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A95982 A treatise of the institution, right administration, and receiving of the sacrament of the Lords-Supper. Delivered in XX. sermons at St Laurence-Jury, London. / By the late reverend and learned minister of the Gospel Mr Richard Vines sometime master of Pembroke-Hall in Cambridge. Vines, Richard, 1600?-1656.; Baxter, Richard, 1615-1691.; Burgess, Anthony, d. 1664. 1656 (1656) Wing V572; Thomason E894_2; ESTC R203900 224,149 399

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shadow represented so shall this continue in the Church till the person come alive which is here represented dying and then an end of this too 2. At the end of the paschal Supper to shew that Jansen Harm p. 105. in this Sacrament there is no bodily repast intended for they had already supped but a spiritual refection of the soul The rosted Lamb might afford the guests a belly-full so the Religion and Ordinances and Promises in the Law were more outward and bodily but this Sacrament of the Gospel is an after Supper modicum full of spiritual signification but not so stuffie for outward matter that we may prepare not as Austin saith our months but our faith and expect to satisfie not the hunger and thirst of the body as they might but the hunger and thirst of the soul which in this little model may finde enough and over-measure The Temple-service among the Jews was an Heb. 9. 1 10. Rom. 2. penult outward Religion and as their Ordinances were outward so they generally were Jews outwardly we wonder that they so little saw and tasted the marrow and kernel of them and stuck in the rinde feeding on the crust of most Ordinances as if a man should think the cloth would heal the sore and not the plaister spread upon it but if we take estimate of them by our selves we shall finde that most of us should have been as they in that case for God having ordained for us outward Sacraments for number few for Observation easie for signification excellent as Austin speaks Epist 118. we are for the general but outward in them though we be clearlier taught what is within them yet we are in the Use of them but outwardly reverent as they and do not spiritually and inwardly enjoy the kernell of them which the Apostle took notice of when he said Not discerning the Lords body and so they are seals indeed but rather seals of a Letter which shut it up than seals of a Deed or Covenant conveying the Estate to us 3. Though it be not a Reason why this Ordinance was appointed after the Passeover-Supper yet I may Observe it to you in this place that hence it is called The Lords Supper from the Author it 's called the Lords and from the Time it 's called a Supper being celebrated in the night and at the close of Supper Some later Maldonat in Mat. 26. 26. Estius in 1 Cor. 11. 20. Jesuites do tax the novelty of the name and affirm Nullus in Scripturâ locus c. No place of Scripture cals it so for the term in this Chapter refers say they to the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Feasts of Love Used with it they may say as well that Lords Table 1 Cor. 10. 21. refers to them too which we believe not it is a spiritual feast that which Matthew cals a dinner Matth. 22. 4. is called by Luke a Supper Luk. 14. 16. but we call it the Lords Supper though it be received in the morning or any other time of day with reference to the time of the first institution as the Passeover in after-times was called the Passeover not becaUse there was any destroying Angel past over their hoUses every year but in respect of the first Passeover in Aegypt and in memory of that wherein there was a passing over the Israelites hoUses and a destroying of the Aegyptians first-born I could name to you many other names that this Sacrament bears in Scripture and ancient Authours farre more ancient then their Missa which is but once found in Ambrose and in none before him or the Sacrament of the Altar as they call it but I insist not now on names He that will may see them in Casaub Exercit 16. § 2 Secondly Why the Lord Jesus ordained it a very little before he was betrayed 1. He now seals his will which men Use to do Paraeus in loc when they are in sight of death This is the New Testament saith he in my bloud when men make their Wils they bequeath their body to the earth Christ bequeaths his body and bloud to us He bestows his body natural on his body mystical the Church The Testatour is Christ Heb. 9. 16. The Legacy bestowed is himself and all spiritual benefits with him My body and bloud The heirs are all believers Disciples The Executours for the outward part are those to whom he saith Hoc facite do this execute this my Will The Witnesses are the Evangelists and Saint Paul Here is a perfect sealing then of a Testament which is of force by the death of the Testatour and nothing must be added or taken away for it is a Will sealed and Gal. 3. 15. publisht 2. To leave it as his ultimum vale or last memorial Aug. Epist 118 of precious relish and esteem when men are going then they give memorial gifts unto their friends then they give their pictures Keep this for me Remember me when you see me not When men are dying then they pull their ring off their finger and leave it with their beloved Oh what impression have the verba morientis the word of a dying man As if a man saith Chrysostome should say to children These were your fathers dying words This was his last charge This he spoke and died and there is nothing that is remembred with more awe more affection than the last words the last gift of dying friends 3. To testifie his dearest love to his Church and people that when death was in sight and all the unspeakable sorrows shame and suffering were now ready to invade him when injuries from men were ready to load him and the justice of God upon sinne to be demonstrated on him all these did not make him forget his love His love to his poor people overtop'd all He loved them to the end Joh. 13. 2. and exprest it at the last and when he was in expectation of utmost sorrow he forgets not his love to his 4. To fortifie his Disciples against temptations which were now rushing in upon them when they should presently see their Lord led away as a prisoner to be arraigned and themselves scattered and discouraged Peter denying bloudy enemies insulting then to fortifie their hearts Let not your hearts be troubled Joh. 1● 1. He administers this Sacrament to strengthen the Union and Communion between him and them and to tie them to him so fast that the gates of hell might not prevail against them that their faith might not fail though it fainted as was said to Peter and though they fall yet they might not utterly be cast down as the Psalmist saith They had before eaten the body which they after saw broken and drunk the bloud which they after saw shed The broken body was not theirs that broke it The bloud shed was not theirs that shed it but it was theirs that had before eaten it and drunk it so God underprops his weak servants before
up anniversaries or festivals for his Nativity Circumcision Ascension c. which the Churches in after times Observed but he did set up in grosse this solemn memorial of himself and that is principally of his death His death I say For ye shew the Lords death ver 26. And why BecaUse his death is the expiation of sinne therein was made the Sacrifice of Atonement Redemption Reconciliation was made thereby the Covenant confirmed the love of God to man demonstrated the justice of God for sinne exemplified the foundation of our righteousnesse hope peace and victory laid the fulnesse of merit the mirrour of mercy the admiration of Angels the center of all Christianity and the summe of all Scripture types Prophecies Promises the most admirable of all the works of God that ever were and indeed all that can be said and more then can be said was here to be seen and is here to be remembred Secondly This remembrance of Christ must be lively and practical There is a naked historical theoretical remembrance a review of the Species or Ideas formerly imprinted in the minde So Absolom is remembred in his Pillar and Lot's wife in her pillar of salt meerly historically and there is a practical remembrance which connotes affections fruitfull effect and so in common speech to remember is to requite good or evil and in Scripture phrase God remembers our sins our services when he punishes or rewards Remember me O my God and spare me Nehem. 13. 22. with infinite the like Our remembrance of Christ in this Supper sets awork all that is within us Our sorrow for sinne as Peters remembrance of his words when the Cock crew Mark 14. 72. He wept bitterly our faith to believe in and receive him so Psal 20. 7. We will remember that is trust in the Name of our God It sets on work our thanksgiving for so great a benefit ingages resolutions blows up the coals of love fils with admiration What would the sight of Christ bleeding on the cress for us groaning under our sins have wrought on tender heart The same as far as a reflexion can work which is weaker than the direct Species should be the temper of our hearts when we see him and his death personated and acted in this Sacrament here we see him dying paying our ransome Oh the dreadfull example of Gods justice upon sin Oh the sweetest example of Gods mercy to a sinner actually acting their several parts in this spectacle of Christ represented to our saith as yet hanging on the crosse the Lamb of God is as yet smoking upon the Altar which takes away the sins of the world if you seel not your remembrance of Christ it 's nothing If you exercise onely wit and invention it 's barren but the exercise of affection is the best commemoration He that brings sin hither as bitter herbs shall be sweetly refresht with Christ our Passeover §. 