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B08365 A dialogue between a pastor and parishioner, touching the Lord's Supper. Wherein the most material doubts and scruples about receiving that holy sacrament, are removed, and the way thereto discovered to be both plain and pleasant. Very usefull for private christians in these scrupulous times. With some short prayers fitted for that occasion, and a morning and evening prayer for the use of private families / by Michael Altham, Vicar of Latton in Essex. Altham, Michael, 1633-1705. 1687 (1687) Wing A2933AB; ESTC R172247 65,705 236

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the way You have furnished me with a better notion of Sacraments than I had before and thereby given me so great satisfaction that you shall not need to bespeak my attention hereafter I beseech you therefore since you have well dispatched the notion of Sacraments in general that you would now proceed to that of the Lord's Supper in particular Pastor I shall very willingly comply with your desire and in so doing I shall endeavour to do these two things I. To show you plainly what notion you ought to have of the Lord's Supper II. That the Celebration thereof is a duty incumbent upon us by vertue of a divine Command I. We must look upon this Supper as a Sacrament properly so called I have already shown you what conditions are requisite to constitute such a Sacrament and if I make it appear that all those conditions are to be found in this then may it be justly reckoned as one of that number The Conditions I told you were these four 1. A Divine Institution Now that this holy Supper was instituted and ordained by Christ that it owes its Original to none other but only the Son of God and our Saviour will plainly appear from the concurrent testimonies of St. Matthew St. Mark and St. Luke St. Matthew gives us this account of it As they were eating Jesus took Bread Matth. 26. v. 26 27 28 29 30. and blessed it and brake it and gave it to the Disciples and said Take Eat This is my Body And he took the Cup and when he had given thanks he gave it to them saying Drink ye all of it For this is my blood of the New Testament which is shed for many for the remission of sins But I say unto you I will not drink henceforth of this fruit of the Vine until that day when I drink it new with you in my Father's Kingdom And when they had sung an Hymn they went out into the Mount of Olives Much to the same purpose is that account which St. Mark gives of it And as they did eat Jesus took bread Mark 14. v. 22 23 24 25 26. and when he had given thanks he brake it and gave it to them and said Take Eat this is my Body Also he took the Cup and when he had given thanks he gave it to them and they all drank of it And he said unto them This is my blood of the New Testament which is shed for many Verily I say unto you I will drink no more of the fruit of the Vine until that day that I drink it new in the Kingdom of God. And when they had sung an Hymn they went out into the Mount of Olives St. Luke also with little variation gives the same account And he took bread Luke 22. v. 19 20. and when he had given thanks he brake it and gave it to them saying This is my body which is given for you this do in remembrance of me Likewise also after Supper he took the Cup saying This Cup is the New Testament in my blood which is shed for you And if we call in St. Paul to give his suffrage with these three Evangelists we shall find him according with them all in the History of the Sacrament and the Institution of it but most expresly with St. Luke 1 Cor. 11.23 24 25 26. I have received of the Lord that which I also have delivered unto you That the Lord Jesus the same night in which he was betrayed took bread and when he had given thanks he brake it and said Take Eat This is my body which is broken for you this do ye in remembrance of me After the same manner he took the Cup when he had supped saying This Cup is the new Testament in my blood this do as oft as you drink it in remembrance of me For as often as you eat this Bread and drink this Cup ye do shew or shew ye forth the Lord's Death till he come Thus have I shown you all those Scriptures which give any account of the History of this Sacrament and the institution of it and you see plainly they do all agree that it was ordained and instituted by Christ that it owes its Original to none other but only the Son of God the Lord 's Christ and our Jesus and if so then the first thing requisite for the constitution of a Sacrament properly so called viz. A Divine Institution doth evidently appear in the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper 2. The second thing requisite for the constitution of a Sacrament properly so called is a visible sign And that there are such things in the Lord's Supper is visible and apparent for by the words of Institution Bread and Wine which are substantial and visible things are appointed to be the Elements thereof And though these in their own essence and nature do nothing differ from common Bread and Wine yet in regard of their designation and use they do very much differ therefrom For in this holy Supper they are designed for and used as outward and visible signs of inward and spiritual grace and in respect of that secret thing which is hidden under them and represented by them they become Sacramental 3. The third thing requisite for the constitution of a Sacrament properly so called is a divine promise added to the sign which importing spiritual grace here and eternal life hereafter may firmly unite the sign and thing signified and that this is to be found in the Lord's Supper is plain from the words of institution where the Bread blessed and broken is called the Body of Christ and the Cup the New Testament in his blood which is shed for many for the remission of sins And our Saviour expresly saith John 6.35 I am the bread of life he that cometh unto me shall not hunger and he that believeth on me shall never thirst And again v. 54 55 56. Whosoever eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood hath eternal life and I will raise him up at the last day For my flesh is meat indeed and my blood is drink indeed He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood dwelleth in me and I in him Which plainly declareth an Union of the sign and thing signified by vertue of a divine word and promise in which Union consists the nature of a Sacrament properly so called 4. The fourth thing requisite for the constitution of a Sacrament properly so called is That it be given to the whole Church as a perpetual sign to continue so long as the external form of divine Worship instituted by God doth remain in that Church Now that this was given to the whole Church appears plainly from the institution of it for the Disciples to whom it was first given were the Representatives of the whole Church And that it was given for perpetuity seemeth plain from those words of our blessed Saviour Matth. 26.29 I say unto you that I will not drink henceforth of this fruit
