christ that is shed for us that he poured out for us for the remission of our sins that is the right object that the hand of the faith of every true beleever doth seize and lay hold upon in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper not the body but the body broken for us the body given for us not the blood but the blood shed and poured out for us not simply Christ but Christ dying for us it is that which is the principall matter of the Sacrament 1 Cor. 10.16 The cup of blessing which we blesse is it not the communion of the blood of Christ the bread which we breake is it not the communion of the body of Christ The Apostle likewise speakes there of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper What is it that the Lord doth communicate unto us in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper on his part the body and blood of Christ that is to say the death of Christ What is it that we doe communicate in that we receive from God on our parts the very same thing that God gives unto us the body and blood of Christ that is to say the death of Christ Why then it is the body and blood of Christ that is communicated unto us which cannot be communicated unto us without it bee broken shed that is it I say which we receive in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper and that is the thing that is chiefly therein to bee respected 1 Cor. 11.29 Hee that eates and drinkes unworthily eates and drinkes his owne damnation All of us are unworthy receivers of this Sacrament who is worthy of such great things as these are we bring with us many failings and imperfections to the Lords table the best of us all let us prepare our selves as well as we can yet for these failings of ours we are to be humbled before the Lord and to strive against them but though we have these failings yet if so be we discerne the Lords body that is to say if our faith doth rightly seize upon the death of Christ in the Sacrament here is the principall matter that is to be looked unto I say if we rightly apprehend the death of Christ in the Sacrament then the principall is whole our failings and our imperfections the Lord will graciously passe by them and he will pardon them in mercy and though we be unworthy in respect of our selves yet the Lord will accept us as worthy in Christ Iesus I but on the other side if we do not discerne the Lords body if when we come to receive the Sacrament of the Lords Supper our hearts and our faith doe not rightly lay hold upon the death of Christ why then wee faile in the very principall of the businesse and though wee should bring other graces with us as knowledge of God sorrow for sin and the like yet all these shall not helpe us but still we are unworthy receivers so we are in our selves and so wee shall bee still reputed of God we shall be so farre from having any benefit that on the contrary it shall turn to our judgement and condemnation because we discerned not the Lords body that is to say because we doe faile in the principall matter that is tendred unto us namely the death of Christ Those places shall suffice for the confirmation of this point out of Scripture now to confirme it further by reason the Reasons of this Doctrine are many Reason 1 The first Reason is drawne from the comparison of the state of the former Testament with the state of the new Testament all the sacrifices of the Law and the Sacraments of the former Testament they did all tend chiefly and pricipally to this end that therein and thereby the beleevers might be led on to enter into a more serious consideration of the death of Christ Iesus for so the Lord intended them and ordained those sacrifices and Sacraments for that purpose and for that very end and there is no question but so the faithfull did make use of them from time to time never any beleever under the state of the former Testament that brought his beasts his Bulls and his Goats to be sacrificed for sin that rested in them as if they were Sacrifices powerfull and effectuall to take away sinne no saith the Apostle in the 10 to the Hebrewes it is impossible that the blood of beasts should take away sinne and that the faithfull knew well enough but yet they submitted themselves to those ordinances because they were Gods laws but still the principall matter that they aymed at in all their sacrifices was the death of Christ the death of the Messias that was to be slaine for the sinnes of the whole world for the perfect purging away of sinne And so in the Sacrament of the Passeover there was never any true beleever that did eate of the paschall Lambe but still he had an eye to the true Lamb of God that was slain from the beginning of the world that as that Paschall Lambe was a memoriall of the deliverance of the children of Israell out of Aegypt and from the hands of Pharaoh so the true Lambe of GOD namely the Sonne of God
remission of sinnes Remission of sinnes is the benefit there is no remission of sinnes but onely by the blood of Iesus Christ as it is in the 1. of Iohn 11.7 It is the blood of Iesus Christ that clenseth us from all our sinnes On the other side in Hebr. 9.22 Where there is no shedding of blood there is no remission of sinnes then consider of it there is no purchasing of remission of sinnes by Christ but by his blood there is no obtaining of remission of sinnes by us but onely by participating or by communicating in the blood or death of Christ Iesus the death of Christ Iesus is not communicated unto us in the Sacrament except we partake of it and seize upon it by faith in the Sacrament therefore the chiefe and principall matter in the Sacrament is the death of Iesus Christ if so be that in the receiving of the Sacrament we come with our harts sprinkled with the blood of Christ Iesus by the Spirit of God why then we are sure to be made partakers of the whole benefit of the Sacrament remission of sinnes but if wee doe not come with the blood of Christ so sprinkled in our hearts by the Spirit of God we doe not seize upon the death of Christ wee have no benefit in the Sacrament if there be not shedding of blood there is no remission of sinnes Christ himselfe could never have redeemed us from death without his blood had beene shed for us and so we can never have any benefit by his redemption without his blood be sprinkled in our hearts and we take fast hold upon the death of Iesus Christ The Vses of the doctrine are these Vse 1 The first is this this yeelds us matter of reproofe of divers that doe come unto the Lords Table and yet are not sensible of the death of the Lord Iesus Christ they come to the Lords table but they know not what they come about Alas as Salomon saith Eccles. 4.17 Such men doe but offer the sacrifice of fooles they doe not know they doe evill they doe but offer the sacrifice of fooles because they doe not know what they doe that is the meaning of the place that they doe not heare or learne they doe not understand they are not well taught what it is that they must principally meditate upon when they come to the Sacrament of the Lords Supper Sily men and women that so come to the Lords Table alas they know not that they doe evill they know not that they prophane the Sacrament in that they doe not receive the holy things of the Sacrament that is the death of Christ they know not that they make themselves guilty of the blood of Christ in that they receive not the body and blood of Christ by faith Christ he is tendred unto them but they know not that they doe eate their owne damnation in that they apprehend not the death of Iesus Christ which is the chiefe matter that is there tendred unto them and that the Lord calls them unto they offer the sacrifice of fooles they know not that they doe evill I will give you a comparison If so be that a man should goe into the market to fetch such and such commodities that he stands in need of he makes himselfe ready and goes forth and makes full accompt to bring them home with him but the foolish man never considers the price of these things what they will cost him and so hee takes no money to pay for them when as the price is the chiefest thing to be respected in that he goes about but he never considers that Is not this a ridiculous man is not that man like to come home as foolish and as emptie as he went out It is so with many of our Communicants many here come to the Lords Table for what forsooth to furnish themselves with such and such commodities for to receive the holy Sacrament the body and blood of Christ for to receive remission of sinnes and grace and comfort and such like these they come to receive I but they do not consider the price of these things what is that the death of Christ for these things cost Christ Iesus his most precious blood they doe not bring faith in their hearts whereby to purchase and get these things for themselves therefore such men goe away as foolish and ridiculous and as empty of grace as ever they were before yea they are so much the more damnable because they come thus unfurnished It is with many of us as it was with the Iewes that the Apostle speakes of in the 2. to the Corinthians chap. 3. vers 14 15. Their mindes are hardned for unto this day remaineth the same covering untaken away in the reading of the old Testament which veile in Christ is put away but even unto this day when Moses is read the veile is laid over their hearts They could see the outward things the sacrifices the ceremonies and the letter of the old Testament as the Apostle speakes I but saith the Apostle they could not looke unto the end they could not looke unto the substance of those things that were tendred unto them in this outward shadow that is to say they could not looke upon Christ that is the substance of all no saith the Apostle there is a veile over their hearts and to this day they continue in their hardnesse so I say it is with many among us wee come here unto the Lords Table we can see these outward things well enough the bread and the wine I but yet many of us doe not looke to the end of these things to the substance that is tendred unto us in these holy mysteries namely to the death of Christ wee doe not discerne the Lords body there is a veile over the hearts of many of us a covering of blindness over the harts of many of us therefore though we doe come often this month and the next month yet still wee continue in the hardnesse of our hearts we are never the better till this veile be taken away as the Apostle speakes of the Iewes till this veile be taken away by Christ till Christ Iesus doe take away this veile of blindnesse and shew them his death and present his death unto them and cause them to looke upon him whom they have pierced till such time that this veile be taken away and that he present his death to their hearts by his Spirit they shall never be the better for it they do continue in their hardnesse and they shall continue in their hardnesse for ever Therefore beloved let us not deceive our selves to thinke that wee are more holy and religious receivers than indeed we are let us try our selves when wee come to the Lords Table examine our selves upon this point what apprehension we have of the death of Christ what portion wee have in the death of Christ and accordingly as thou findest some measure of this grace within thee so