3. To whom this Remembrance is made § 3 Quest To whom is this remembrance made Ausw 1. We make it unto and within our selves whetting upon our hearts the fruit and benefit we receive from him and the torments and pains he endured for us 2. We make this remembrance to others to all the world by our solemn profession of Christ and his death as that we stand unto for remission of sins and acceptation with God Let the Jew or Infidel laugh at us for trusting to a crucified Saviour and memorizing him in a piece of bread and cup of wine It is our joy and triumph we live and hope to die in and if need be for this profession 3. We make this remembrance to God we set before him the Sacrifice of his own Sonne and put him in minde by him to be mercifull to us we inculcate the death of Christ to God and set before him these monuments we say and pray Lord remember Mede Diatrib in Mal. 6. c. 1. v. 11. Forbes Hist Theol. p. 618. Cal. 2. that Sacrifice which we here remember If thou remember our sins we will remember thy Christ pardon us in the name of that Sacrifice which we commemorate and make mention of before thee and this is the reason why the Ancients so often called this Ordinance a Sacrifice which Chrysostom recalling himself saith Chrys in Heb. Homil. 17. pag. Graecat 856. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rather the commemoration of a Sacrifice becaUse they offer'd up their prayers and thanksgiving in the name of Christ the Sacrifice here commemorated for here is no real sacrificing of Christ to God that turns the Table into a crosse but here is the commemoration of a Sacrifice and a feasting and feeding thereupon by faith as men that are in covenant and fellowship with God CHAP. XIII A Lamentation for the neglect of this Ordinance NOw to the Use of this point The Lord hath left it in charge that his Church do celebrate this Ordinance in remembrance of him And § 1 First We may bewail that great eclipse which hath befallen this Ordinance here with us of later years the like to which hath not been seen in England since it became Protestant the remembrance and memorial of Christ hath been even forgotten and the Ordinance of Communion been render'd as the apple of contention and division a matter of quarrel rather than of Use the losse that is gained by this intermission or neglect or disUse or it is very great for we lose an inestimable benefit by it the solemn remembrance of Christ with the comforts thence resulting we lose a duty by it for Christ said Do this and is it not a great losse to lose so signal a note of the Church of Christ so great a benefit and the visible mischief hath been very great for hereby separation hath been mightily advanced the people like sheep wanting fodder at their own crib have scatter'd themselves to other cribs and pastures where they might finde sustenance and several communions have been taken up on the same Reason that water being carn'd or stopt from this old channel findes out or makes other water-courses and leaves the other channel dry and the generality of the people by their too easie patience under so great a famine have given too sad an argument how easily they would part with all Religion that have so carelesly suffer'd the losse of so great a part thereof as this Ordinance is I know that we shall like Josephs brethren be ready to transfer the fault on others no man will own it and yet haply we are all guilty it but in this that the Apostle said to the Corinthians in another case 1 Cor. 5. 2. And ye are puffed up and have not rather mourned For had not pride and envy discontent and security prevailed over us we might have mourned and lamented after or over this losse or eclypse and thereby have manifested not only a good disposition of heart in feeling the want of Ordinances but a very good sign that God would restore
the Apostles did not herein vary for they sung a Hymn at the close as Matth. 26. 30. which example I need not stand to improve against the Anti-psalmists of this age There are severall pertinent meditations that may fully take up the time of the action with great advantage and benefit to our souls as namely 1. The dreadfulness of Gods justice which with a terrible stroak did smite the great Shepherd for our sins the least dram of it would have sunk us to all eternity 2. The cursed nature of sinne that so exasperates the holy God and makes such a breach between God and the creature as can never be made up but by the broken body of the Lord of Glory 3. What it cost to redeem a soul a mass of gold as big as the whole earth not valuable with one drop of this blood 4. What an infinite love broke forth that God rather than let our souls be lost would send his eternall Son and make him sin for us 5. What a great work it is to reconcile a sinner to his God all names of men and Angels are nothing to it all their sufferings would not pay a penny of this debt which is not dissolved by any blood but of the Lord of Glory 6. That God would not only pardon sin by giving forth a generall pardon as a King pardons rebels but so pardon as might even melt the hardest heart and for ever humble and silence and satisfie it by the love of God and the sufficiency of that Sacrifice whose vertue extends to thousands and lasts alwaies 7. That the gratious Covenant of God made with all that beleeeve in Christ is sealed and ratified with such blood as there needs no doubt of the validity of the Covenant though one man bad as many sins on him as all the world 8. That Gods way of saving man by a Mediatour the death of a Mediatour doth oblige man to be the thankfullest creature in the world Angels that sin'd not have need of no Mediatour Angels that sin'd have none man that sin'd and therefore needs one hath one given to him The man Christ Jesus 9. That as God gave Christ for you so he gives him to you that he that was your Sacrifice offered up to God might in this Sacrament be offered unto you as meat and drink as spirituall repast that as we live by Christ so we may live upon him being entertained as confederates to feast with God upon the Sacrifice offered up unto him It is a fruitfull field of Meditation through which ye may walk the time of celebration and then breathe out your Meditations in a Song of praise as the close and musick of this heavenly Feast Concerning which Hymn wherewith the Jews did usually close the coenam apolyticam or dimissory Supper calling it the Hallel from the first word of it Hallelujah you may consult not only the Jewish Writers but our Learned men Cameron Myroth in Matth. 16. 30. Drusius in Matth. 26. 30. Hugo Broughton in Dan. pag. 46. beside Paulus Burgensis Gerard Harm Fol. 178. col 3. who do also point out to us the 113. 114. Psalms as that Hymn for though some others do rather conceive it a new Hymn composed by our Saviour Grotius in Matth. 26. and the 17 Chapter of St John to be it we finde no Reason to go with them in that opinion both becaUse our Saviour did not easily vary from the Rite or Custom received nor could the Disciples have sung with him in consort except we imagine such a praelection of it to them as is Used by us now a daies which will not be proved CHAP. XIII How much it concerneth Ministers to Teach and all to Learn the true meaning of this Ordinance 1 COR. 11. 26 27. For as often as ye eat this bread and drink this cup ye do shew the death of the Lord untill he come Wherefore whosoever doth eat this bread and drink this cup of the Lord c. VVHen this Ordinance of the Supper is suitable to the Institution and the Communicant is suitable to the Ordinance then all is right Of the former I have acquitted my self by setting forth the nature Use end of this Sacrament according to our Lords Institution recited by the Evangelists and by St Paul in this place § 1 Now I am to proceed unto the later which is to render the Communicant suitable to the Ordinance of which our Saviour did not in the Institution directly speak but the Apostle in this place speaks more fully and directly unto than in any other place is found the abUses and distempers of the Corinthians leading him most properly to it and though in Popish Churches the grand errour and abUse lies in the unsutableness of their Mass to the Institution yet in Reformed Churches who endeavour to imitate the pattern in the Mount the common sin lies in the unsutableness of the Communicant to the Ordinance and so the point of worship stands between us and the Papists much alike as it stood between the Samaritans and the Jews of old The Samaritans Used a false worship Ye worship ye know not what Joh. 4. 22. The Jews had a true worship but were carnall and for the most part formall worshippers The Feast is prepared drest and ordered according to the Institution of Christ Now the guests are to be surveyed and tried whether they come worthily or unworthily by the test or ticket of the Apostles Doctrine following to the end of the Chapter of which I shall say this in generall 1. That the Apostles Doctrine in this place is properly calculated for the rectifying the abUses and unworthiness of the Corinthians as ye may see at the 33 34 verses but so also most other Scriptures occasionally written are of generall Use their latitude is greater than their particular direction 2. That the Apostle spends the most of his Doctrine upon eating and drinking unworthily setting home the sin and danger of it for the occasion viz. the sinne of the Corinthians required it and yet doubtless the point of worthiness should in order of nature be first stated before unworthiness can be understood for how should I know sinne except first I knew a law of duty how a crooked line except I know what is straight and therefore to attent consideration the Apostle will be found to begin there as I shall shew you afterwards 3. That the Apostle in setting home the sinne and danger of eating and drinking unworthily speaks thunder and lightning in very pertinent but yet new and unusuall phrases which are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 have no brother in any other part of Scripture as guilty of the body and blood of the Lord eating and drinking judgement or damnation c. full of terrour and fit for compunction These of the 26 verse are the words of St Paul who having recited what Christ did and said at the first celebration and institution of this Sacrament goes about to set