is so tender in this point Can. 28. and so far from giving encouragement unto such that instead of admitting she forbiddeth them and remitteth them home to their own Parish Churches and Ministers there to receive the Communion with the rest of their Neighbours In all these Cases you see our Church is very cautious and therefore no fear of such an universal and promiscuous admittance to God's Table as your Objection supposeth She is not so prodigally lavish as to cast her Pearl to Swine or give her Childrens Bread to Dogs But though these cases may limit yet do they not at all lessen our Duty Let our circumstances be what they will yet to Do this is still our Duty To continue therefore under these circumstances must needs be sin because it hindereth us from doing that which is our duty and to plead our excuse for Non-Communion upon that score is to add sin to sin and double that iniquity which was too great before What therefore is to be done in this case but as speedily as may be to put our selves out of these circumstances that we may the sooner set about the performance of our Duty Which whosoever refuseth or neglecteth to do he doth plainly declare that he hath a greater value for his own inordinate lusts and debaucht practices than for an holy Communion with God and Christ Parishioner I am mighty well pleased to understand That the Wisdom and Piety of our Mother the Church of England in taking so much care to guard the Table of the Lord and with so much caution to fence the Body and Blood of Christ against the bold approaches of ignorant prophane and wicked persons is far greater than I thought it had been or than many will yet believe it is But Sir I have something more still which if I did not fear I had too much tired you already I would gladly be satisfied in Pastor No more of these Apologies good Neighbour if your own leisure and patience will allow it mine will hold out And therefore now we are together and have so fit an opportunity for it speak your whole mind and speak it freely propound what ever scruples you have that I may apply my self to give you all the satisfaction I can Parishioner I humbly thank you Sir for the freedom you are pleased to give me which I shall willingly make use of The next thing I have to propound is a matter of great weight an Objection that hath and still doth very much startle me and I believe many others which if you can clear your so doing will very much smooth the way and encourage both me and them to communicate with you Obj. 3. St. Paul expresly saith He that eateth and drinketh unworthily eateth and drinketh damnation to himself not discerning the Lord's Body 1 Cor. 11.29 Now Sir I do not find my self worthy and I hope you would not have me to eat and drink my own Damnation Pastor This Scripture which you now cite hath been and still is made very much use of to deter and affright men from doing their duties from communicating with the Church and People of God in this holy Ordinance Some men who have usurped the Pulpit and invaded the Office of the Ministry in our late unhappy times have with so much zeal but little knowledge taken upon them to interpret the holy Scriptures that they have made them to speak other things than the holy spirit of God or his Amanuenses the Prophets and Apostles ever intended And I do not doubt but to make it plain to you that the Objection raised from this passage of St. Paul is founded in the misunderstandings of men and not in the Text it self or the true and genuine sense of the Apostle in this place In order whereunto I shall endeavour to lay before you the plain meaning of St. Paul in this Text and that by the resolution of these two Enquiries Qu. 1. What is here meant by eating and drinking unworthily Qu. 2. How and when men are said to eat and drink their own Damnation Qu. 1. What is here meant by eating and drinking unworthily Ans For Answer whereunto let me premise That the Worthiness here spoken of doth not consist in perfection or in an absolute and unsinning obedience to all the Laws of God. For if we were indeed thus perfect we should have no need or at least not so much need of this Sacrament Since the first Adam in the state of Innocency none save only the second Adam the Lord Christ Jesus could ever justly glory in being thus qualified Notwithstanding the vain pretensions of some Enthusiastical Catharists this certainly is a thing which is not attainable in this life For All have sinned saith St. Paul Rom. 3.23 cap. 5.12 There is none that doth good no not one saith holy David Ps 14.3 The just man falleth seven times saith the wise Solomon Prov. 24.16 And if any man say that he hath no sin he doth but deceive himself and the truth is not in him saith the Apostle John 1 Joh. 1.8 From all which Scriptures and many others which might be produced wherein the terms are so general that they cannot but include all and every individual it is plain and evident that perfection doth not belong to the present state of Mankind And if so then must we conclude that the great and wise God and the holy and blessed Jesus have instituted this Feast in vain and given out a command to no purpose A Table indeed may be spread and richly furnished but the rooms will be all empty for if none but those who are perfect be worthy there will none be found that are so This therefore cannot be the meaning of the Apostle in this place And as the worthiness here spoken of doth not consist in perfection i. e. in an intire and unsinning obedience to the whole Law of God So neither doth the unworthiness here mentioned consist in imperfection or sin It is not every failing not every weakness nor every sin that presently renders men unworthy to be Guests at God's Table For if so then all mankind would be excluded because all have sinned as appeareth from the Texts already quoted And consequently the Table of the Lord would be as empty and this great Feast as much want Guests upon this account as upon the other But this is so far from being the sense of the Apostle here that it is quite contrary to it For as Christ came into the World purposely to save Sinners so did he institute his holy Supper for the sake of those who were liable to sin and weak in the Faith that thereby they might be fortified against the one and strengthened in the other For any one to say then I am a Sinner and therefore Unworthy is a false consequence For it is not sin barely but an obstinate and impenitent continuance in sin that renders any one an unworthy Guest at God's Table as I shall show