come and so expect a blessing from God but if thou have a veile before thee and thou canst not see and behold the death of Christ that is to say Christ Iesus crucified for the taking away of thy sinnes surely thou art not in case to come to the Table of the Lord. Vse 2 The second Vse of this Doctrine is matter of instruction and it serves to instruct us in many good Christian duties Is it so that the very substance and the chiefest matter of the Lords Supper is the death of Christ Iesus then this should teach us in the first place that wee should hunger and thirst long after this Sacramēt we must hunger thirst after grace we must hunger thirst after righteousnesse the death of Iesus Christ is our grace and our righteousnesse and the same also is the substance of this Sacrament therefore wee must hunger and thirst after this Sacrament Oh beloved that wee could but consider with our selves the worth of the death of Iesus Christ which was as great a matter as the whole world besides or if we could but consider the necessity of the death of Christ that without the sense and feeling of it in our hearts it is impossible that any man can be saved or if we could but consider the power of the death of Christ what a force it hath to beat downe the power of sinne hell and death and if we could consider the sweetnesse of Christ crucified the crucifying of Christ is the very life of a man that is truly regenerate and converted to God if wee could but consider the benefit of Christ Iesus crucified all grace and all glory belongs unto us by the death of Christ lastly if we could but consider the glory of Christ crucified Christ was most glorious upon the Crosse when he was in the height of his obedience and so God beheld him and then indeed did he procure most glory to us as it was his glory so it is our chiefest glory I rejoyce in nothing but in Christ crucified saith the Apostle If wee could soundly taste of these things the worthinesse of Christ crucified the necessity of Christ crucified the power of Christ crucified the sweetnesse of Christ crucified the benefit of Christ crucified the glory of Christ crucified we would hunger againe and againe after the Sacrament of the Lords Supper after the death of Christ therein tendred unto us it should whet us on to a spirituall appetite to this heavenly banquet This teacheth us in the second place what bee the graces that every one of us must be furnished withall when we doe come to the Lords Table What be the speciall graces why all graces that are any way respective to the death of Christ it is the death of Christ that there we come to celebrate now because every grace is in some sort or other respective to the death of Christ therefore every one of us shold come furnished in some measure or other with every grace but yet there be some graces that be more proper and nearer respective to the death of Christ than others are and these we must all be furnished withall when we come to the Sacrament they be so necessary that if we come not with them it is damnable for us to come at all There bee many I will but touch these five Knowledge Faith Love Obedience Thankfulnesse The first grace is knowledge we must bee indued with knowledge the knowledge of God generally and likewise of all other matters that be necessary to salvation but more specially the knowledge of Christ Iesus crucified we must know the story of his crucifying the benefit and power of his crucifying but yet more particularly we must know Christ Iesus crucified in reference to the Lords Supper there is the particular knowledge required of us the presence of Christ in that Sacrament the power of Christ in that Sacrament the benefits of Christ in that Sacrament these bee the things that wee must be well acquainted withall except we know these things wecome in a miserable case I shewed you that the death of Christ must bee meditated upon in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper here is the eye whereby wee doe discerne Christ crucified in these holy mysteries even the knowledge of Christ crucified in reference to the Sacrament of the Lords Supper and therefore as ever thou lookest to have any benefit by the Sacrament of the Lords Supper whosoever thou art see that thou be experienced and well seene and well grounded in the knowledge of Christ crucified be not to seeke of this when thou doest come see that thou have this knowledge before thou commest hee that hath his money to seeke when he should pay for his meat is like to fast so if we have not this knowledge before we come to the Lords Supper if we be not well experienced in this grace we are like to fast we are like to him that hath his weapons to seeke when hee should goe to fight he is like to be beaten Secondly we must bring Faith with us that is the second grace faith to apprehend the death of Christ to apprehend Iesus Christ crucified and this is as it were the hand whereby we doe apply and lay hold upon Iesus Christ for it is but in vaine for us to know Christ crucified except we doe apply him to our selves the eie of knowledge cannot save us without we doe apply him with the hand of faith by faith we doe as it were lay hold upon Christ in the Sacrament and lay his death upon our sores as a plaister to cure them and as a cordiall to our soules to comfort them Thirdly there must be Love in us love to God love to Christ and love to our brethren for Gods cause for the death of Iesus Christ being first wel knowne and understood then secondly well beleeved and applyed by faith worketh in us a kind of sensible feeling of the love of God towards us in Christ Iesus and thereby kindles in us a love to God himselfe and to Christ and then consequently to our brethren if God hath so loved us we must also love him and if Christ have so loved us as to give himselfe for us how ought we to love Christ and to love one another for his sake This is the heart as a man would say whereby we do give entertainment unto Iesus Christ crucified whereby we doe embrace him within us and surely whosoever can come to this that our hearts be seasoned with a love to God and to Christ and to our brethren for his sake out of question the Lord Iesus Christ dwells in us and lives in us and we dwell and live in him The fourth grace is Obedience even obedience to the whole will of God here comes in the whole duty of a Christian as well repentance as new obedience This is a grace specially respective to the death of Iesus Christ Iesus Christ he was perfectly obedient
of Iesus Christ expressing it lively the bread is a sollide substance so is the body of Christ the bread is the food of our bodies the strengthening of our hearts the staffe of our life in the state of nature here is a lively representation to spirituall minded men that the body of Iesus Christ is the spirituall food of our soules the strength of the hidden man of our hearts it is the staffe of the life of God in the state of grace to every true beleever and so likewise the wine shewes forth the blood of Christ the Wine is a liquid substance so is the blood of Christ but principally the sweetnesse of the smell of the wine the pleasantnesse of the taste of the wine the comfortable cheerfulnesse of the wine whereby it doth glad our hearts this is a most lively expressing unto us of the blood of Christ Iesus this shewes unto a spirituall minded man if this wine be so sweet and pleasant and comfortable oh what a sweet savour hath the blood of Iesus Christ oh what a pleasant relish is there in the blood of Iesus Christ oh what comfort and cheerfulnesse is there in the blood of Iesus Christ to every distressed and beleeving soule that can finde and feele these things within himselfe this they doe single each by it selfe now put both these together as both of them are tendred together to us in the Sacrament then here is a full refreshing set forth unto us that there is a full refreshing to every beleeving soule in the death of the Lord Iesus Christ so much for the signes Secondly concerning the actions in the Sacrament both on our Saviours part and likewise on our our part on our Saviours part he tooke the bread and brake it what is that to say but as if our Saviour should say Doe you see mee breake this bread thus thus is my body broken for you so for the cup when hee tooke the bread and brake it he distributed and gave it among them here is a manifest shewing forth of the extension of the death of Christ that the Lord Iesus Christ is the common Saviour of all them that beleeve He tooke the bread saith the Text and hee gave it unto them and so of the cup. Then againe here is an action on our part as our Saviour bid them to take it so wee doe take it wee take the bread we eate it we take the cup wee drinke it what is this but a shewing forth of the death of the Lord except our hands belye our hearts except we be otherwise then we seeme to be when we take the bread and eate it when wee take the wine and drink it we openly professe that wee are of the number of them that take hold on Iesus Christ and doe apply him particularly to the comfort of our owne soules Thirdly the words of institution in the Sacrament the words what are they why first and formost the Text saith He tooke the bread and brake it and bid them to take and eate here you see first he bids us to take it to shew us hee intended that his body is ours and that his death is a sacrifice to God for us whereby our sins are satisfied for and whereby we are reconciled to God then he saith This is my body he speakes demonstratively and he speakes it by way of an essentiall predication he saith this is my body as if our Saviour should say to every spirituall minded man and woman This Sacrament is as lively a representation of my death as if my body and blood were here crucified and shed before your eyes and so likewise it followes this is my body which is given for you and my blood which is shed for you for the remission of sins here is a full shewing forth of the Lords death here is the Gospell preached at the administration of the Sacrament that the blood of Iesus Christ cleanseth us from all our sinnes It followes in the last place Doe this in remembrance of me as if our Saviour should say doe this in remembrance of my death for so the Apostle expounds it hee had repeated our Saviours words in the verse going before Doe this in remembrance of me and he comes and expounds it here Doe this in remembrance of my death as if our Saviour should say consider well and advisedly of this Sacrament for this Sacrament is in it selfe a remembrance and a lively memoriall of my death and so you must esteeme of it and so you must make use of it and so to every beleever it shall be made good for all saving purposes Thus you see the doctrine is proved both by the circumstances the substance and the whole frame of the Sacrament that the Sacrament being administred and received according to Gods own ordinance is a fresh and a lively memoriall a sensible representation a through setting forth of the death of the Lord Iesus Christ the reasons of the doctrine are these Reason 1 The first reason is drawne from the nature of the Sacraments the sacraments are as it were glasses wherein we may