is enough to the putting on my better clothes and framing my self to a grave composure but here I am to meet my Lord Christ and to receive him as my Saviour I am to have the Covenant of mercy sealed to me in his blood I am to make a thankfull memoriall of Christ and to profess my embracement and adherence to his death as my only comfort therefore be thou awakened O my faith my godly sorrow my spirituall appetite my thankfulness that I may go out to Christ and he come in to me 3. This takes off all slighting and undervaluing of this Ordinance which appears to an outward and carnall eye No better bread or wine than I can have at home for in this plain case is a rich Jewel this bread is the body this wine is the Blood of the Lord of Glory and therefore I must not value the seal by the worth of the wax which is not worth a penny but by the pardon or the inheritance which passes and is conveyed by it 4. This keeps me from running blindfold into the sin of guiltiness of the Body and Blood of the Lord and so into condemnation for as the same Signet or Seal of a Prince doth to one seal a pardon to another an execution so this very Sacrament is to a Beleever a seal of pardon to another as it were the seal of his condemnation 5. Lastly The preparation so much spoken of and the self-examination required by the Apostle cannot be imagined to referre to the eating of bread and drinking wine but to the inward thing of the Sacrament it necessarily follows that those inward graces that enable us to have communion with Christ and make commemoration of him can never be known or sought except we know the meaning of this Sacrament for it is that which gives the Law and Rule of all our preparations And so I have shown you the Reasons why we should labour to understand the language of this Ordinance So much of this generall Point the second Point shall be taken from those words Ye shew the Lords death or shew ye for the word might be construed imparatively but that the particle For would not then so well consist CHAP. XIV The great business that lies upon the Communicant as oft as he eats this Bread and drinks this Cup is to shew the Lords Death Doct. 2 THis Point cleaves into two parts § 1 First It is the Lords death which in this Sacrament is shewn forth The two standing Sacraments of the Jewish Church Circumcision and the Passeover did both appear in blood The two standing Sacraments of the Gospel do also referre to death We are buried with him by Baptism into death Rom. 6. 4. and in the Supper we shew the Lords death As of all deliverances and benefits vouchsafed to Israel of old God would have the Passeover-deliverance celebrated by a constant memoriall in all generations so of all that Christ doth for us it is his death that must be shewn forth in all generations of the Church till he come again and therefore this Ordinance is speculum crucifixi as Calvin saith and In 1 Cor. 11. the memoriall not so much of Christs life or resurrection De satisfact cap. 1. saith Grotius as of his death This death hath no second in all the world for it was the death of the Sonne of God the death of the Lamb of God 1. Of the Sonne of God the Lord of Glory whose highness and excellency gave price and value to his death Had he not been man he could not have suffered Had he not been the Sonne of God God blessed for ever he could not have satisfied and conquered 2. Of the Lamb of God and therefore his death was a Sacrifice and that 's more than a Martyrdom for though a Martyr may be said to seal with his blood that truth he dies upon yet no blood can seal the Covenant but this of Christ no death can ratifie the Testament but the Testators death Had the death been the death of the Lord a most excellent person and not also the death of a Lamb for Sacrifice to make attonement it had wanted one of his properties but it was both As it was the death of the Lord of Glory the Sonne of God so it gave us the most illustrious testimony and example of the love of God as ever was or could be and that the Scripture often points unto As it was the death of the Lamb of God so it was a Sacrifice death wherein he was made sinne for us and bore our sinnes in his Body As it was the Joh. 11. 13. Rom. 5. Gal. 2. 20. death both of the Sonne of God and the Lamb of God so it reconciled us sinners unto God and meritoriously redeemed and ransomed us from our bondage to the curse and wrath of God the only ground and foundation of our hope peace and comfort § 2 Secondly It is the business of the Communicant to shew forth this death of the Lord The Ordinance it self is full of death what other language doth bread broken and the blood severed from the body speak but a dying Christ As the Ordinance so the Communicant doth by eating and drinking in fact declare and annunciate his profession of adherence to and embracement of the death of Christ we solemnly and publiquely avow both to God and men that we stick unto and abide by the death of the Lord for remission of sinne and reconciliation of our persons to God and it is a solemn part of Gods positive worship to shew forth the death of Christ our Lord not by a meer historicall relation but a practicall and publique profession of our faith and acceptance thereof which though at all times we may remember yet God would have a solemn Ordinance in his Gospel-Churches for the commemoration and shewing of it forth which Ordinance is this of the Supper I know men are witty to elude Ordinances and to flatter themselves with private devotions and meditations but when God hath set up an Ordinance on purpose for the publique and solemn shewing of the Lords death let them consider it that are not only careless of the benefit of it but fail of their duty by not presenting themselves at this solemn shewing of the Lords death but how can it be expected that they that shew not the life of Christ by a godly conversation should care to shew forth his death by publique profession or rather how can it be construed that they do it out of conscience of duty and not out of meer superstition expecting that from the Sacrament which the Papist expects from his auricular confession that is to quit the old score that he may more freely begin upon a new But I may not forget that which is very learnedly Observed that the Apostle using the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which frequently is Used for publishing and preaching Schiud in loc Haggada the Gospel doth
allude to the Haggada as it was called by the Jewish custom at the Passeover and that was a set and solemn declaration or annunciation of the Lords passing over the hoUses sprinkled with blood of their slavery and hard bondage in Aegypt and their deliverance thence teaching us in this our Gospel-Passeover to shew forth our hard bondage under sinne and the Lords justice passing over all the souls sprinkled with this blood and thereby delivering us from our spirituall Aegypt § 3 The Use of this Point is to call upon all Communicants hoc agere to be intent upon and taken up with this employment Shew ye forth the Lords death this must be your actuall exercise at the time of eating and drinking the death of Christ must fill your eyes your ears your lips your thoughts If any of you could see Christ dying the sight would wholly take you up and you come as near to see him dying as an Ordinance can bring you in a representation If any where that Psal 2. 11. takes place here Rejoyce with trembling Tremble for you see the weight of sinne upon the Lord Christ and the severity and wrathfull indignation of God against sinne both those terrours cannot be seen in a clearer glass than the death of the Lord Rejoyce for the love that delivers up Christ is unparallel'd and the death of the Lord is succedaneous a Sacrifice death the Sacrifice bears the sinne and takes it off you there is a nunc dimitiis for all you that take Christ in your arms I would not be thinking of the joys of heaven the second coming of Christ absolutely and abstractly considered but shewing forth his death As in prayer good thoughts if impertinent are distractions and to be whipt for vagrants so here If my heart present to me the anger and terrible wrath of a just and holy God I shew the Lords death If the Law take me by the throat and say Pay that thou owest I shew the Lords death If conscience ask me what I have to shew for pardon of sin and peace with God I shew the Lords death Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect It s Christ that died CHAP. XV. The Lords Supper is an iterable Ordinance THe third Point is taken up from the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For as often as ye eat this bread c. Doct. The Sacrament of the Lords Supper is an iterable Ordinance which is to be repeated Our Saviour gives a hint of this in those words This do for a remembrance of me and the Apostle from him For as often c. The word often is sometimes opposed to seldom and sometimes to once as Heb. 9. 25 26. Nor yet that he should offer himself often as the High priest entreth into the holy place every year For then he must have often suffered since the foundation of the world The Sacrifice of Christ or the offering of him up was but once Heb. 9. 26. The Sacrament of his body and bloud is often as a memorial of that Sacrifice and the comparison Used in that place is this As man dies but once so Christ also As in the Sacraments of the Jews the first of them Circumcision was but once nor indeed could be but the Passeover often once every year and Christ was but once circumcised but kept the Passeover often So in the Sacraments of the New Testament Baptism is but once Christ was but once baptized but the Supper often which though Christ celebrated but once yet he gave order for the repetition of it I will not now take up the discussion why Baptism but once the Supper often the Scripture gives us no hint for the repetition of the one but it doth for the other and the old saying is plausible Semel nascimur saepius pascimur we are but once born but we are often nourisht God did more punctually and precisely under the Law prescribe the times of their Sacraments the eighth day for circumcision such a day of such a moneth yearly for the Passeover as he also did the times and place and other circumstances of his worship for the people were more servile then and the worship more outward but under the Gospel circumstances are at more liberty and spiritualnesse more call'd for and therefore in this Sacrament for instance we have nothing for how often but we have for how worthily as a learned man Observes and therefore under correction it was not so right Muscul de coena Lib 4. distinct 13. Qu. 5. that when as Durand saith The primitive devotion of communicating every day was grown so cool that it came to be commanded on the three great festivals whereof Easter