you hereafter From this account of this Text you see plain that there are some who have no pretence to perfection in this life and yet in God's account are esteemed worthy Communicants And of such an one I shall give you this short Character which may serve as a Test to try your own worthyness by To be a worthy Guest at God's Table is not to be without sin but to be sensible of sin and sorrowful for it one who doth hunger and thirst after righteousness one who doth earnestly desire Union and Communion with Christ especially in this holy Feast One who is truly sensible of and as truly thankful for what the blessed Jesus hath done and suffered for him One who upon that consideration doth resolve with himself that as much as in him lieth he will for the future lead a new life and live in all godly love and charity with all men This though short I take to be a full Character of a worthy Guest at God's Table Which worthy disposition may very well consist with many and great weaknesses and imperfections This thus premised may enable us to give a more direct answer to our first enquiry and help us to discover What it is to eat and drink unworthily To eat and drink unworthily in the Apostle's sense doth therefore imply these things 1. To come to the Lord's Supper with low and mean thoughts of it being either ignorant what it is or if in some measure knowing yet are they willing to put a slight and contempt upon it The former of these are indeed the more pityable but neither the one nor the other are excusable both of them in St. Pauls sense may be truly said to eat and drink unworthily The one contentedly sitteth down under such circumstances that he cannot and the other if he can will not make any difference between the Table of the Lord and their own between this great and holy Feast and a common and ordinary meal and repast This is that for which St. Paul reproveth the Church of Corinth 1 Cor. 11. v. 20 21 22. saying When ye come together into one place this is not to eat the Lord's Supper For in eating every one taketh before other his own Supper and one his hungry and another is drunken What have ye not Houses to eat and drink in Or despise ye the Church of God and shame them that have not What shall I say to you Shall I praise you in this I praise you not This is to come to the Lord's Table without Faith or Fear neither believing nor remembring what the blessed Jesus hath done and suffered for them of which at this Feast they ought to make a grateful and solemn Commemoration 1 Cor. 11.24 This is to approach thereunto without that due regard and reverence that becometh them and befitteth the action they are about not once considering with whom or upon what they are to feast And this is part if not all that St. Paul designeth in those words which he addeth in the close of this Text not discerning the Lord's Body 2. To eat and drink unworthily is to come to the Lord's Supper without a due sense of sin without a just remorse a godly sorrow and an unfeigned repentance for it For as I before hinted to you it is not sin barely but an obstinate and impenitent continuance in sin that maketh men unwelcome guests at God's Table If the wicked will turn from all his sins that he hath committed and keep all my statutes and do that which is lawful and right he shall surely live he shall not die All his transgressions that he hath committed they shall not be mentioned unto him in his righteousness that he hath done he shall live saith the Lord Ezek. 18. v. 21 22. A broken and contrite heart God will never despise Ps 51.17 I might if it were needful produce many other Texts to this purpose for the holy Scripture is full of such passages as speak the goodness and mercy of God to repenting and returning Sinners how ready he is to receive them how he openeth his arms to embrace them and how kindly he bids them wellcome If the Prodigal can but think of returning to his Father his Father will prevent him and run to meet him Luk. 15.18 19 20. Turn unto me and I will turn unto you saith the Lord of Hosts Zech. 1.3 But though God be thus kind and gracious to the Penitent yet will he be severe and inexorable to the obstinate and impenitent If men will sin with an high hand and go on therein without once reflecting upon what they do or have done If they will still persevere in wickedness against all the admonitions of God and checks of their own Consciences If they be resolved to indulge their lustful appetites and inordinate affections and not to be reclaimed therefrom If against the judgment of the Church and the plain evidence of Scripture and reason they will reject the Truth and espouse and defend Errours and Heresies If they give themselves over to strife and contention to promote malice and hatred to disturb their own and the peace of that Church and state in which they live What can such men expect but a certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation to devour them Hebr. 10. v. 26 27. There is nothing doth more surely forfeit the kindness and mercy of God nor any thing that doth more certainly treasure up to it self wrath against the day of wrath than an hard and impenitent heart Rom. 2.5 As impenitency is a certain bar to Man's Salvation so is it to his participation of this holy Feast For to come to the Lord's Supper without a due sense of sin and sorrow for it is to go about to join righteousness with unrighteousness to mix light with darkness and to lodge Christ with Belial 2 Cor. 6. v. 14 15. 3. To eat and drink unworthily is to come to the Lord's Supper without Charity If thou bring thy gift to the Altar and there remembrest that thy brother hath ought against thee leave there thine offering before the Altar and go thy way first be reconciled to thy brother and then come and offer thy gift Matth. 5. v. 23 24. This counsel proceedeth from the unerring wisdom of the blessed Jesus wherein he doth plainly intimate how vain it is to expect that God will accept an offering at our hands whilst our hearts are filled with malice and hatred to our Brethren Love to God and love to the Brethren are qualifications indispensibly necessary in every one who will be a worthy Guest at God's Table and neither of these can well consist without the other If a man say I love God and hateth his brother he is a liar for he that loveth not his brother whom he hath seen how can he love God whom he hath not seen And this Commandment have we from him that he who loveth God love his brother also 1 John 4.