see and behold the true forme or the true shape or the true likenesse of that which is represented in the glasse a glasse must be both true and cleere it must be true that it may not cast a false shadow upon us not to reflect another manner of shadow than is cast upon it it must bee cleere that the true object that it doth represent may be cleerly and lively represented unto us the sacrament of the Lords Supper is a glasse it must be a true glasse and a cleere glasse what is the object represented by it the principall object of the Lords supper that is resembled unto us in it is the death of Christ then consider the object that is to be seene and beheld in this glasse is the death of Christ the sacrament is a glasse wherein this is to bee beheld a glasse must be true and cleere and therefore the Sacrament of the Lords Supper must cleerly and plainly and lively shew forth the Lords death which is the principall object there to bee considered Againe Sacraments wee know are teaching signes fignes ordained of God that they may bee teachers unto us and teachers you know must speake plainly they must speake teachably they must deliver the matter with a lively voyce so as it may be best knowne discerned and understood and worke instruction in the hearts of those that it is to be learned by the Sacraments are teaching signes the Sacrament of the Lords Supper is a teaching signe the lesson that the Sacrament of the Lords Supper teacheth is the death of Iesus Christ and therefore the Sacrament of the Lords Supper must teach the death of Iesus Christ lively and cleerly and so must be a through shewing forth of Christs death Reason 2 A second reason is drawne from the proportion of the word with the Sacrament the word that shewes forth Christ lively
and to save us by condemning him Fourthly there is another duty required the words of the institution must necessarily bee rehearsed and this is a matter that gives wonderfull light to the death of the Lord Iesus Christ in the sacrament for when wee heare the minister make rehearsall of the same words of Christ then wee doe esteeme highly of the sacrament as if Christ were personally among us speaking to us with his owne mouth and delivering his body and blood unto us as it were with his owne hands this is a notable meanes to set forth the death of Christ Lastly it is a Christian duty and a needfull duty about the time of the sacrament to shew forth both our thankfulnesse and our cheerfulnesse even by singing of Psalmes It is true indeed there is no Psalme amisse because all were penned by the holy Ghost yet some are more fit and seasonable then others the fittest Psalmes are either teaching Psalmes or psalmes of thanksgiving if wee will have Psalmes of thanksgiving there is specially the 103 Psalme and the 116 full of good meditations to this purpose but if we will have teaching Psalmes teaching us the death of Christ for that is then most seasonable that teacheth us the matter of the death of Christ then take the second Psalme for that teacheth us concerning the death of Christ as it is applyed by the holy Ghost Act. 4.25 and so the 22 Psalm as it is alleaged 27 of Matth. for there are three severall places quoted out of that Psalme singled out applyed expresly unto the death of Christ and therfore they are most seasonable to be used and it is necessary that wee make choice of the most seasonable Psalmes that are fittest for that purpose Vse Another use is matter of reproose of the Popish Church many things in the Popish Church are hereby reproved I will but touch them that they doe directly oppose themselves against this doctrine and the truth and tenure of it directly whereas here the Apostle saith as often as you eate this bread and drinke this cup ye shew forth the Lords death till he come the Popish Church doth flatly crosse this rule divers waies First in their halfe Communions they have the bread but not the cup is this to shew forth the Lords death no it is but to shew forth halfe the Lords death this is horrible wrong to the people and disgrace to the Sacrament and dishonour to God hath God given us a great light to see Christ by and shall men scantle it to halfe a light hath God given us both the bread and the wine to discerne the Lords body and blood by and to shew forth the Lords death by and shall we have the body and not the blood shall wee have but one halfe and bee deprived of the other Againe many times in the Popish Church they have their Masses as they call them without any preaching at all many times and usually it is so with them I cannot say that by this they overthrow that very masse of theirs from being a Sacrament I will not stand upon it but yet I say that practice of theirs is a wicked and a gracelesse practice directly against this doctrine of God you shew forth the Lords death how should it bee shewed forth but by preaching and teaching but they have little or no preaching or teaching amongst them but chiefly the words of institution they are to bee rehearsed oh but say they wee have these words of institution rehearsed and therefore you cannot but say that we have teaching I answer though they have the words of institution yet the Priest mumbles them to himselfe and the people heare him not Secondly if they doe heare him it is in an unknowne tongue they understand him not Thirdly when hee rehearses them hee turnes his face from the people as of purpose to suppresse the right shewing forth of the Lords death and therefore this practice of theirs shewes that they wold not have the people discerne the Lords death in this Sacrament These are fearfull abominations and this lyes heavy upon those people of God that live under Antichrist and therefore wee should with great thankfulnesse injoy and use these blessings that God hath bestowed upon us in the cleere exhibition of the death of Iesus Christ in the Lords Supper I but say the Papists we shew forth the Lords death more then you for wee lift up the Host is this to shew forth the Lords death no this is to shew forth their owne Idoll their owne breaden-God that themselves have made The end of the eighteenth Lecture THE NINETEENTH LECTVRE VPON THE SACRAMENT OF THE LORDS SVPPER NOw we are to proceed as the occasion requires for our preparation to the Sacrament the next sabbath in the handling of that Scripture which wee have made choise of out of the 1 Cor. 11. and the 26. vers For as often as ye shall eate this bread and drinke this cup yee shew forth the Lords death till he come We have shewed you the two generall parts of this Scripture an action to bee performed in the former part the receiving of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper and a caution that this action is to bee performed withall in the latter part of the verse the remembrance or the shewing forth of the Lords death til he come we have handled the first part of the verse wholy we have entred into the second part where we shewed that there is first to bee considered the caution it selfe the shewing forth of the Lords death Secondly the frequenting of this action or the often using of this caution to bee supplyed out of the former part of the verse as often as yee eate of this bread and drinke of this cup for that particle often serves indifferently for the whole verse as well for the former as the latter part as if the Apostle should say as often as yee eate this bread and drinke this cup so often ye shew forth the Lords death till he come Thirdly we shewed you here the continuance of the observation of this caution how long it must be kept why till Christ Iesus come to judgement to the end of the world The caution it selfe the shewing forth of the Lords death of that I have spoken already now therefore wee are God willing as the Lord shall inable us to speake of the second thing namely the frequenting or the often using of this caution the often shewing forth or remembring of the Lords death as often as ye eate this bread and drinke this cup so often ye shew forth the Lords death till he come which words we must not so understand as if so bee that the remembrance or the shewing forth of the Lords death were precisely confined and limited to the use of the sacrament of the Lords supper as if the Apostle should say that then onely the death of Christ is to bee remembred when the Sacrament is to bee received and
at any time forget us this should and must perswade us to make the death of Iesus Christ our continuall remembrance Reason 2 Secondly God alwayes remembers the death of Christ it is our duty and it is our grace and our happinesse to doe as God doth therefore seeing that God remembers Christs death alwayes oh how ought we to remember Christs death alwayes too It is true God cannot bee said properly to remember any thing because remembrance is of things past nothing is past in respect of God all things are still present before him neither can he be said properly to remember one thing more then another because hee cannot forget any thing But yet to speake according to the manner of man God may be said and God is said to remember things done yea some things more then others because he testifies and shewes by his outward proceedings more respect unto some things then unto other thus may God be said to remember the death of Christ and that more and above all things else because he shewes in his outward proceedings more respect to the death of CHRIST then to any thing else Whatsoever God doth in the administration of the world he doth it respectively to the death of Christ let it be to the preservation and salvation of the faithfull It is respectively to the death of Christ because they have their parts in him and he in them Let it bee to the destruction of the wicked it is respectively to the death of Christ they have no part in Christ whatsoever dangers thou escapest thou escapest them by the power of the death of Iesus Christ whatsoever benefits thou receivest it is by vertue of the death of Christ whatsoever grace God giveth thee he giveth it thee only in the remēbrance of the death of Christ whatsoever sinne God forgiveth thee he forgiveth it thee meerly in the shedding of Christs blood Is the death of Christ so precious that it is worthy alwayes to bee remembred by the Lord himselfe how much more then is it to be remembred by us Reason 3 A third reason we have continuall need and continuall use of the death of Christ and therefore wee must have it alwayes in continuall remembrance we must alwayes have it in a readinesse about us we have continuall need and use of the death of Christ great need as much as our bodies and our lives yea as much as our soules are worth our faith that requires daily to be strengthened why our faith that is stablished in the blood and death of Christ so the Scripture speaketh Through faith in his blood as the blood of Christ or the death of Christ being the very chiefe foundation that the faith of Gods children is rooted in and setled and stablished upon wee must pray continually every body knowes that it is the expresse commandement of the Apostle Pray continually we can never put up any the least pleasing petition to God but the eye of our faith must be fixed upon the death of Christ and therefore we must alwayes remember it