was by Innocent the first made Anno 1200. of the Quorum I might instance nearer home enjoyning all to it at that time For of this Chrysostom had complained long before that at those times the people either of custome or by Law crouded in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who as well 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 O the custome saith he O the partiality of men The truth is I finde that in times of persecution threatning Christians either to arm themselves or in fear of being scatter'd and dispers'd took every occasion to celebrate the Supper and Justin Martyr signifies that their solemn meetings on the Lords dayes were accompanied with this feast and that the Question how often is propounded in Austine and Chrysostom and Austin perswades and exhorts every Lords-day Austin Eccles Dogm cap. 53. Chrysost hom 13. heb Gerard. Harm cap. 171. if the heart be prepared and Chrysostom saith that a pure conscience may come as often as it will but for a wicked man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 once is too often and to conclude if the necessity of our infirmities the great benefit the honour of this memorial may be heard to speak we shall come to this Rule That frequency beget not a customary formality or fastidious satiety as Manna did nor seldomnesse beget forgetfulnesse or superstitiousnesse extraordinarinesse and under this caution I leave the determination of the times unto the Church CHAP. XVI Of the Continuance of this and other Gospel-Ordinances in the Church THe fourth point ariseth from the last words Untill he come and it is this This Ordinance and so all Gospel-ordinances are to continue in force in the Churches untill Christ come and this point cleaves into two parts § 1 First The Lord Christ will come again he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 10. 37. He that shall come he shall appear the second time Heb. 9. 28. as in the old Church of Israel there was a glorious Temple then a captivity that followed after the captivity a second Temple and then Christ came So in Gospel-Churches there was first a glorious Virgin primitive Church then followed a captivity under Antichrist and that captivity shall be followed with a second Temple a Reformed Church and then Christ shall come again but as
blinde and unworthy the Remedy and Reformation of which inveterate abUse and the prevention of Separation from our Churches had no order been appointed which must have universally followed by the necessity of the thing and instigation of them that lay on the advantage were such Reasons as could enforce no lesse Nor do I know how possibly otherwise the matter could be remedied or radrest not intended to despise any that had right before and had been long admitted 3. The principal thing is that the end of this Examination be obtained though the form or manner be not punctual as namely That a man have competent knowledge of this Ordinance and be so known to have whether by good testimony of others that are able or by our acquaintance or by conference or he is a learned man a knowing man a Minister of the Word which may be justly presumed to have due knowledge as Paul presumed that Agrippa believed the Prophets I say in these cases the end of Examination is attained Nay if one should come and declare himself by confession of his Christian faith and purpose of life without any Question propounded or asked I should not so dote upon Questions and forms of Examination as not to passe such a one for a knowing man becaUse I have attained the end of all Examination which is I know that he hath knowledge competent not that I would encourage any man to break a wholsom order or establishment for the Scripture requires and the Apostle enjoyned to see order in the Church Col. 2. 5. But that I would principally intend the thing it self above the form not denying the right which he hath by his knowledge and profession nor thrusting him upon a separation meerly upon a form except in one case that a man intend to break a publick order and to destroy it by his example As if a man tear my hedge upon a just occasion I take no offence but if he purpose to let all the Swine into my corn I should oppose him 4. I could wish that all Examination were bounded and limited to such Questions as are of necessity to this Sacrament There were printed some few Questions and Answers as the rule and bounds of it some five or six years since For I dare not trust the discretion of all men without a gage And if any man should ask me such a Question as is not necessary or for a Scholar to know or to pry into my secrets I should though I could answer crave excUse I am afraid of and terribly hate auricular confession I love no step toward it and therefore I would not answer upon my own liberty 5. Though some will say I can declare my self to my Minister but not otherwise I confess the Pastour hath the greatest account to make of his people and is most concerned But what if the Church will not trust him with that report as all Ministers are not to be trusted with it such is their loosnesse in this point and too much facility And were I to chUse I had rather do it under the eye of witnesses especially in conversing with women who though in one regard their modesty hinders to speak before others yet in other regards is matter of occasion to them that are ill minded which must needs be avoided providing things honest not before God but men 6. Lastly Let men lay conscience to the point and set by passion and prejudice both examiner and examined and in humility and meeknes deny themselves to keep up some face of order in these broken times Let your thirst to this Sacrament carry you thorow a thorn-hedge and I on the other hand shall stoop low rather than a thirsty soul should want the Sacrament or be thrust on the Rock of Separation and so we shall meet at the end though differ in the way It should be a very sorry answer indeed that I would not make the best of and I hope you would not make the worst of any errour or infirmity in me I know Order in an Army as he sayes kils no body yet without it they are a Rout and not an Army FINIS THE TABLE A ABUses in Ordinances no ground for separation 30 Actions in the Lords Supper of Christ 76 Communicants 95 B BRead must be broken and why 88 Benefit of worthy receiving 314 1. Generally 1. It is of higher nature then the Elements of themselves can convey 319 2. Blessings of the Covenant are sealed and graces of the Covenant improved 320 2. Particularly 1. What God conveys 1. Christ and his benefits 322 2. The Covenant sealed 324 2. What believers receive 1 The body and bloud of Christ 326 2. Remission of sin 327 3. Communication of greater proportion of Gospel-spirit 329 C COvetousness caUse of Judas TReason 47 Counsel of God fulfilled by wicked instruments 58 Consecration of Elements by what words 81 Cups divers in the Passeover 79 D DIscipline what to be done where it cannot be duly administred 223 Discerning the Lords body what it is 338 Danger of unworthy eating 345 E ELements what they signifie 73 Must be taken severally ib. Were severally blest 77 By what words consecrated 81 Ought to be consecrated only by a Presbyter 83 Changed only in their Use 85 Whether given by Christ immediately to all 91 Inward signification of them 117 They work not physically 267 Examination of our selves required to right participation of the Lords Supper 352 Examination 3. 1. Of Men. 356 2. Of Christians ib. 3. Of Communicants 357 Motives to and Directions for it 358 Examination by Elders 370 F FAsting not necessary before the Lords Supper 29 Fitness for the Lords Supper wherein it consists 278 May be set too high or too low 279 G GRaces to be exercised in Communicants 289 1. Knowledge of Nature Vse End of this Ordinance 290 2. Christ-receiving faith 292 3. Repentance 293 4. Spiritual appetite after Christ 296 5. Love to fellow-members 297 6. Thankefulness 298 Grace that is true how differenced from counterfeits 367 Guilty of the body and bloud of Christ what 342 Ground of worthy receiving and of the Churches admission different 343 I JEwish writings and customs needfull to expound the New Testament 2 Institution best rule for Reformation 34 Words of it explained 111 Irreverent carriage reproved 277 Judas intended not Christs death 57 K KNowledge of the Nature Vse and End of this Ordinance required in a Communicant 290 L LOrds-Supper Elements of it taken from Passeover 2 Who capable of worthy receiving 20 Occasional circumstances not obliging 22 Christ the Author of it 48 Why instituted at night 63 After Supper ib. Little before betraid 66 An Ordinance of Fellowship 98 What it exhibits 120 An inner Ordinance only for believers 140 The End of it the remembrance of Christ 141 Occasions of the neglect of it 148 How Obstructions may be removed 153 How our mindes should be exercised in it 156 The great work of it to shew Christs death 167 An Ordinance to be repeated 171 Must continue till Christ come 174 A barred Ordinance 182 Who ought to be debarred 191 Not a converting Ordinance by Institution 247 Yet may occasionally convert 250 Love feasts how abUsed 30 M MIxt Communion no ground for separation 234 Motives to endeavours after right participation 300 Motives to self-examination 358 N NEcessity of teaching and learning the true meaning of the Lords-Supper 161 P PApists must have faith of miracles 86 Passeover represented Christs death 3 Why so called ib. Whether a Sacrifice 5 Christ our Passeover 6 It looked Backward as a remembrancer 8 Forward as a type 8 How it resembles Christ sacrificed 9 Christ in the Sacrament 13 Preparation for the Lords Supper 274 Q QUalification for worthy receiving false and insufficient 304 Qualifications of remembrance of Christs death 143 R REmembrance of Christs death 143 To whom it is made 145 Rites and gestures spurious in Lords-Supper 101 S SAcrament and Sacrifice how differ 5 Sacrament must resemble the thing signified 104 Consists only in the Use 106 Scriptures necessity 40 Separation not grounded on AbUses in Ordinances 30 Mixt Communions 234 Sign taken for thing signified 7 Sins of Judas and Disciples how differ'd 61 Sins scandalous what 212 Sins notorious what 213 Socinian errour 120 T TRansubstantiation its rise 128 Arguments against it 130 V UNworthy receiving a great and dangerous sin 332 The caUse of the sin Not discerning c. 337 Aggravations of the sin 341 Danger of it 345 Dangerous to Church and State 348 A godly person may receive Unworthily 285 W WOrthy and unworthy receiving 45 180 263 Worthy receiving not to be measured by success 265 What required to it 283 Benefit of it 314 Who capable of it 20 False qualifications for it 304 FINIS ERRATA PAg. 3. lin 27 r to suffer p 4. l. 18 Gerard. p. 5. l. 2. r. paterfamilias p. 6. l. 3 prius prosunt p. 8. r. § 5 6. p 8. l. 28. r. not only hrist p. 9 l. 7. r. this life-giving death of p. 22. l. 15. r. and blessing p. 33. l. 14. ● Hebrewish with whom the c. p. 37. l. 24. r. the Lord I have received of the Lora that which also I delivered p 44. l. 31. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 5● l. 13. r. Author from him therefore l. 22. r. Schoolman saith l. 23. r. were contained p. 58. l. 13. r. saith Ames p. 77. l. 16. r. Post-coenium p. 85. l. 17. r. Marcion l. 18. 1. body l. 20. r. humane l. 22. r. being p. 93. l. 32. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 95. l. 12. r. Thus Every p. 143. l. 14. r. Benefits Benefactors