I beg your Prayers and shall not fail to join my own that it may please God to pardon both me and them who have led me into it I am so well satisfied that I hope I shall not hereafter omit any opportunity of doing what I am commanded Sir I have given you a very great trouble though you are pleased not to think it so You have taken a great deal of pains and to good purpose for I am very well satisfied that all my scruples have been idle and ungrounded Cavils and that I had no just cause to separate my self from the Communion of the Church as I have hitherto done But Sir may I presume to give you a little more trouble You have removed my scruples and now I desire to be admitted into Communion with the Church and am resolved by the blessing of God to walk orderly and peaceably therein If therefore you will please to furnish me with some short rules which may direct me in my preparation for this holy Ordinance and instruct me how to behave my self both then and afterwards you will greatly oblige me and I shall make it my business to observe them Pastor I shall very readily and willingly comply with your desire and think it no trouble at all I am so far from thinking it so that I look upon it as my duty and am mighty well pleased when I meet with an opportunity of doing it so well that I could heartily wish that those whom God hath committed to my charge would often give me this occasion And to satisfy you that these are my real thoughts I shall now apply my self to answer your desire by giving you the best rules and directions that I can in this Case And to render them the more effectual I shall observe the method propounded by your self and endeavour to show you 1. What is required of those who come to the Lord's Supper 2. How they ought to demean and behave themselves when there 3. What will be expected from them afterwards 1. What is required of them who come to the Lord's Supper Ans Our Church hath given a short but very full Answer to this Question which is this They are required to examine themselves Ch. Catech. whether they truly repent them of their former sins stedfastly purposing to lead a new Life have a lively Faith in God's mercy through Christ with a thankful remembrance of his Death and be in Charity with all men Which Answer is founded upon that excellent Rule laid down by St. Paul in this Case Let a man examine himself and so let him eat of this bread and drink of this Cup 1 Cor. 11.28 To examine ones self imports a serious diligent and impartial Tryal in order to amendment and reformation A transitory glance upon the several Occurrences of our lives or a general survey of what we do or have done will not serve the turn but we must make a particular search and scrutiny into our several actions and the several circumstances wherewith they have been attended We must consider from what principle and by what rule we have acted and to what end our actions have tended and apply these to those several and respective duties we have been about For without the due consideration of these things an action though materially good may be formally evil This is to examine but whom are we to examine Not others but our selves Let a man examine himself God Almighty having endued man with reason and consideration having made him sensible of his duty and apprehensive of those hopes and fears that advantage and danger which usually attend the performance or non-performance thereof leaveth him to be his own Judge and remits him to his own Examination So that if men will flatter and deceive themselves in that which is their greatest concern they may blame themselves and none but themselves if danger ensue thereupon God would not have men either impertinently to meddle in the concerns of others or carelesly to trust others with what concerns themselves he would have every one do his own duty and take care of his own concern It may reasonably be supposed that every man either is or at least ought to be best known to himself and that he will be most just to himself And therefore God trusts man with himself and St. Paul in this very case refers man to himself saying Let a man examine himself But if after all this Men will be unfaithful to themselves and deceive their own Souls whom have they to blame but themselves Thus have I shown you both the importance of the word and the Subjects of the Duty what it is to Examine and who they be that are to undergo that Discipline There only remaineth to consider the end for which we are to examine our selves and that is In order to amendment and reformation God would not have us to ravel into our by-past lives on purpose to take pleasure in our former sins or from our impunity to take encouragement to go on still in the like iniquities but he would have us to understand wherein we have formerly transgressed our rule and done amiss to correct and amend it for the present and to resolve upon a more renewed course of living for the future This in the general is or ought to be the design of self-examination but to be more particular and bring it nearer to our present Case I shall endeavour to do these five things 1. To show you the reasonableness of this advice Let a man c. 2. The necessity of the thing we are advised to viz. Self-examination in order to a due participation of this holy Feast 3. What we are to examine our selves about 4. By what rules we are to proceed in examining our selves 5. For what end we ought to examine our selves 1. The reasonableness of this advice Let a man examine himself St. Pauls advice and counsel in this case will appear to be very reasonable if we consider either the excellency of the Feast we are invited to or the unworthiness of the persons who are invited It is no common and usual entertainment but a great and extraordinary Feast that we are invited to Nor is it only a bare Feast but a solemn Feast upon a Sacrifice and that Sacrifice no other than the offering up of the Son of God and our Saviour Christ our Passeover is sacrificed for us therefore let us keep the Feast saith St. Paul 1 Cor. 5.7 The Master of this Feast or he who makes this great entertainment for us is none other save only the holy Jesus It was he who as a Priest offered himself as a Sacrifice unto God the Father who hath instituted this holy Feast in memorial of his Death and Passion and therein prepared for us not only common food for the refreshment and sustentation of our decaying Bodies but such as may suffice to nourish both our Bodies and Souls unto Eternal Life not only the food