wee are tempted daily to sinne no sound resistance of any temptation but in the death of Iesus Christ Rev. 12.10 11. If we ever overcome the accuser it must be by the blood of the Lambe sin must be mortified the death of Christ is the onely sword to mortifie and to slay sinne within us And last of all we sin dayly and therefore we have need of the forgivenesse of our sinnes and reconciliation and peace to be made with God continually no hope of forgivenesse of sinnes and of reconciliation but onely and meerly by the blood of Iesus Christ now ordinary wisedome and reason teacheth us looke what we know wee have continuall use of wheresoever wee goe wee will bee sure to carry that about us be it money or strong waters or the like wee will alwayes have it about us wee have continuall use and great need of the death of Christ even as much as the price of our life and soule is worth therefore let us alwaies have that in our hearts alwaies in a readinesse about us because we have continuall use of it Reason 4 A fourth reason is this the death of Christ Iesus doth alwaies labor for us and worke for us as a man would say and travels for us and that not in any small employment but in the best and the greatest worke that concernes our best good namely in satisfying our debts and in making our peace with God Heb. 12.24 the Apostle saith there that the blood of Christ Iesus that speakes better things then that of Abel the intendment of that Scripture is this wee sinne daily against God the sinnes that we doe commit doe cry out daily to heaven for vengeance to be poured upon us even as the blood of Abel did cry for vengeance to bee poured upon Cain but the blood of Christ Iesus that steps in for us and that speakes better things than the blood of Abel and calls to God for mercy and for forgivenesse and so prevailes against the cry of our sinnes and procures mercy and forgivenesse at the hands of God Heb. 10.19 20 vers there the Apostle calls the blood of Christ the new and the fresh and the living Way Well what is the meaning of it the meaning is this that whereas wee doe sinne and offend God daily the blood of Christ Iesus that daily makes our peace the death of Christ that is as it were day by day fresh and bleeding anew in the sight of God and so makes our peace with God It is true indeed when Christ offered himselfe upon the Crosse that then his blood was actually shed and never else yet it is as true that the blood of Christ bleedeth anew effectually in the sight of God when any sinne is forgiven any soule The death of Christ thus working and travelling for us shal not we remember it continuallie We must never forget those that worke and labour for us and for our good and shall wee not alwaies remember CHRIST IESVS especially in his death whereby hee doth effect our greatest good Reason 5 The last reason is this the thoughts of the death of Christ Iesus are most sutable and agreeable unto us in this present estate that we are in and therefore wee ought to remember it alwaies so long as we are in this estate the thoughts of his resurrection they are alwaies comprehended within the thoughts of his death and the thoughts of Christ his glory that being a matter which we can see here onely a farre off are not so fit for us in this abasement and humiliation and corrupt estate we are now in continually to feed upon but the thoughts of the death of Iesus Christ are most fitting for this present estate In this estate we are daily to bee cast downe before the Lord nothing will humble us so throughly as the thoughts of the death of Iesus Christ still wee must have sinne to be crucified
mortified and killed within us In this state of humiliation that we are in there is nothing so powerfull and effectuall to kill sinne as the death of Iesus Christ in this state we must be fitted still and prepared to the glory that shall be revealed the thoughts of the death of Iesus Christ continually meditated upon are an excellent preparation for us to glory for if we remember the death of Christ affectionately as we ought wee suffer with him and therefore we shall be sure to raigne with him wee are dead with him and therefore also shall live with him these thoughts being so sutable and agreeable to our present estate therefore the remembrance of Christs death must alwaies bee present with us The uses of the doctrine are these Vse 1 the first use is this here is matter of reproofe this serves then to reprove two sorts of people First it serves to reprove the prophane and carnall gracelesse wretches of the world that will never enter into any serious thoughts of the death of the Lord Iesus Christ if so be that to blaspheme Christs death to blaspheme Christs blood to make mentiō of it in their fearfull oathes damnable protestations if that be to remember Christs death they remember it often enough oftner then they are able to justifie but as for any holy religious reverent devout and saving remembrance of Christs death that they never enter into no they seek all the means they can take all the courses that ever they can to turne such thoughts out of their hearts such thoughts are too sad and too sorrowfull for them they cannot endure them take a man that lies wholy in his sinne hee had as lieve thinke upon hell as upon the death of Iesus Christ soundly and seriously as he ought to doe but let such gracelesse wretches know that for this they shall never bee had in remembrance before the Lord for any mercy because they doe not remember the death of Christ wherein alone mercy is tendered to mankind Secondly it serves to reprove some of our nice and sluggish professors that content themselves now and then with the thoughts of the death of Iesus Christ happily when they come to the Lords Table happily when any affliction or cross or extremity comes upon them when they have any pang or torment of conscience comes unto them for their sinnes then happily they will entertaine the remembrance and the thoughts of Christs death but they cannot endure to make it their continuall taske which is the duty here prest upon us these men must know that God doth not love to be served by spirts and fits whatsoever we doe in the service of God let us doe it soundly and constantly God cannot endure such service as theirs is God requires intire obedience that we should obey him in all our courses and that at all times especially when just occasion of any duty is offered unto us Now then seeing just occasion is daily offered that wee should alwaies bee meditating and our hearts running upon the death of Iesus Christ therefore God requires it at our hands that wee should alwaies remember it this fire should never go out of our hearts it must glow and burne within us night and day It is fit that Gods children should have some set time when they should enter into a serious meditation of the death of Christ and yet not to thinke our selves acquitted if we doe it onely then but that that should prepare us to remember it ever after as we shewed before in our bodily repast A second use of this doctrine is this Vse 2 here is matter of tryall for us whereby wee may know our selves whether we be in the right way or no whether we doe truly professe the faith of Christ as we ought to doe all of us professe Christs religion wee know wee can have no part in Christ except we have part in the death of Christ and we know we can have no part in his death except it be remembred of us and applyed unto us in our continuall meditation therefore let us conclude this that so many of us as professe religion if wee doe not apply the death of Christ to our selves from time to time by due meditation whatsoever wee professe surely wee professe in vaine and this will be a witnesse against us that we are not the true children of God if so be that you would learne how you might come to know whether you have the right remembrance of the death of Iesus Christ within you learne it by these two or three markes see it in the morning when you awake doe you finde your hearts seasoned with good thoughts of the death of Iesus Christ with thoughts concerning forgivenesse and mortification and reconciliation to GOD and likewise if you have these thoughts or the like at night when you goe to bed this is a certaine evidence that your soules are seasoned with the death of Iesus Christ againe when we are in the duties of our calling all the day long we must still have our hearts lifted up and setled upon the death of Christ and our thoughts must be running upon our justification and our sanctification and our conformity to the death of Christ yea in our very mirth we must still preferre Ierusalem when we are in our greatest mirth in our honest recreations for those that are unhonest there is no hope of any spirituall comfort in them but in our honest recreations doe we prefere the death Iesus Christ before all those things that wee for a while doe solace our selves withall especially in the use of the meanes of salvation in the hearing of the Word the receiving of the Sacrament When we come to heare the Word do we finde in our selves a desire to be drawn on to see Christ crucified before our eyes When wee come to the receiving of the Sacrament is it our chiefe practice to remember Christ crucified affectionately and to have our hearts throughly seasoned with the power of his death these bee undoubted signes and assurances unto us that wee have our part in the death of Christ Vse 3 A third use is matter of exhortation for us Ministers teaching us that we should still labour to sprinkle all our speeches private and publike with some matter concerning the death of Christ with some matter concerning Christ crucified it was almost the whole doctrine of the Apostle still to preach Christ crucified but the use doth concerne all both Ministers and people therefore this should stirre up every one of us both Ministers and people that we should labour to make the thoughts and the remembrance of the death of Christ to be ordinary with us to bee familiar with us still make that as familiar with us as ever possibly we can in all our courses let us remember the death of Christ if wee remember that soundly then it shall goe well with us whatsoever befals us that we may bee the