A TREATISE OF THE Institution Right Administration and Receiving of the SACRAMENT OF THE Lords-Supper Delivered in XX. SERMONS at St Laurence-Jury London By the late Reverend and Learned Minister of the Gospel Mr Richard Vines sometime Master of Pembroke-Hall in Cambridge LONDON Printed by A. M. for Thomas Vnderhill at the Anchor and Bible in Pauls Church-yard near the little North-door 1657. Upon the Sight of Mr VINES His Posthumous TREATISE OF THE SACRAMENT October 18. 1656. WHile thou grew'st here thy fruit made glad The hearts that sin and death made sad Lest we should surset of thy fruit Thy life retired to the Root Desiring with us first to keep A Passeover before thy sleep Weary of Earth thou took'st thine ease Passing into the Land of Peace The threatned evil we fore-see But hope to hide our selves with thee Though thou art gone while we must fight Wee 'le call it Victory not Flight When God had taken up this VINE We thought to taste no more its Wine Till in the Land of Salem s King We drink it new even from the Spring But unexpectedly we finde Some Clufters which are left behinde This Mantle from thy Chariot fell We know it by the pleasant smell Who know's but from this little seed Some more such fruitfull Vines may breed The Tree of Death beau's precious fruit Though in the Earth it have no root Dear Brother thou art gone before And I a wretch wait at the doore Sin doth not only keep me thence But makes me loth to go from hence When Christ hath heal'd me of this sin And made me fit hee 'le let me in Till then may I but in a Glass See what you see with open face Sure it will raise my heavy Soul And these distrustfull fears controll And make me willing to be gone As knowing whither and to Whom If Time be Nothing as some say You that were with us yesterday Are with us still or we with you Which is the better of the two The Soul imbodied in those lines Doth make us say that This is VINES And if our hearts with you could be Our Lord would say that there are we But as according to desert The Heavens have got thy better part And left us but some of the Wine Whil'st they have taken up the Vine So we look up and wait and pray And yet still feel we live in Clay Here we are keeping sin's account While some small sparks do upward mount Crying How long Holy and True Till we are taken up to you Thus also we must follow Love To finde our HEAD and LIFE above He that is made by the New-Birth A BURGESS of the Church on Earth And then by Faith can rise so high In Divine LOVE to Live and Die Shall be translated to your soil Remov'd from sin and fear and toil And from this HoUse of Worms and Moles Unto that Element of Souls Where every Branch becomes a Vine And where these Clods like Stars will shine God is not there known by the Book You need not there the Pruning Hook There you have Wine without the Press And God his Praise without Distress There we shall finde our Eyes and Sight When we come to our Head and Light The Kernel is where you now dwell And we here strive about the Shell You have the Reconciling Light Who are past Faith and live by sight No wonder then if you are One When Peace from Earth is almost gone We crowd about a little spark Learnedly striving in the Dark Never so bold as when most Blinde Run fastest when the Truth 's behinde No Heresies with you are sown There 's not a Truth but all will own A mixture we get here by rote And Errour keep 's the major Vote There Pride and Faction cannot enter There 's no Division in the Center The Saints there play not Satans part They Use not any Carnal Art Their Righteous Brethren to defame And by untruths to blot their Name There you are Comely and not Black Each One hath All yet None do lack What sin or smart can you befall Where SELF 's put off and God is All Look up and see now VINES is gone Are not the Stars the more by One No but One fewer in our sight For we have forfeited his Light And such a One as all do miss Save those whose pleasure darkness is And who can Number Stars above When Saints so fast to Heav'n remove If but three such in all our times As USHER GATAKER and VINES Were taken hence by fatal sleep Three Nations should consent to weep And if an Age this loss repair The Church will think it very fair They shine in Glory now to God Who shin'd and burn'd here to a Clod. May such a sinfull Worm as I Aspire and ascend so high That Kingdom 's mine in Hope and Right Which you possess by Love and sight That God that Christ hath loved me Whose Glory blessed VINES doth see We were both washed in one stream And both enlightened by one beam One Garment also did us cloath At once One Pulpit held us both Much more One Church for we agreed Both in One Method and One Creed One Evil we did both condole As animated by One Soul Me think's where thou art I should be Although the lowest in degree Though thou art gone and I am here Yet is my Passing-Hour neer Time is at work both Night and Day Even when it seemeth to delay My Grave and Coffin are at hand My Glass hath but a little Sand Now I am writing and anon They'se also say of me He 's gone Then I shall see the shining face Which is the Glory of your place But lest in vain I hope and run Lord perfect what thou hast begun Richard Baxter TO THE READER THe Posthumous Works of Learned Writers like fatherless Children are exposed to many wrongs and injuries Yea such hath been the fraud of some Impostors in the Church that they have taken away the live children of famous men and put their dead ones in the room Hence are those spurious and supposititious Books which have wandered up and down with their counterfeit Passes That therefore no suspicious thoughts may possess thee concerning this Treatise which is here published under the Name of that Learned and Eminent man Mr Vines I do upon sure and unQuestionable Evidences give my publick Testimony that it is his proper and genuine Work printed by the Copy that was written with his own hand Thy Well-wisher ANTHONY BURGESSE Sutton-Coldfield Sep. 20. 1656. THE CONTENTS CHAP. I. OF the Passeover or Paschal Lamb It 's signification and the Analogy or Resemblance between it and Christ our Passeover CHAP. II. Of Errours and Corruptions in the Church How soon they spring up When they are a ground of Separation and when not That this Ordinance must be sutable to Gods Institutions And the Communicants must be sutable to this Ordinance CHAP. III. That the Lord Jesus is the Author
unsealed and unwritten too will stand good to many purposes The Emperour Valentinian earnestly desired Baptism but before Ambrose could come died He was sayed saith Ambrose voto Baptismi by the desire of Baptism No The desire was good but it was his faith in Christ that saved him Crede manducasti saith Austin Believe and thou hast eaten What then need we care for Sacraments Yea the Covenant passes the Estate the Seal secures and quiets it God need neither adde to his Promise Oath or Seal to binde himself thereby but to settle us CHAP. IV. Of the Time of this Sacraments Institution And of Judas his betraying Christ. SO much of the Authour now to the Time of this The time Institution In the same night wherein he was betrayed The Lord Jesus was betray'd he was betray'd in the night The same night in which he was betrayed he instituted and celebrated this Supper § 1 First The Lord Jesus was betrayed The same word signifies Gods delivering up his Sonne to death Rom. 8. 32. and Judas his delivering up his Master to the Jews Luk. 22. 4. and the Jews their delivering of him up to Pilate Mat. 27. 18. God is not said to betray his Sonne becaUse according to his purpose and out of his love to man-kinde he delivered him to death for their redemption but both the Jews and Judas are said to have betray'd him they for envy seeking his bloud Matth. 27. 18. He for covetousness seeking money Matth. 26. 15. for it is thought that Judas conceiv'd that Christ would slip out of the mids of them and go away as often he had done and then his Master were safe and he had his money for it 's said Matth. 27. 2. that then Judas which had betray'd him when he saw that Christ was condemned repented himself It 's a good saying that we should not look on pleasure as it comes toward us but as it goes from us Sinne before it be committed seems to the eye of lust full of profit pleasure after commission when the lust is spent Ammon hates Tamar for whom he was sick before But the traitor sticks fastest to Judas he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the betrayer of Christ his Lord and Master and therefore the brand is set upon him Judas Iscariot who betrayed him as on Jeroboam that made Israel to sinne and how did he betray him He brought a band of men to the place where Christ was and marked him out unto them with a kisse Matth. 26. 48. This is he take him and hold him fast This Text refers not to Gods delivering up of Christ nor to the Luk. 22. 48. Jews but to Judas for it 's said In the night that he was betrayed and that was by Judas only § 2 Judas being an instrument to bring to passe Gods holy councel and purpose plunged himself by his sinne into Obs deep damnation It was Gods purpose and decree that Christ should die and he himself deliver'd him up to death but as God holily and justly doth what Josephs brethren do sinfully so he delivers up the Lord Jesus by wicked hands Luk. 22. 