of Angels but that which far surpasseth those Quails and that Manna wherewith the Israelites were so miraculously fed for forty Years together in the Wilderness The dainties which are now prepared are not only Bread and Wine but the Body and Blood of Christ Jesus the tendency whereof is not only to preserve life here but to fit and prepare us for Eternal Life hereafter So that if we consider either the Excellency of this Feast the dignity of its Author the greatness of his preparations the goodness of the things prepared the greatness of its ends or those glorious advantages which may thence accrew unto us have we not great reason to proceed cautiously herein to take the advice which St. Paul giveth us and examine our selves before we presume to eat of this Bread and drink of this Cup. But if we consider the unworthiness of the persons who are invited to this great Feast it will render the advice yet more reasonable Who are they for whom the holy Jesus prepares so great a Feast and whom he invites to so noble an Entertainment Men they are but fallen men Men in an estate of sin in a depraved and degenerate condition who by their original pravity have lost their primitive purity and thereby unfitted themselves for Communion with so holy a God. Whose Parents have been attainted of High-Treason against Heaven and have involved their Children in the same guilt Who have not only been sold under sin but are become willing slaves thereunto who are not only guilty by derivation but more criminal by their own actual transgressions who are not only by nature the Children of wrath but by their own personal crimes liable to eternal ruine who have not only sinned but repeated their sins against Heaven and by their iterated provocations have challenged the utmost of divine fury and indignation Who have been forward enough to make Vows and Promises of better Obedience unto God and as ready upon all occasions to break those Vows and violate those Engagements Who have been always willing to close with opportunities of sinning but very unwilling to be reclaimed therefrom These are they who are invited to this holy Feast but be not mistaken for whilst such they have no encouragement to come thereunto And therefore St. Paul giveth us good counsel when he saith Let a man examine himself and so let him eat of this bread and drink of this Cup. Which Examination as I have already told you must be in order to amendment and reformation So that if we seriously consider either our original pravity or our actual iniquities our repeated sins against God our manifold breaches of Vows and Promises made unto him or our great unwillingness to be reclaimed from our sinful courses we must needs own our selves to be very unworthy Guests at God's Table and if so then we shall find great reason to be very cautious in our approaches thereunto and to think this advice very reasonable To examine our selves before we eat of this Bread and drink of this Cup. 2. The necessity of the thing we are advised unto viz. Self-Examination in order to a due participation of this holy Feast The necessity of Self-Examination in order to this end will appear to be very urgent if not indispensible when we consider That without a serious diligent and impartial tryal of our selves we can never fully understand wherein we have done amiss And so long as we are prepossessed with an opinion of being innocent we shall never endeavour to amend and if we do not that we can never expect to be well-come Guests at Gods Table and if we be not fit Guests there we cannot expect the advantages thereof But if notwithstanding our unpreparedness we will presume to come thereunto then may we look to meet with that dreadful Sentence pronounced against him who wanted the Wedding Garment which was To be bound hand and foot and to be cast into outer darkness where is weeping and gnashing of teeth Matth. 22.13 All which considered may fully evince the necessity of Self-Examination But though the advice which St. Paul giveth us be in it self so reasonable and the thing he adviseth us to be so necessary yet will not the want thereof excuse our disobedience to the command of Christ or our non-attendance upon him at this holy Feast It will rather condemn us because we refuse to gratify him in a business which is not only reasonable in it self but necessary for us To make an Apology for our not communicating upon this score were to excuse one fault by committing another For there can no other reason be assigned of our not doing our duty but only our negligence and unwillingness Let not any therefore hence forward dare to say they are not ready when Christ calls them but rather let them before hand consider what it is that is required of them and so prepare themselves that they may be always ready Let them make it their business to understand their duty and do it to search every corner of their hearts and every circumstance of their lives and amend what is amiss that so they may be always ready And to assist you herein I shall now apply my self to the next thing which I promised to show you viz. 3. What we are to examine our selves about There are two things which we ought especially to examine our selves about viz. Our by-past lives and conversations and our present thoughts and resolutions As to the former of these Let us consider under what obligations we stand unto Almighty God to live holily and righteously how far he hath obliged us by his mercies and goodness by his Promises and by his Providence by Mercies conducing both unto Life and Godliness here and to Eternal Life and never-failing Happiness hereafter How far we are engaged by our own Vows and Promises not only made but frequently repeated in the presence of God and of his People and by our constant and continued profession of Christianity Let us consider what rules he hath given us to live by how equitable they are in themselves how practicable as to us and how easy and pleasant he hath thereby rendered our way to Heaven and Happiness Let us call to mind how far we have violated those obligations and how often we have transgressed those rules and feriously examine what progress we have made towards repentance and amendment Those who are so considerative as to make these reflections upon the time past will find cause sufficient to be troubled for what they have done and to reform their way of Living by which only means they may in some measure capacitate themselves for this holy Feast But it is not only our by-past Lives and Conversations but our present thoughts and resolutions we are to examine our selves about We ought to consider what thoughts we have of the ways of God and the ways of sin towards which the byass of our affections doth most incline Whether we