better inabled and the more quickned to the performance of this duty First I will give you a taste of the meanes whereby wee may attaine to make the death of Christ so familiar to us and then I will shew the benefits that we shall receive hereby if we conscionably travell in this course The means of it are these in few words If we would have the death of Christ familiar unto us we must be sure that we doe never passe it over with a sleight meditation but let it be soundly taken to heart doe not thinke upon it as an ordinary common thing but conceive of it as a matter that doth concerne us and our good most of all let us thinke upon the death of Christ in that which he suffered and endured in his soule and body for our sinnes how hard it went with him in the Garden when hee sweat water and blood when his soule was heavy even unto death and how much more harder it went with him when hee was upon the Crosse when he said My God my God why hast thou forsaken me That he that was in singular favour with God should be made the very marke of Gods wrath to light upon that he who was the worlds Redeemer should bee exposed to the obloquy and reproch of the whole world that he who was the Lord of heaven and earth should be now in the hands of the powers of darknesse wee should yearne in our very bowels and be much troubled in our inmost affections at the thoughts of these things Secondly we must be frequent in the use of the meanes in the hearing of the Word in the receiving of the Sacrament and prayer for by this meanes wee shall make this death of Christ our owne there God tenders unto us the death of Christ let us come thither with hearts desirous ready and willing to receive it and there we shall be sure to have it Let it be our reach in all these duties to have an eye upon the death of Iesus Christ seeking to have that soundly fixed and fastened upon us whatsoever we faile in else still let that above all other sticke most close to us Then againe wee must labour to worke the remembrance of Christs death into our affections this is the right memory of heavenly things when the heart affects them the heart will surely remember that which it doth much affect When I see any thing that causeth deepe affection within me either much sorrow or much joy or the like I will remember that soundly then let us labour to worke the remembrance of the death of Christ into our affections let it still worke love in us because Christ loved us to die for us and let it worke hatred in us against sinne because it was sinne that brought him to his death and let it worke sorrow in us that he should bee so cruelly murthered and put to death for us And let it worke rejoycing in us that wee for our parts by his death are saved and by his stripes are healed Let the death of Christ worke these affections in us and then it shall be our owne never to forget it Lastly let us put our selves to the power and the rule and the directions of it let us suffer our selves to be swayed by the death of Iesus Christ in all our courses let it beare rule with us the counsell that our Saviour gives in the like case Iohn 7.17 If any doe my will the same shall know my doctrine any Christian that labours to be well acquainted with any duty the best way to bee acquainted with it is to labour for the obedience to that duty so if wee would remember Christ his death then let us labour to submit our selves to the power and obedience of it Whatsoever we doe let us examine it whether it be agreeable to the death of Christ if it be not then to say with our selves wee will not doe it though we may gaine all the world by it these are the meanes whereby wee may attaine to the habit of this grace namely to the continuall remembring of the death of Christ Iesus a saving remembrance The other point is the benefits that hereby will arise unto us If wee remember continually the death of Christ in our hearts we shall have many and great blessings The first blessing is this By this means we shall have a Book alwayes ready in our bosome alwaies a book about us to teach us every Christian duty for the death of Iesus Christ is such a Booke that will instruct us in every duty that belongs unto us To give you an instance in two or three Would you learne humility and meeknesse looke into the death of Christ Philip 2.5 6. that shall be sufficient to teach you humility and meeknesse and obedience Would you learne patience the death of Christ is a book to teach you patience Heb. 12.1 2 3. Looke to the author and finisher of your faith who for the joy that was set before him endured the Crosse and despised the shame c. consider him therefore that yee faint not Would you learne love to the brethren Christ his death teacheth you this duty in the highest degree 1 Iohn 3.16 If Christ so loved us that he laid downe his life for us then how ought wee also to lay downe our lives for the brethren Lastly to deny our selves is a speciall lesson that all Christians are to learne this is effectually taught us by the death of Christ 1 Pet. 4.1 2. Christ hath suffered in the flesh that we should not live to our selves but to him and this is a lively teacher if the death of Iesus Christ be soundly layd up in thy heart it will both teach thee the duties to bee performed and also inable thee to performe them A second benefit is this thou shalt have wonderfull peace and unspeakable comfort from God by this meanes Our sinnes they accuse us our consciences they accuse us the devill hee accuseth us daily before the Lord O but if thou have a remembrance of the death of Christ in thy heart there is a Supersedeas for them all that pacifies and appeaseth them all and that is a generall release and acquittance from all that ever they can charge thee withall Thirdly we shall have much spirituall growth and increase by the word and the Sacrament and much spirituall growth if once our hearts be seasoned with the death of Christ What doth the word and the sacrament teach but the death of Christ that is the substance of them all Then if once the death of Christ be grafted in thy heart before Oh with what comfort and chearfulnesse and with what great profit shalt thou heare the word and receive the sacrament When our stomacke hath some liking to our meate and our meate hath some affinitie to our stomacke then there is a quicke digesture Why so if so bee our hearts be seasoned with the death of Christ why then
to us let none of these nor all these hinder us from being set upon this duty but let us breake through them all in an holy zeale and set our selves soundly to meditate upon the death of Christ in hope of these heavenly blessings that the meditation of this duty will bring us unto therefore still remember the death of Christ and as ever thou desirest to have a living teacher within thee remember the death of Christ as ever thou lookest to have comfort from God so look that thou remember the death of Christ as ever thou lookest to have spirituall growth and encrease by the Word and Sacraments still looke to the death of Christ as ever thou lookest to have a strong bridle to restraine thee from sinne so still let the death of Christ bee thy continuall meditation as ever thou desirest to come before God cheerfully and with comfort in prayer remember the death of Christ as ever thou desirest to be fitted and prepared to dye remember the death of Iesus Christ as ever thou desirest and lovest any one or all these blessings together remember the death of Christ and that continually let it never goe out of thy minde The end of the nineteenth Lecture THE TVVENTIETH LECTVRE VPON THE SACRAMENT OF THE LORDS SVPPER WEE purposing God willing the next Sabbath to be partakers of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper we are therefore according to our ordinary course to make preparation thereunto by this Sabbaths evening Exercise that so we may come with better grace in our hearts to that heavenly Table 1 Cor. 11.26 For as often as yee shall eate this bread and drink this cup ye shew forth the Lords death till he come Which Scripture containes as you have heard these two parts an action to bee performed in the former part of the verse the receiving of the Sacrament as often as ye eate this bread and drinke this cup. Secondly a caution that this action is to be performed withall in the last part of the verse the remembrance or the shewing forth of the Lords death till he come We have fully finished the former part and through Gods mercy we have proceeded in the handling of the latter part to the last clause of all till he come ye shew forth the Lords death till he come I shewed you that this latter part of the verse containes the caution that the receiving of the Sacrament is to be performed withall it ministers unto us these things to be considered of First the caution it selfe namely the shewing forth of the LORDS death wherein wee shewed you what it was that was to be remembred the death of the Lord Iesus Christ and also the manner of the remembrance of it by a shewing forth or by a setting forth by a lively or a sensible expressing of it Secondly it doth commend unto us the frequenting of this caution that the death of the Lord Iesus Christ must be often remēbred for though that particle often bee onely named in the former part of the verse yet by all common understanding it is also to be understood in the latter part of the verse As often as ye doe receive the Sacrament so often yee remember the Lords death Thirdly and lastly here is the continuance of this caution the continuance of this duty take it so how long is it to continue why till he come so long as the world standeth till Iesus Christ shall come to judgement So then here we are now come to the last clause of all containing the continuance of this duty let this be done til he come till Christ come to judgement in which clause there be two things offered to our consideration the first is the continuance of this duty it selfe and that is directly and expresly affirmed ye shew forth the Lords death till he come That this duty must be continually and must never cease to continue in the Church so long as the world stands The second thing is covertly implyed yet plaine enough too if the words be well weighed and considered and that is the end or the reach that wee must ayme at in the performance of this duty namely the fitting and the preparing of us to the comming of the Lord Iesus Christ unto judgment for so the very same particle till is used in the very same sense In the 1 Cor. 15.25 where it is said that Christ must raigne till hee have put all his enemies under his feet till he have put all his enemies the meaning of it is this First that Christs reigning shall be continuall till the very end of the world Secondly and the end of Christs reigning is this the utter destruction of his enemies and the trampling of them under his feet so it is in this case Doe this duty till he come that is to say this duty must be continued till Christ come to judgement and the end and the reach that we must ayme at in the performance of this duty is that we be fitted and prepared for his comming We cannot understand this clause clearly and fully except we take it with these two explications the first is this that howsoever this duty is imposed by name upon the Corinthians onely yee shew the Lords death till he come yet notwithstanding it is proportionably implied to all the faithfull by succession from time to time to the end of the world for the Apostle knew very well that the Corinthians in themselves in their owne persons should not live till Christ should come to judgement and therefore it was impossible that they should keepe this commandement till he come but the Apostle imposeth upon the Corinthians this duty for their time that they must observe it so long as they live and likewise imposeth the same duty upon the succeeding Churches from age to age to the worlds end that they must observe this duty so too so that is the first explication the second explication is this that howsoever this clause be here expresly referred onely to the latter part of the verse to the caution to the remembrance of Christs death Ye remember Christs death till he come yet it is implyed and intended to belong also unto the former part of the verse to the action it selfe the receiving of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper For as that particle of frequenting the word often is used onely in the former part yet it extends it selfe in sense to the latter so this clause of continuing till hee come though it bee named onely in the latter part yet in sense it doth extend it selfe to the former part of the verse so that both the remembrance of the Lords death and also the observation of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper both these are to bee continued till Iesus Christ shall come to judgement for so the Apostle here expounding pounding our Saviours meaning in the words going before when he saith Doe this in remembrance of me he addes this rule of continuance doe