22. The Sonne of man goes viz dies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as it was decreed and determin'd But woe to that man by whom he is betrayed it had been good for that man that he had not been born It is according as it is decreed yet woe to that man c. Acts 2. 23. He was deliver'd by the determinate councel and fore-knowledge of God but you have slain him by wicked hands God brings his holy councels purposes and decrees to passe by most wicked instruments The giving up his Sonne to death was the most glorious work of grace and love that ever was but effected by most wicked hands Godly men could not be imployed in such services An Artificer Useth a crooked tool to do that which he cannot do by a strait one The secret will of God is no rule of our obedience Nec omnis revelata saith Ainsw not every reveal'd Medull a lib. cap. 1. §. 23. will neither his instance is of Jeroboam to whom it was reveal'd long before that he should have ten Tribes 1 King 11. ●1 which yet peccavit occupando he sinn'd in assuming 2 Chron. 3. 5 6 7. The revealing of an event which God hath determined or those actions whereby that event shall be brought to passe gives no warrant for else Hazael being told 2 King 8. 12. before and Judas too what they should both do might have been pleaded for justification After a wonderfull manner saith Austin that is against Gods will which is not besides it It 's against the will of his command which is our rule which is not beside the will of his purpose and yet may be our sin God is just and gracious in delivering up his Sonne to death but Judas and the Jews sin horribly in it there is Rom. 12. 2. That good and acceptable and perfect will of God which the godly are to hold unto but for the Act. 2. 23. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gods determinate councell Pharaoh and Judas and Herod and Pilate the worst names in the whole world may be the instruments and damned midwives to bring it to the birth for as Mr Brightman saith in another case a fair and perfect childe born doth not make any thing the better the adultery in which it was begotten so the being the work of Gods purpose nothing warrants the act of any man or of Judas that betray'd Christ I must not enlarge upon these § 3 Obs 2 The Lord Jesus was betrayed in the night Judas marches as Captain of the band of men and Officers of the Chief-Priests and Pharisees unto the Garden with Lanterns Torches Weapons Joh. 18. 3. They are cunning to do their work in the night without notice and noise tumult He that about an hour or two ago had been at Passeover with Christ now betrayes him He had sold him afore and now delivers him § 4 Observe here the pattern of a wicked heart made worse by spiritual Ordinances Whether Judas was present at and participant of the Lords Supper that is whether he received both Sacraments the Passeover and the Lords Supper we may haply hereafter consider but at the Passover he was at that Passover which Christ saith he had heartily desired to eat with them Luk. 22. 15. and with the holiest society in the world but he was a Serpent in Paradise all the while § 5 His Character is this 1. He was purse-bearer and receiver of the contributions that came in and steward to lay out upon occasion and becaUse he inverted the publick stock to his private Use he is called a thief John ●2 6. 2. His Covetousness in time began to flie at great gain for though he retained to such a Master and was both a Teacher and Preacher of heavenly Doctrine yet he thrives from a thief to a traitour and exposed to
is no Reason to deny those that are godly the liberty of performance of this duty or enjoyment of this benefit Why are they starved becaUse others will not or ought not to eat Did the Church that lived amongst Jews or Heathens alwayes want this Sacrament They were sometimes disturbed and persecuted when the Civil Magistrate turned the edge of the Axe toward them but they lost not the Ordinance Why but we have no rule establisht by Civil Authority or rather no Government Nor had the Primitive Church for 300 years when the vigour of Discipline was strongest How was their Discipline of force Per pacta conventu by consent whereby all Discipline is valid He that will be of our body must submit to the Laws and Rules of that Corporation he is free of whether to be enfranchised or disfranchised What if wicked men break in and abUse our Sacrament what if Heathens had so done in the Primitive Church If they eat our bread it 's no Sacrament to them If extream violence be Used or feared we have the protection of the Magistrate or as the first Christians we have our hoUses to break the Lords bread in §. 3. Of removing Obstructions to this Ordinance § 3 Quest If the command be so high the memoriall so sweet the benefit so great What may be done that there may be no Obstruction between my soul and this duty this remembrance this benefit Ans I le set my self amongst you and be as the lowest of the people and this should be my rule I would abate and submit and strip my self of all carnall respects pride stomach-envy discontent scorn c. rather than deprive my self of this benefit or hinder my self from coming to meet my Lord Christ It should be point of conscience that should hinder me or nothing And now on the other side I le set my self in place of a Minister or Church-officer and my rule is this I will abate and strip my self of all pride interest enmity contempt of my neighbour partiality base and carnall respects rather than keep my self from giving it to you and would bring it to a point of conscience only that shall forbid me or nothing when it is at a point of conscience then both I and you must examine whether our consciences be not bound by errour that which binds you may loosen me that which binds me may loosen you if we inform one another and if errour be found I will cut the bond and set my self at liberty to receive or give the Lords Supper and I am consident that if carnall thoughts Reasons and respects were cut off on all sides thousands would be reduced that stand off both from their duty and from their benefit It was the case of many of precious memory that liked not the Ceremonies yet submitted to those inconveniences rather than lose that benefit which by their submission to them might be gained § 4 Vse 2 Let every man consider how he acquits himself of this duty Do this and upon what terms he runs the loss of such a benefit as to keep a memoriall of Christ It 's a kinde of Thanksgiving to Christ to commemorate his death and sufferings for us As there is an exhibition of Christ and his grace to a faithfull receiver so the benefit should draw us to the Use of this Ordinance As it is a command a dying command of Christ Do this in remembrance of me so the duty or conscience of duty should impell and move us The two Sacraments of old were both of them backt with cutting off in case of neglect Gen. 19. 14. Numb 9. 18. The positive worship of God in Sacraments is not easily either misperformed or neglected You will say God affrighted his people of old unto his Sacraments but now we fright you from them Farre be it from us we affright you into preparation not from the Sacrament as Joshua did the people Josh 24. 19. Ye cannot serve the Lord for he is a holy God he will not forgive your sinne it was a quickning speech not a discouraging we would not have you runne on the point of this Ordinance Why but if it be a command how can we be debarred If Christ say Do this who can say Do not this I have answered this already The command here is not an outward commandment as I may say but an inward not given to all the world but to Christs Disciples to certain qualified persons as the command of the Passeover was limited to the circumcised and to the clean and this also to a man that examines himself and so let him eat of this bread c. It 's a duty and a priviledge both of all outward Ordinances the inmost § 5 Vse 3 Christ hath thought it needfull to make provision against our forgetfulness of him while he is absent from us in the flesh The forgetfulness of Christ is the loss of all Religion we are apt to forget his love and his blood Those that live in known habituall sin forget Christ and I make no doubt but the often sight and memory of his death which is here acted and personated or drawn forth to the eye might exceedingly mortifie sin and melt the heart Nothing shews sin more distastfull to God than the death of Christ every pardon cries aloud to him that is pardoned Go and sin no more but he that takes heart to sin becaUse Christ died seems neither to see his own sinne nor death in the death of Christ §. 6. How our mindes should be exercised in the time of the celebration of this Supper § 6 Vse 4 Here we learn how to exercise our mindes and meditations in the celebration of this Supper viz. in the remembrance of Christ the survey of whom is inriched with excellent fruit of renewing our repentance quickning our faith elevating our affections and the impression made upon us by this lively spectacle of a dying Saviour cannot but work as the bloody Robes of Caesar did upon the people when they were hanged out in sight by Marc. Anthony and therefore it is suitable to the end of this Sacrament to be exercising our memories mindes and affections in the perusall of Christ Jesus I know that some Churches Use to sing a Psalm while the action is performing whom I condemn not as a means to keep the heart intent and in spirituall frame or fixedness but should rather chUse a silent meditation and imployment of the minde in the remembrance of Christ for that 's more suitable to the end of this Ordinance and to Christs example and institution who according to the custom of the Jews filled the time of action with commemoration and closed it with a Hymn and if we may give credit to the Jewish Writers and others out of them as Hugo Broughton shews in his Commentaries on Daniel the Psalms of the Hallel or Hymn sung by the Jews was the 113 114 and so onward and it 's very probable that Christ and