is not only our duty but our greatest interest For thereby know we that we have passed from death to life because we love the brethren 1 John 3.14 The remembrance therefore of the dying love of the blessed Jesus ought to stir up in us at this time a love to God and to the Brethren 7. The consideration of the whole should create in us an humble and thankful frame and temper of mind It should put us upon offering the Sacrifice of Praise and Thanksgiving unto God not only in word but in every action of our life for Christ and all his benefits and to testify the reality of that gratitude by renewed acts of Faith Repentance and Obedience all our days Thus ought we to receive this Sacrament in remembrance of Christ 2. What it is to shew forth the Lord's Death till he come Ans An Historical Narrative of the Sufferings and Death of Jesus Christ to be able to tell that he died at Jerusalem in the Eighteenth Year of Tiberius the Emperour Pontius Pilate being the Roman Deputy in Judea and Josephus Caiphas the High Priest that same year This is not to shew forth the Lord's Death in the Apostles sense But such a serious Meditation thereof as may inhanse our hatred of sin our love to God and our thankfulness to Jesus Christ if it be constant and continued will best declare our sense of our Saviour's Sufferings and shew forth his Death till he come 1. When therefore we are at God's Table and there see all things prepared for us when we consider that Christ our Passover was sacrificed for us and that we are now invited to a Feast upon that Sacrifice We cannot but reflect upon the just anger and indignation of God against sin We cannot but observe that such was the severity of Divine Justice and the heinousness of sin that no reconciliation could be made between God and Sinners till the punishment due to sin was suffered So highly was God incensed so great was his wrath justly conceived against sin that he was not to be pacified by any thing but only the deprecation and Death of his own Son. These ought to be our thoughts especially at this time and if thus we employ our selves when we are at this holy Feast and in pursuance of these thoughts do for the time to come loath and abhor hate and avoid all manner of sin then and thereby shall we truly shew forth the Lords Death till he come 2. When we are at God's Table and there see the dainties provided for us that there is not only food for our bodies but for our Souls also not only such as may sustain our frail Bodies or support and maintain the union between our Souls and Bodies here but such as will nourish us up in grace here and fit us for Glory hereafter When we consider that such was the love of God to Mankind that he gave his only begotten son that whosoever believed on him should not perish but have everlasting life John 3.16 have we not the greatest Specimen of God's mercy and goodness towards us that we can desire and is not this love writ in Characters so legible in this holy Sacrament that he that runneth may read them and if so what cause have we with grateful acknowledgments to own and declare the goodness and mercy of God to praise and thank him for it to love him again and to testify that our love by keeping his Commandments Which if we do and persevere in so doing then shall we truly declare and shew forth the Lord's Death till he come 3. When we are at God's Table and there under those symbolical Elements of Bread and Wine can clearly discover the Body and Blood of Christ really though not corporally offered to us how lively is the dying love of our blessed Saviour therein represented to us May we not therein plainly read those dreadful pangs those dying groans and those unspeakable sufferings which the blessed Jesus did willingly undergo for our sakes and ought we not with all possible expressions of love and gratitude to commemorate this his kindness This is all i. e. this with the dependencies thereupon that he requireth of us for all that he hath done and suffered for us viz. to celebrate this Feast in remembrance of him which if we rightly do and continue so doing then do we truly declare or shew forth the Lord's Death till he come For this Meditation cannot fail of filling our hearts with grateful sentiments of our Saviours Love and those sentiments will certainly imploy our tongues in thankful acknowledgments and engage our whole lives in dutiful returns unto him for it Thus have I shown you in the first place how you ought to demean and behave your self when you are at God's Table viz. you ought to do this in remembrance of Jesus Christ But there is one thing more yet required of you viz. 2. In the doing of this there ought to be a Discerning of the Lord's Body This expression hath been mightily strain'd by some who have racked their inventions to find out such notions of it as I am apt to believe were never intended by St. Paul but I shall not now either trouble my self or you with the Examination of them My design is only to instruct you plainly and make things as intelligible to you as I can In order whereunto all that I shall do at present shall be only to acquaint you with the full importance of the word Discerning and by that means to show you the true and genuine sense of the Apostle in this expression The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here used and rendred Discerning imports only a discretional act whereby we do exempt some one thing from the common order of others and set a more honourable value and esteem upon it This sense of the word is warranted by the usage of it in other places St. Jude v. 22. adviseth us to have compassion of some making a difference 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. between such Sinners as are treatable and willing to be instructed and such as are intractable obstinate and disobedient And St. Paul putteth the question saying 1 Cor. 4.7 Who hath made thee to differ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. who hath separated thee from the rest of Mankind and placed thee in an higher Form than them from both which places the importance of the word is very plain that it implies only a discretional act whereby one thing is distinguished from another and more honour and respect paid thereunto than to the other To discern the Lord's Body therefore in St. Pauls sense is to look upon the sacred Elements of Bread and Wine in this holy Feast as the most precious symbols of the Body and Blood of Christ to put a difference between them and all other common meats and drinks to use them with a religious reverence and not to approach this holy Table without a lively Faith in