it till he come now each of these were joyned together by our Saviour Christ namely the remembrance of the Lords death and likewise the receiving of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper therefore each of these must also be implyed together by the Apostle Concerning the continuall remembrance of the death of Christ wee have spoken the last day where we handled the frequenting of it now therefore wee come to speake concerning the continuance of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper to the end of the world which is the first point that which is directly and expresly affirmed Doct. The doctrine that hence ariseth for our instruction is this namely that the Sacrament of the Lords Supper is a perpetuall ordinance of the Lord Iesus Christ to bee duely and continually observed by all the faithfull from time to time to the end of the world this place you see affirmes it plainly Doe it till he come and I doe not know any one Scripture besides that doth expresly and particularly confirme this point unto us not particularly I say concerning this Sacrament but yet there be many Scriptures that may be alleadged that doe prove this doctrine by necessary consequence and that very cleerly and very sufficiently in Luke 19.13 there is a parable A Noble man went into a farre Country to receive a Kingdome for himselse and so to come again he calleth his ten servants giveth them ten pieces of mony saying Trade you till I come The Nobleman that there is spoken of in the parable is our Saviour Christ he went into a far country to receive a Kingdome for himselfe in heaven and so to come again at the day of judgment By the servants there we are to understand chiefly Gods Ministers as they being particularly employed about the holy things of God the Word and the Sacraments and such like wherby the Lord is especially served worshipped By the pieces of mony that there are given unto thē we are to understand all such gifts which the Lord Iesus doth bestow upon his Ministers for the preaching of the Word and the administration of the Sacraments and for the discharge of the whole worke of their Ministery these gifts these indowments of theirs must all these servants employ trade thriftily till Christ come that is to say till Christ doe come to judgement That it is meant of the day of judgment appears plainly out of v. 15. because it is said when he did come againe and called his servants to account now the day of accompt is the day of judgement Then you see here the gifts of their ministery the direction of their ministery the exercise of their Ministery they must continue untill Christs coming to judgment their labors and their endeavours in their ministery they must cōtinue til Christ come to judgement Trade all these things till I come therfore the holy things of God the word and the Sacraments which they do thus trade and labor endeavor in they also must be perpetual ordinances to be continued til Iesus Christ shal come to judgment 1 Tim. 6.13 14. I charge thee before God saith Paul to Timothy that quickens all things and before Iesus Christ who under Pilate witnessed a good confession that thou keepe this Commandement without spot and unrebukable untill the appearing of the Lord Iesus Christ The Commandement that there the Apostle speakes of is and doth extend it selfe to the whole charge that Paul had given unto Timothy in and for the worke of his ministery all his gifts and directions and exercises of his ministery all this whole command that Paul gave unto him must be kept without spot and unrebukable duly and religiously it must be observed by Timothy till the appearing of our Lord Iesus Christ But you will say Timothy could observe it no longer than his owne time and hee was not to live till Christ was to appeare in judgement how could hee observe it till then I but the Apostle sets forth the nature and the condition of these saving ordinances the Word and the Sacraments and the worke of the ministery namely that they be perpetuall ordinances to be observed duly and conscionably without spot and unrebukable so long as the world standeth til the appearing of the Lord Iesus Christ and therfore Timothy he for his time his part must look that he do cōscionably observe thē so long as he liveth I he must take order do the best that in him lyeth that the succeeding Churches from age to age shall embrace these saving ordināces until the very appearing of the Lord Iesus Christ To prove the point yet more specially for that is only more generall to prove it more specially Matth. 28.19 20. Goe saith our Saviour to his Disciples teach all Nations baptizing them in the name of the Father of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you and I will be with you alwayes to the end of the world Here is a command and here is a promise a command that they on their parts should teach them to observe all that Christ commanded them a promise on his part that he will be with them and assist them in the worke of their ministery to the end of the world the command is that they should teach and baptize and administer the Sacrament for though but one Sacrament bee there named yet the other must bee proportionably understood that they were to administer the Sacraments both of Baptisme and also of the Lords Supper accordingly as Churches should bee planted for ever and that which followes in the twentieth verse takes hold very directly upon the Sacrament of the Lords Supper teaching them to observe whatsoever I have commanded you now you know that our Saviour commanded the Apostles in the administration of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper Doe this in remembrance of me therefore they were to teach them to observe this Sacrament of the Lords Supper and the people they were to observe and to follow it But how long must that continue looke into the promise and that will tell you it must continue alwayes to the end of the world Christ promiseth his assistance and his blessing in these labours and endeavours of theirs in their preaching and administring of the Sacraments and in all these actions to continue alwayes saith the Text to the end of the world therefore the Word and the Sacraments the preaching of the Word and the administration of the Sacraments shall continue alwayes to the end of the world Where this blessing is promised that it shall continue to the end of the world this endeavour of theirs must also continue to the end of the world too so then you see the sacrament and the administration of it is a perpetuall ordinance you see it so in speciall one place yet more in particular and so I end Luke 22.19 that which is the ground of this text our Saviour in
Sacrament of the Lords Supper for seeing that it is thus set upright by Iesus Christ such a compleat ordinance of God wanting nothing therefore it is a grievous sinne for any that shall lay hands upon it to alter it or to adde any thing to it The Popish Church is guiltie highly of this sinne and of the wrath of God for it how many ceremonies have they defiled it withal as by the crosse namely which as it is in use in the popish Church is as abominable an Idoll as ever was erected amongst them It is in some use amongst us after the Sacrament of Baptisme but to us there is no Idolatry in it at all and howsoever it be free and farre from all Idolatry amongst us yet surely if it had crept within the Sacrament of Baptisme as it did creepe within the Sacrament of the Lords Supper I make no question but our State being religious and wise would have utterly cast it out from the one Sacrament aswell as from the other But I say they staine this Sacrament by admitting of the Crosse into the Lords Supper but that is not the worst they goe further they maime this blessed Sacrament they make this Communion but halfe a Communion they deprive the people of the cup let them have the bread and much good may it doe them but they shall have no wine but our Saviour saith Eate this bread and drinke this cup he gave them bread and wine to eate and to drinke and thus did he leave this ordinance to be observed by them now if the Papists shall come and deprive the people of one halfe of this Communion the servant sheweth himselfe to bee envious where the Lord hath shewed himselfe bountifull the Lord hath given them both kinds and the Papists give them but one Nay what will you say if they overthrow this Sacrament utterly surely they doe for they turne the nature of the Sacrament into the nature of a sacrifice for with them this sacrament is a sacrifice it is a Sacrament in the institution of our Saviour Christ but they will have it a propitiatory sacrifice for quicke and dead this is to overthrow the nature of the Sacrament they spoile it also with horrible Idolatry another way in that they keep it but in one kind that is in the bread and that very element of bread that Christ hath separated to holy use they have turned into a prophane and grosse Idoll they hold it verily to be a God and if this be not to overthrow the nature of the Sacrament I know not what is Vse 3 Another use is this here is matter of confirmation arising hence that is concerning the perpetuall visiblenesse of the Church upon the earth it shall be perpetually visible upon the earth so long as the world standeth where the Sacrament is to be administred there must needs be a visible Church the Sacrament is still in use and therefore the Church shall still continue visible The Papists doe us wrong when they charge us that we hold the Church is invisible or that at some time it is not visible at all true in some sense it is so and the Scripture speakes so and some of the Papists themselves doe speake as much but yet not in that sense as they charge us withall the Church is sometime so obscured and eclipsed that it is invisible that is to say that the world cannot see it and take publike notice of it but yet is it never so darkned but that one professor knowes another and they doe meet together though sometimes happely but two or three or a few in the use of Gods saving ordinances God never wants his Church in one place or another the gates of hell shall never prevaile against it Vse 4 A fourth use here is matter of instruction many instructions to many duties First this cals upon us that we should behold and consider and take to heart the wonderfull care and the provident love that the Lord Iesus Christ hath over his Church that doth not content himselfe to furnish his Church