17. These and the like expressions some Learned men draw into consequence to prove that which we know rather the name of than the nature of the thing Excommunication Others understood Grot. do Imp. p. 231. by them Nullum actum privato majorem no act greater than private avoidance of company which is that I now speak of For in the primitive times when the Heathens Observed of Christians how they loved each other and when the Christians had in Use certain remarkable testifications of this love by their feasts of love and holy kisse c. It was a mark or note of reproof and shame to be shunned and avoided by the brethren for scandalous sinne and it was medicinal to him that was so avoided and in that regard a duty in conscience and charity to be performed and I would that all distances created amongst brethren by passion and envy were reduced to this then we should finde that though we had not power to separate an offendor from the Church yet the separating of our selves from him would work much good and be in some measure an Excommunication For it is certain that a great part of the effect thereof lies in the non Communion or withdrawment of the people from him that 's scandalous and as certain that if we flatter and encourage the sinnes of men by our samiliarity and fellowship Excommunication it self would be but a lost Ordinance and of no effect For it is my opinion That if Excommunication greater and lesser as they are called was in full proportion reduced into practice yet except the people that are members of the Church did make conscience of imparting their fellowship to such as were cut off it would be little better then a wooden dagger and rather serve to create passion and fury than humility and shame in them § 5 4. The Ministers duty is by Doctrine to declare the sinne and danger of undue intrusion to the Table of the Lord which is a ministerial prohibition of the unworthy a comminatory seclusion though not juridical a power of the Keyes And this is openly denied by none who speak out of conscience and not unReasonable lusts The Apostle in this Chapter takes this course in terrible expressions pronouncing and denouncing judgement to the unworthy other holy and famous Worthies of the Church in their generations do rather thunder than speak Better that a milstone was hang'd about his neck and he cast into the sea than that a man with an impure conscience take and eat this morsel saith Cyprian or the Authour De Caena and so Chrysostome pours out himself in his Homilies and Sermons on this point with great sharpnesse and accounts this which is done with the voice a seclusion or keeping of men back Hom. 13. ad Hebraeos and so it is and Pag. 467. Homil. 83. in Mat. Hom. 86. ad pop Antioch Tract 62. in Jo. Amb. ad Heb. 10. may justly be called for it is a ministerial prohibition of the unworthy Chrysostom compares this sinne with theirs that slew Christ Austin sinne of Judas Ambrose with the sinne of the Jews Basil makes the Question Lib. 2. de Bapt. cap. 3. Whether it be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without danger to come not purged from filthinesse of flesh and spirit and answers it by the unclean persons coming to holy things making that uncleannesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 typically to denote moral uncleannesse which I rather note for his sake that slights this Argument And therefore let all Ministers be stirred up to Use this prohibition the more and the rather when other is wanting in discharge of his duty to God and mens souls which though it be not better liked than the practical seclusion yet men are more patient under it I hope out of conviction of conscience and not becaUse they may notwithstanding this lie still in the croud without that particular mark which the actual seclusion sets upon them § 6 5. The Minister that dispenses the Sacrament by giving it into the hand of the Communicant may in this case with more Reason suspend his own act and withdraw his hand from one that he sees and knows to be a scandalous person as he might do in cafe a Hookers Pref Turk Jew or excommunicate person should intrude unto the Table of the Lord in which case viz. of Excommunication Calvin saith He would die rather than reach forth his hand to give the Sacrament to such an one It 's true you will reply This may be done in the case of such as are debarred by the Church but not in the case of a scandalous sinner not yet so judged For answer to which Objection I say That indeed there are men of great renown for learning and holinesse that hold If a M. Ball. Trial p. 205. Minister know a man unworthy he must yet receive him becaUse he cannot manifest it to the Church If a mans unworthinesse be notorious and yet not so judged by them that have authority he must administer the Sacramental Signs to him not as one worthy or unworthy but as one as yet undivided from them And the truth is the Minister alone singly as a Minister hath not by warrant of the Word the power of Excommunication or Suspension in his hand as Grotius de imperio p. 230. is generally holden nor will I dispute but this with holding of his hand from actual giving of the outward Signs is no act of censure no Suspension of the person no casting of him out but as those that allow it say An Act of liberty as a Physicians not giving drink to an hydropick person or the withholding his own Sword from a furious man for the time of his rage and as saith the Authors last cited a Minister may do this by the same right whereby he doth by Doctrine declare such a mans incapacity or whereby a private Christian withdraws his fellowship or society Nor otherwise can Chrysostom charge to Ministers to hinder the unworthy which he presses in his 83. Homil. on Matthew on pain of being guilty of their bloud be understood for it must be meant of such scandalous sinners known to them but not so judged by the Church they being kept from accesse or sight of the holy mysteries in his time by the censure of the Church and I as little doubt of the judgement of many learned men or of the intention of the Church of England in the Rule given to the Minister before the Communion in the case of some emergent scandal at the present time nor do I conceive that any learned man would deny this liberty to a Minister to withhold his hand from some mankiller drunkard perjured c. that hath been convicted before the Civil Authority though no censure of the Church be against or upon him Nor is that charge given to Timothy very far from proving it Lay hands suddenly on no man Be not partakers of other mens sins 1 Tim. 5. 22.
childe may receive a Ring as well as a Gyant and the least Candle points upwards as well as the greatest Torch Great Masters of Families as the Prodigal Observed allow the meanest of their domestick servants to come to the Tables end and eat of their bread Many sinnes many backslidings if there be contrition and godly sorrow serve for bitter herbs to eat the Passeover with Many wants and weaknesses may be accompanied with vehement desires hunger and thirst Low graces may occasion low hearts when God makes the disease a preparative why should we refUse the medicine If we set the pitch of this fitnesse too low in some empty formes of Religion or some eminent works and moral vertues or some conceited perfections which feed our pride we shall take in many that have nothing of Christ in them Gospel-qualifications are most sutable to a Gospel Ordinance We are not prepared for Christ by ostentation of works but sense of misery The sense of unworthinesse is our worthinesse A little vessel that is empty will receive more than a great one that is full A broken Christ requires a broken heart To be rich and full and righteous in the Gospel-Dictionary doe signifie Obstructions and impediments of our happinesse where the naked are cloathed the hungry are fed the ungodly are justified the weary are refresht the sick are healed the stung with fiery Serpents are recovered the returning lost childe is feasted and they that thirst do buy wine and milk without money and without price And hence it follows That no unregenerate man that lies dead in trespasses and sinnes without a seed a spark of Gospel-grace having no initials of true Repentance and Faith in Christ can be in capacity to eat and drink the Body and Bloud of Christ worthily and with effect for such a one is a stranger to the Covenant and uncircumcised and therefore expresly debar'd this Passeover Exod. 12. 43. Where there is no life there can be no reception of nourishment He that is void of the Condition of the Covenant cannot receive the benefit nor eat the Supper that wants the Wedding-Garment This is a severe point and disclaims the greatest part of men from eating and drinking worthily becaUse they have no ticket of grace renewing or regenerating they are not Disciples indeed they are branches in Christ by externall ingraffing John 15. 2. but have not the life of Christ in them They that are not in the body of Christ do not eat his body saith Austin They that are not members of him do not spiritually feed on him Panem Domin they do eat as Judas not Panem Dominum Ego hoc axtoma teneo saith Calvin that without the Spirit Christ is not received in this Sacrament The Papists go no lesse Catholici omnes saith Vasquez all agree in this That it 's necessary for a worthy Communicant to be in the state of grace and sanctification and therefore howsoever any person be furnisht with endowments of nature and education famous for eminent works and vertues adorned with civil and fair conversation yet without something of Christ some work of the Spirit some seed of Regeneration he cannot eat and drink worthily and with effect And this Doctrine is the rather requisite to be taught becaUse men may flatter themselves in that they have past the test are admitted with approbation to this Table and allowed the liberty thereof for all this may be and yet your case no better than Sauls that would needs be honoured before the people than Judas's who was not thrust out from the Sacrament than his who was let in by the servants to the feast but cast out by the King for want of his Wedding-garment You enjoy a priviledge to eat and drink but what judgement and condemnation to your selves Oh consider it The Lord of this feast will come to view his guests he will turn out some that the servants let in he will say Friend How camest thou in hither He answered not Lord I was called in I was admitted in by thy servants No He was dumb he had nothing to plead he had not a Wedding-garment For he is not a Jew that is one outwardly Rom. 2. penult §. 