Christ Jesus a serious and unfeigned repentance of all our sins a stedfast purpose of leading a new life and being in Charity with all men This I take to be St. Pauls meaning in this expression and if you thus discern the Lord's Body you will certainly find the blessed effect of it in the spiritual nourishment of your Soul unto Eternal Life And thus have I performed the second part of my Promise to you by showing you how you ought to demean and behave your self at God's Table Pashioner Sir You have infinitely obliged me by the pains you have taken to furnish me with such good rules and directions I pray God to give me grace to observe and follow them I shall God willing do my endeavour and I beg your Prayers for my assistance But there is one thing more yet which you were pleased to promise me viz. some Directions how to behave my self after I have received this holy Sacrament And these also I would willingly take along with me when I go from hence Pastor I confess I am your Debter by Promise as to this also and shall endeavour to discharge my self of that Debt by giving you some short and plain rules how to carry your self afterwards 1. When you go away from this holy Sacrament you ought to carry along with you a deep sense of those great obligations which God Almighty hath laid upon you therein You ought to retire not only into your Closet or some private place but into your self and there meditate of the great mercy and goodness of God the Father in sending his Son to be your Mediator and Redeemer and of the great condescension and infinite kindness of God the Son in taking upon him your nature and submitting himself to Death even the Death of the Cross for your sins You ought often to think of that great honour you have received in being admitted not only to feast with God and Christ but to feast upon Christ the true Christian Sacrifice In a word you ought by serious thoughts and meditations of what you have been about to imprint upon your minds a due sense of God's goodness and thereby take a prospect of all that happiness which you either do enjoy or may obtain by complying with and being obedient to the command of the blessed Jesus in this particular 2. Having thus imprinted these things upon your mind you must endeavour thereby to work it into an humble and grateful frame When you reflect upon your former sins and present unworthiness you will find cause sufficient to be humbled for them and when you consider God's greatness in himself and his goodness towards you you will find good reason to be thankful for the favours you have and daily do receive from him Let it be your care therefore always to cherish due sentiments of divine goodness in your mind that so you may be ready upon all occasions to praise and glorify his great and holy name for it Can you remember how kindly you have been invited how courteously received how nobly and friendly entertained by the blessed Jesus and yet be unthankful I cannot believe that any one who pretends to Christianity can so far forfeit his Religion and reason too can be so much lost to all the sentiments of piety and humanity at once as to be guilty of so gross ingratitude Unthankfulness in Divinity is an odious crime and Ingratitude in Morality is no better So much was it abhorred even by the Heathens that it became a Proverb among them Call a man ingrateful and you have said the worst you can of him Be not you therefore guilty of that against God which the Heathen looked upon as so great a reproach among themselves Consider that heavy charge which God draws up against Israel Isa 1.2 3. Hear O Heavens and hearken O Earth saith the Lord for I have nourished and brought up Children but they have rebelled against me The Ox knoweth his owner and the Ass his Master's Crib but Israel doth not know me my people doth not consider Let the consideration of God's so deep resentment of this crime in his own people teach you and me to beware of it Let us recollect our selves and call to mind all those incomparable favours and benefits which God from time to time hath bestowed upon us and the advantages of this holy Feast in particular that so our minds may be always ready to make grateful acknowledgments thereof 3. When by these or the like Meditations you have wrought your mind into such an humble and thankful frame Your next work will be to evidence the truth and reality of that temper by actions sutable thereunto We do not expect to find grapes on thorns nor figs on thistles For as a good tree cannot bring forth evil fruit so neither can a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit saith our blessed Saviour Matth. 7.16 17 18. And thence he concludeth Therefore by their fruits ye shall know them v. 20. The best evidence therefore of a worthy Communicant is to be taken from his way of living afterwards If he make Conscience of what he doth if he make it his great care and business to live holily towards God and righteously towards all men it is a good sign of the goodness of his condition But if notwithstanding the obligations which have been laid upon him at this holy Feast he return with the Dog to his Vomit and the Sow that was washed to his wallowing in the Mire if he still adhere to his old sins and take pleasure in his former wickedness it is an evidence that he still remaineth in the gall of bitterness and that without a timely repentance and reformation his portion will be with Hypocrites in Everlasting Burnings It is good counsel which St. Paul giveth us Col. 2.6 As ye have received Christ Jesus the Lord so walk ye in him Thereby intimating that our returns ought to be sutable to favours and benefits which we have received The holy and righteous God loveth holiness and righteousness in his people and expects it from them When by our Baptism we were at first admitted into Christianity we entered into Covenant with God That we would renounce the Devil and all his Works the Pomps and Vanities of this wicked World and all the sinful desires of the flesh that we would believe all the Articles of the Christian Faith And that we would keep God's holy Will and Commandments and walk in the same all the days of our life Now our continued profession of that Faith into which we were baptized is indeed a daily repetition of that Promise but as often as we receive this holy Sacrament and feast with God upon this holy Sacrifice we solemnly renew our Covenant and do thereby engage our selves to perform the Conditions thereof To sum up all in a word therefore If you would know what is expected from you after you have been admitted a Guest at God's Table It is briefly this