with sufficient spirituall maintenance and food so long as hee liveth here himselfe but takes order for it whilest hee is here that the Church should be maintained and should have as good a portion after his death as it did enjoy in his life time as if so bee our Saviour should say and thus resolve with himselfe Nay though I my selfe die yet my love and my care to my poore Church that shall never die but so long as the world standeth so long shall my Word and Sacramēts and saving ordinances be made good for all saving purposes to my chosen people a loving and a carefull husband will not onely maintaine his wife whilest he lives with her but he will doe the best hee can to leave somewhat to maintaine her when he is absent when he is dead and gone the Church is the Spouse of Christ and Christ is her loving husband loving it most dearly most tenderly and most affectionately and therefore hee hath not onely provided meanes of maintenance for the time hee lives here upon earth but now also that hee is absent that he is dead and gone from them still their maintenance that continues He is a faithlesse hous-keeper that provides onely for his family so long as hee is with them and lets them sterve or shift for themselves when he is gone he is worse then an Infidell as the Apostle speakes that provides not for his family but our Saviour is more faithfull then so he provided bountifully for his Church and family whilest hee was here among them upon earth and now that hee is gone from earth to heaven from among them yet still hee leaveth them the same liberall portion to nourish and cherish their soules as they had before Christ would have us take notice of this his great care and love towards us Mark 13.13 The Sonne of man is like unto a man going into a strange Countrey leaveth his house c. So Christ left his house that is his Church for a time that is in regard of his bodily presence but he never left it in regard of his gracious providence but hee gives authority to his servants and leaves to every man his worke and commands the porter to watch see here how the Lord before he departed tooke order for the welfare of his Church and people that it might be as well with them after he was gone as it was before Iohn 14. c. 16 17 18 vers I will pray the Father saith our Saviour and he shall give you another Comforter that hee may abide with you for ever even the Spirit of truth whom the world hath not knowne and so he proceedeth and saith I will not leave you comfortlesse The Apostles they were much daunted and dismayed in themselves when they heard that our Saviour would goe from them alas what shall become of us when the shepheard is smitten the sheepe will soone bee
what we can while we live to further Gods ordinances to those that shall live after us leave some good monument behinde us to that effect If God have given us riches let us give something to maintaine Gods ordinances to the end of the world It is an excellent thing when God hath given any man abundance of wealth and hath given him withall a heart to part with some of it for the maintenance of Gods ordinances to the worlds end yea if occasion so require let us seale Gods truth with our blood this is the best monument of all Lastly and so I end all mans power being nothing of himselfe God being all in all wee must therefore pray to God while we live here not onely that he would continue his Word and Sacraments to us but pray that he would continue the same to our posterity after us to many generations yea even to the end of the world if it bee his blessed will In 1 King 8. Salomon when he built the Temple hee did not onely pray for that time but for the time to come Then whensoever hereafter thy people shall be oppressed with the sword or famine or such like and shall pray to thee in this Temple heare thou in heaven and be mercifull unto them So we must labour not onely to pray to God to fence his Church and plant his Vineyard and nourish those plants that are in it already but that he would still continue to make a supply of such plants so long as the Sun and Moone shall endure and this would testifie a true zeale that wee beare to the glory of God We know beloved in regard of our owne businesses if we purchase lands for our selves or our children we desire that it may continue for ever to our childrens children What shall we not be as zealous for Gods glory as wee are carefull for our owne children yes wee ought much more and therefore we should bee stirred up still to labour as much as in us lyeth by prayer and all other good meanes for the continuance of the Word and Sacraments and all the saving ordinances of God not onely unto us but to our posterity to our childrens children to the Church of God even to the end of the world The end of the twentieth Lecture The One AND TWENTIETH LECTVRE VPON THE SACRAMENT OF THE LORDS SVPPER THE first to the Corinthians Chap. 11. verse 26. the last part of the verse till he come For as often as yee shall eate this bread and drinke this cup ye shew forth the Lords death till he come You may remember how wee divided this Scripture into two parts we shewed that in the former part of the verse there is an action performed in the latter part of the verse there is a caution that it is to be performed withall in the former part of the verse is the receiving of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper The caution that it is to be performed withall in the latter part of the verse is the shewing forth of the Lords death till he come Not to trouble you with repeating of many things In this latter part of the verse we observed unto you first the Caution it selfe the shewing forth of the Lords death secondly the frequenting of the Caution that it must bee often done for howsoever this word often is not used in the latter part of the verse yet in all common construction and understanding it is to bee supplyed out of the former part of the verse As often as ye shall eate this bread and drinke this cup so often shall ye shew forth the Lords death and lastly I came to speake of the continuance of this whole duty the whole that is here spoken of how long must this continue till Christ come that is to say as long as the world stands till Iesus Christ shall come to Iudgement Wee are entred upon this clause already I shewed you that this clause doth offer unto us two things for our consideration the first is the continuance it selfe of this duty how long it shall be to the end of the world that the observation of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper and the remembring or the shewing forth of the death of Christ must continue among the faithfull and be duly observed by them to the very end of the world that is directly affirmed here as you see I shewed you that there is another thing that is here covertly implyed and yet plaine enough if wee consider and weigh the words aright namely the end or the reach which the performers of this duty ayme at or which wee must ayme at in the performance of this duty namely to fit us and prepare us to the comming of the Lord Iesus Christ unto Iudgement Wee have spoken of the former part already now as GOD shal inable us we are to proceed to the latter part and so to finish up this Scripture at this time Therefore here secondly wee must consider that which is covertly implyed namely the end or the reach that these actions or these duties aime at or that we must aime at in the performance of these duties to fit us and prepare us to the comming of the Lord Iesus Christ unto judgement that the doctrine that hence we are to raise may appeare to be built upon a firme and a sure ground wee must shew these two things First that this particle that here is used till hath the same use in the same sense elsewhere in the Scripture not onely to signifie the continuance of an action till that time but withall to signifie that that continuance is such a preparation to such an action Secondly we must shew that it is so to bee understood here for it is not alwaies in the Scripture so meant therfore there must be some speciall inducement alleaged why it must bee so taken here Concerning the first that this particle is used in the same sense elsewhere I gave you one instance in the opening of the Text in the 1 Cor. 15.25 where it is said that Christ should raigne till he had put all his enemies under his feet For there is the same particle that is used here and it signifies not onely that Christ should raigne till his enemies should be destroyed but by his raigning his enemies should be destroyed Take another instance or two for better confirmation Gal. 4.19 My little children saith the Apostle of whom I travell in birth till Christ bee formed in you there is the very same particle also In those words the Apostle as you may see compares himselfe to a spirituall mother he is alwaies in paine and in travell in the spirit and in the worke of the ministery till such time as Christ should be formed and fashioned in the hearts of these Galathians till that time there that same word till intends these two things First that the paines and the travell of Paul in this spirituall child-birth did indure with in him till
life and in the time of our death therefore let us looke to these things still let us labour to perform them in our daily conversation that so wee may be fitted for Christs particular comming to us or else his generall comming to the whole world You have heard of the foolish Virgins get it in time have it alwayes burning and then we shall be sure specially make use of the receiving of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper this should teach us in the receiving of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper we should so addresse our selves and so cary our selves every way and so goe away with such hearts and having such meditations in them as that we may be fitted every way for the comming of the Lord Iesus Christ Oh that our hearts were so fitted oh how reverently would we cary our selves in the practice of it with what conscience would we performe it to glorifie God and to please God with what singlenesse of heart We know that when Christ shall come to judgement there shall bee no hiding of any thing out every thing shall bee naked before him and there will bee no smoothering up of any thing He that hath best profited by receiving of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper whosoever he bee that is thereby best fitted to the comming of the Lord Iesus Christ to judgment he desires it more earnestly waits for it more diligently rejoyces in it more cheerfully and hastens to it more willingly and more comfortably Oh when a man hath beene at the Lords Table and there hath found and felt the sweet communion of Gods blessed Spirit in his hart assuring him by his spirit within him assuring him that his sinnes are forgiven him assuring him that now he is fully and perfectly reconciled to God when he can enjoy this communion with Iesus Christ then he may goe home to his closet and say Oh now Lord Iesus come quickly now thy servant is in some poore measure ready and fitted Oh there is a worthy and a profitable and a ready Communicant This profit is to be found in this sacrament by the conscionable using of it here God tenders it and it is to be found of us and therefore let us not deprive our selves of such a gracious and precious blessing that here is if we will submit our selves to the gracious ordinance of God wee may bee made partakers of it the time will come that thou whosoever thou art that art negligent in comming to it or unprofitable in the participation of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper the time will come when thou commest to lye upon thy death-bed especially when thou commest to judgment then thou wilt rue this folly of thine with unspeakable woe and misery I then you shall cry out and shame your owne soules and your owne bodies because you have not beene profitable participators in this Sacrament and profitably performed it to the comfort of your owne soules The end of the one and twentieth Lecture The Two AND TWENTIETH LECTVRE VPON THE SACRAMENT OF THE LORDS SVPPER WEE are still to continue in the Argument of the Lords Supper for our preparation against the next Sabbath day when we purpose God willing to be made partakers of this Sacrament Wee have gone over many names and titles that are given to the Sacrament of the Lords Supper which very fitly and lively expresse the nature of it some of which names common to the whole action some to the severall parts of it we have already reckoned up five names or titles that are all common to the whole action as namely the Lords Supper the Table of the Lord the Communion of the body and blood of Christ the New Testament in his blood and the memoriall of Christs death I might adde to these some other names that are common also to the whole action as namely the Eucharist the Christian Passeover a Love-feast and such like for such names and titles are applyed to this Sacrament by many of the Ancients and approved by some later Divines and that not unaptly nor without some probable warrant out of Gods word But yet because I doe not finde in the Scripture that any of these names or titles are expresly and directly affirmed of this Sacrament I will passe them by and now proceed to the second sort of names that are more proper to the severall parts of this Sacrament For whereas the Sacrament of the Lords Supper consists of two parts the bread and the cup the Scripture by the Figure Synecdoche putting a part for the whole doth sometime comprehēd this whole Sacrament under the name of bread and sometime under the name of the cup I will give you an instance in both And first to begin with the bread looke into Act. 2.42 and there you shall finde this Sacrament called the breaking of bread and that is the Scripture that God willing we will treat upon for this argument Acts 2.42 And they continued in the Apostles doctrine and fellowship and breaking of bread and prayers All the contents of this verse doe in some sort concerne the matter of the Lords Supper for not onely the breaking of bread but the Apostles doctrine and fellowship and prayers are matters of necessary use in and for the right receiving of this Sacrament and therefore let us take this verse wholly as it lyes before us This verse and the next immediately going before set forth the gracious and happy successe of that excellent Sermon that Peter made after the sending downe of the visible gifts of the Holy Ghost on him and the rest of the Apostles The sending downe of the gifts of the Holy Ghost is shewed in the 1.2 and 3. verses the power and effect of them is shewed partly in all the Apostles all being filled with the Holy Ghost verse 4. to 13. specially in Peter who made a pithy piercing and powerfull Sermon on that occasion verse 14. to 40. The successe of which Sermon is partly touched verse 37. where it is said that they that heard it were pricked in their hearts and said unto Peter and the rest of the Apostles Men and brethren what shall we doe and it is more enlarged in many particulars from the 43. verse to the end of the Chapter But the summe of all is briefly comprised in this verse and the next going before in the verse before it is shewed how the Church was thereby encreased in this verse it is shewed how that they being encreased were afterward employed their encrease is there called their adding to the Church for though Church be not exprest in the originall yet it is to be understood as in the 47. verse and the Lord added to the Church c. their encrease is their adding to the Church here is their encrease And this is set forth partly by their number partly by the meanes of their adding Their number three thousand soules a plentifull harvest of so little seed three thousand soules at
in memorie Marke the words of the Apostle there whereby you are saved saith hee if you continue and keepe in memory those things except yee have beleeved in vaine As if the Apostle should say they that are saved by the death of Christ they continue in the death of Christ they keepe the death of Christ alwaies in memory otherwise they beleeve in vaine they professe faith but it is but a shew of faith without this there is no true saving faith in them at all In 2 Tim. 2.8 The Apostle chargeth Timothy Remember saith hee What should hee remember that Christ Iesus made of the seede of David was raised againe from the dead according to the Scripture The Apostle covertly and joyntly under the name of Iesus Christ his Resurrection presseth upon Timothy the remembrance of the death of Christ Remember saith hee Christ crucified The Apostle had exhorted Timothy before that hee should suffer affliction like a valiant souldier that hee should looke to his ministery and fulfill that with a good conscience but whatsoever hee did or whatsoever hee suffered still hee must remember Christs death and his rising againe from the dead And see what a preparative the Apostle gives to Timothy in the Verse going before Consider what I say and the Lord give thee understanding in all things By that preparative that hee gives to Timothie in the seventh verse he would raise him up to a more serious remembring of the death of Christ in the eight verse as that being the weightiest duty of all other the Apostle Paul gives himselfe for example in this case both in his preaching and likewise in his practice see it in his preaching 1 Cor. 2.2 I esteeme to know nothing save Christ Iesus and him crucified as if the Apostles heart and minde where wholy possessed and wholy swallowed up with the thoughts of Christ crucified or with the thoughts of the death of Iesus Christ that his tongue could runne upon nothing so readily as upon that and so likewise in his practice In the 2 Cor. 4.10 Every where saith the Apostle we beare about in our bodies the dying of the Lord Iesus Christ The Apostles remēbrance of the death of CHRIST was not such as ours commonly is a bare contemplation of him a bare thinking of his death but it was such as ours should bee a practicall feeling of it a practicall remembring of it certaine sensible effects in his body by affliction or by persecution still minding him of the death of Christ Wee beare about in our bodies saith hee the dying of the Lord Iesus and this was not onely for a time but it was continually so with them so saith the Text Every where doe we beare about in us the dying of the Lord Iesus The word in the originall signifies altogether that is to say at all times and in all places in all places wheresoever we come still wee beare about in our bodies the dying of the Lord Iesus Christ Every day and houre that goes over our heads still we beare about us the dying of our Lord Iesus that shall suffice concerning the proofe of this out of Scripture Now let us come to handle some Reasons of it the Reasons of it are these Reason 1 The first Reason is this why must the death of Christ be had alwayes in continuall remembrance of those that professe his name and embrace his Religion Why Christ himselfe hee alwayes remembers us ever did ever doth and ever will and therefore shall not wee alwayes remember him In Exod. 28.12 there you shall finde how that the two Onyx stones wherein were written the names of the Children of Israel they were to be put upon the shoulders of Aarons Ephod the Text saith in remembrance of the Children of Israel because that Aaron did beare the names of the Children of Israel alwayes in remembrance before the Lord. That was a type and a shadow here is the substance Christ Iesus is our Aaron the true High-Priest there spoken of that hath all the names of the faithfull written alwayes in his memory and carries them alwayes as it were upon his shoulder still presenting all his chosen before the Lord Hee alwayes remembring us remembring us in his whole life remembring us specially at his death for then he paid dearest for us now that being gone away frō us in regard of his bodily presence yet still hee remembers us and makes continuall intercession for us before the Lord Shall our vile persons being so gracelesse alwayes bee remembred by the Lord Iesus Christ and shall not the Lord Iesus Christ and his precious death bee alwayes and continually remembred by all of us Hearken what the Spouse saith in Cantic 2.6 compared with Cant. 1.12 in Cantic 2.6 the Spouse there speaking of Christ her welbeloved saith that his left hand is under my head and his right hand doth direct me Cantic 1.12 My beloved is as a bundle of mirr he unto me he shall lye betweene my breasts This Spouse is every beleeving soule every true beleeving soule When once we doe enter into a due consideration how dearly we are beloved of our Husband Christ that hee layes his left hand under our heads and embraceth us with his right hand that he still remembers us and nourisheth and cherisheth us then doe we presently fall into a holy resolution that surely wee will be kinde to him seeing he is so kinde to us and he being so kinde to us as alwaies to cherish us and remember us therefore we will remember him he shal rest and lie betweene our breasts we will alwayes make his death our continuall meditation and remembrance If an ordinary man should die for us that we by his death might escape and bee acquitted from death would not our hearts in common and naturall kindnesse evermore be running upon this mans death Surely it would Why then seeing the Lord IESVS CHIST hath interposed himselfe in our stead and dyed for us and by his death hath acquitted us from that death which wee should have suffered why should not our hearts and mindes bee alwayes running upon him and upon his death Some may say May I not remember Christ aright though I remember not his death I answer thou canst not remember Christ except thou remember his death for hee hath purchased his Church by his death and look what interest thou hast in him or he in thee it is onely by the death of Christ and therefore thou canst not remember him savingly without thou remember his death and have it graven within thy heart Can a woman forget her Child that she hath travelled for and endured so much paine for Can the Lord Iesus Christ forget us that hath endured so much paine for us farre greater then the travell of a woman No it is impossible Christ Iesus cannot forget us at any time therefore seeing Christ Iesus ever did remember us and ever doth and ever will and it is impossible that hee should