You must make it your great concern with all care and Conscience to perform your Baptismal Vow and Covenant in all the parts and branches thereof i. e. You must take care to spend the remainder of your lives in living holily towards God and righteously towards all men And thus have I endeavoured to perform the third and last part of my Promise by acquainting you what it is that will be expected from you after you have had the honour to be admitted a Guest at God's Table and to bear your part in the Celebration of this holy Feast Pashioner Sir You have to my great satisfaction fully performed all that you promised And now it is my part not only to remember but carefully to observe and conscienciously follow those good Rules and Instructions which you have given me And that from this time forward I will endeavour by God's Assistance to do I beg your Pardon for the trouble I have given you and heartily thank you for the pains you have taken with me I hope you will excuse the One and I will endeavour to improve the Other to those good Ends and Purposes which you design'd it And that I may the sooner set about that Work I will at present take my Leave of you Pastor God b'w'y ' good Neighbour Go and do as you have said and the Lord give a Blessing thereunto Be not you wanting to your self in your Endeavours and God Almighty will never be wanting to you in his assistance But that you may carry on this work the more comfortably be frequent in your Prayers to God for his blessing and direction and rest assured my Prayers shall not be wanting at the Throne of Grace that you may be successful therein A SHORT FORM OF PRAYERS Fitted for the more Worthy RECEIVING OF THE Holy Communion WITH A Morning and Evening Prayer for the Use of Private Families WHen you hear the Exhortation read by the Minister on the Sunday or Holy-day before and find your selves thereby invited to and admonished to prepare your selves for the Celebration of the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper consider seriously by whom and to what you are invited imprint upon your minds a due sense of that great honour which is done you by God and of the great love of your dying Saviour and think with your selves with what Godly Preparation you ought to approach thereunto And that these impressions may not wear out let me advise you constantly to use this following or some such like Prayer and Confession every Morning and Evening the Week before O Almighty and most merciful Father who of thine infinite goodness hast been pleased to invite me not only to Feast with thee but to Feast upon thee who hast provided for me not only Sacramental Bread and Wine but the Bread and Water of Life the Body and Blood of my blessed Saviour How infinite is thy mercy and how unspeakable is thy loving kindness herein I am overwhelmed with the thoughts of it and lost in admiration But when I consider That Thou art a God of purer Eyes than to behold the least Iniquity That Thou neither dost nor canst approve of any Sin in any one then my fears arise and my confidence faileth me How shall I who am a great and grievous Sinner appear before thee How shall I dare to approach thy presence I cannot but own that both in thought word and deed I have grievously offended thy most Sacred Majesty and that too frequently and with too high an hand I have done what in me lay to forfeit thy favour and to provoke thy wrath and indignation against me What therefore can I expect but with him who wanted the Wedding-Garment to be rejected with scorn and exposed to Punishment But O Lord with Thee is mercy that thou mayst be feared It is thy property to have mercy and to forgive In confidence therefore of this thy great mercy and in hopes of Pardon and Forgiveness it is that I am now humbly bold to appear before Thee Behold me O Lord thus prostrate in thy presence with the tears of true and unfeigned Repentance bewailing the miscarriages of my by-past life and for thy mercies sake and for the merits sake of thy dear Son Jesus Christ humbly begging not only Pardoning Grace for Sins past but Preventing Grace against Sin for the time to come It was for my Sin that my Saviour suffered it was to wash away the stain thereof that he shed his Blood O let me not lose the benefit of it If there be any thing in me that may render me uncapable of it be pleased to remove it If there be any thing wanting in me to make me fit for it let thy Holy Spirit O Lord work it in me Subdue and mortifie all my Lusts and Corruptions and implant in me principles of Holiness and true Righteousness Teach me to love and fear Thee as I ought Give me an humble and obedient temper of mind Let it be my great pleasure to walk in thy ways and my only delight to keep thy commandments Make me thankful for all thy mercies and careful to improve them to thy glory my own comfort and the good of others Fit me for all states and conditions of life and prepare me for every good work but especially for the celebration of that Sacred Feast which I am now invited to Let nothing O Lord be wanting in me that Thou knowest requisite for me when I appear in thy presence Let me be found a welcome guest at thy Table and there receive that heavenly Food which alone can nourish up my Soul unto Eternal Life All which I humbly beg in the Name and Mediation of Jesus Christ and in that Sacred form of Words which he himself hath taught us saying Our Father which art in Heaven c. In the Morning of the Communion-Day before you go to Church use this following or some such like Prayer O Lord my God the Day the joyful Day is come on which Thou hast promised to provide and invited me to be a guest at a most Heavenly Banquet This day I am to Feast with Thee and Feed upon my blessed Saviour and Redeemer Give me I beseech Thee a due sense of that Honour and Happiness I am now going to be made partaker of and make me truly thankful for it I am now going to Thy Table good Lord fit and prepare me for it furnish me with such Graces and Ornaments of Mind as may be suitable to so high and honourable an entertainment fill my Soul with Fear and Reverence with Humility and Meekness with Piety and Devotion and with Faith and Charity that nothing may be found wanting in me when I appear before Thee Let thy Blessing go along with me and let Thy Holy Spirit guide and direct me Let me find a gracious reception there and a full satisfaction to all my wishes and desires Enable me so to Eat the Flesh and Drink the Blood of my blessed