6. What is requisite to our Receiving Worthily § 6 The actual exercise of our graces is requisite to our eating and drinking worthily The instrument must be in tune before-hand as I shew'd you in the former but now the strings are stricken now they make their musick The activity and imploiment of our faith and affections is now required and our graces must be on their wheels now the sails are spread to catch the gale which sweetly breathes from this holy Ordinance for here it 's said Take Eat Take and drink and as the eye the hand the mouth are now in actual imploiment as to the Sacrament or outward part so faith which is the eye hand mouth of the soul and all the affections are to be actually imploy'd as to the inward thing the body and bloud of Christ Not the having of an eye but looking up to the brazen Serpent healed the biting It 's not enough to have faith but we must believe Now that the Sacrament is in Use now must our graces be in Use too Now that God actually offers and presents Christs body and bloud to my faith Now let the hand of faith go forth and take Christ in Awake my faith and see the atonement of my sins in the broken body of my Saviour Awake repentance and hear the strong cries and see the dolefull agony of him that bears our chastisement Awake my memory and call to minde that Aegypt wherein I was and the bloud of the Passeover which removed the destroying Angel from my soul Awake all that is within me to blesse and praise the Lord. Oh let this Crosse crucifie my lusts and passions Let this death stay my reigning sins as Joshua did the Kings of Canaan Now let the Altar smoak with the Sacrifice of a loving heart inflamed with holy fire of Gods love to me Now the wax is warm Oh let the Seal be stamped fair that I may see the impression alwayes after Now that God shews forth to methe death of his Sonne for me let me shew forth that death of Christ to God again as that which I stick unto and abide by for my righteousnesse and peace with God Alas if my graces be now asleep they are next a kin to dead We might have sweet we might have fruitfull Sacraments had we but lively graces Graces upon their wing not lying sullen and benum'd with cold therefore blow up your graces as the Apostle his phrase is blow the smothering fire the embers into a flame by pertinent meditation Be ye lift up ye everlasting doors that this King of glory may come in And that I may speak to the comfort of a godly soul Let grace run forth at what tap it will so there be but vent whether at the uppermost of
accounted love of God but rather a lust of serving our selves upon him which is the last resort of the love of most men to God but it may be distinguisht thus If it arise from the sense of that distinguishing love of God to thy soul whereby he hath drawn thee to Christ out of the pit of common perdition and that without any worthinesse in thee or contributions of thine to that inestimable grace yea notwithstanding that contrariety and opposition to him wherein thou wast above many others ingaged the very thought whereof doth ever inflame the heart unto a mans dying day If it be a love to God for his holinesse and his sanctification of thee to bear his Image and to be like him If it be a love of complacency and friendship to delight thy self in God and to affect Union and Communion with him If it produce a willingnesse to confederate with him and to be in league against all interests of the flesh and world I love my master I will not go out free or be at my own freedom 2. The second affection is desire of grace and of spiritual things I conceive there may be a carnal desire of things spiritual and carnal prayers for spiritual gifts namely to consume them upon our lusts of pride and vain-glory which is the desire of Simon Magus a desire to die the death of the righteous which was the wish of Balaam a desire of forgivenesse of sinne to be freed from condemnation by meer self love a desire of heaven too to open unto us for happinesse not holinesse or communion with God a desire comfort to anguish of conscience and that rather for ease than for grace a desire of grace it self as a necessary bridge unto or signe of salvation Give us of your oyl say they for our lamps are out Many fallacies may be in our desires and yet I account them when they are refined from drosse to be most comfortable signes of spiritual life for Christ makes thirsting after rightcousnesse the character of a blessed man Matth. 5. and the Apostle makes them a fruit of repentance 2 Cor. 7. 11. and a signe of regencration 1 Pet. 2. 2. if they arise from a taste of the graciousnesse of God and carry on to the sincere Word for growth in grace and be spent in endeavours of obedience and exercise of communion with God equally longing to be Christs as to have Christ He that shall deny to a poor soul the comfort of such desires puts out the spark that smokes in the wick of the candle when the flame is gone out before 3. The third affection is fear the fear of the terrours of the Lord and those punishments which according to his threats wait upon sinne Estius propounds the case Whether a man under servile fear may come to the Lords Supper And answers No but with distinction the fear of wrath may be Used as a bridle to curb the insolency and luxuriency of the flesh by saying hell and damnation close to it and so the regenerate whose flesh is impetuous may make Use of this fear to restrain the propension of it but then if this fear be meerly of punishment so that were it not for that he would with all his heart give himself over to commit iniquity with greedinesse then it 's plain that the willingnesse to sinne lives and this horrour of conscience nothing at all changes the inclination of the will no more than the whip or chain doth the nature of a Fox or Wolf and the case is no other than that of a childe that will colly himself with the cole that 's black and dead but dare not touch the fire cole which burnes his fingers and there is no comfort in such restraints from sinne nor have such feares any sparke of grace in them 4. The fourth affection is sorrow for sinne which may be worldly and carnal and no other than Pharoah his Take away this plague or the pangs of a whore that returns to folly But there is a sorrow according to God which works repentance unto salvation and brings forth those seven fruits 2 Cor. 7. 11. which change the frame of the heart a happy mother of so many good children These are the pangs of a godly soul and it is one of the first steps unto or parts of the Resurrection of a Christian from his fals and is caUsed not meerly by wrath but as Peters weeping was by the looks of Christ The reproofs the frowns the offence of a gracious God thaws the heart into melting tears and would do so though there were no hell As a meek childe needs no other hoUse of correction than his fathers looks I am loath to be of that opinion which banishes godly sorrow out of Religion For if I were so happy as to want new matter and occasion for it yet sometimes to review old forgiven sins and the rather becaUse forgiven with fresh bleeding heart doth excellently keep down swelling of pride and gives a fresh and new relish to Christ Jesus so the overflowing stoods do enrich the adjacent grounds and make them fresh and greene And so much concerning these affections V. The fifth Consideration is of purposes of amendment which we named before among the preparatives to this Sacrament which there are few but have at one time or other and men do exceedingly befool and flatter themselves in them For we have known that upon conviction of conscience and shame for many years together by fits and moods and for the skinning over some gallings of conscience men flie to purposes of repentance and put them on and binde themselves by vows or other bonds to doe no more and yet experience tels us that Sampson did not easilier break the cords that bound him than these men do break their purposes and cancell all bonds and resolutions and so a sick mans purposes are very often no other than the vows of a Mariner in a storm at sea who for the time will be or do any thing but when the danger is blown over they are as they were You ask What such are to do And the answer is ready Resolution without mortification is to little purpose the lust must be mortified that carries the sway and dominion For as the purposes of a man in his lucid intervals or of one that hath the Falling sicknesse to fall no more is to little purpose without some application to the disease that still lies within and will return and break all dams that are made by the streame of it so are resolutions upon conviction of conscience without effectual exercise of mortification by setting upon that root and lust which between whiles doth but sleep and will awaken again Let the patient see and search his sinne and apply the corzy of the Law and Use those sharp medicines which eat out a rotten core and follow that sharp work of mortification or else all is to little purpose VI. The last thing I
the graces required but should by self-examination know that he hath them becaUse otherwise he might blindfold and at all adventures rush upon the Ordinance and eat and drink damnation to himself 3. BecaUse a man can only then be said to know he hath the graces required when he doth discern and distinguish them from all counterfeits or semblances that are like therefore is self-examination necessary For as gold hath copper a counterfeit of it self so have all true graces some thing like themselves and called by their name which are not right but some slighty ore lying nearer day As there is a faith called which is not faith a repentance not repentance a love of God which is not the love of God a sorrow for sinne which is not godly sorrow there is meeknesse not a grace but a moral vertue c. And therefore examination of our selves is both necessary and difficult that we take not Leah for Rachel and so come to the Lords Table to no more purpose than he that goes to the market with a brasse shilling which he thinks to be good money 4. Then we have this priviledge And so let him eat of this bread c. When we by examination finde that we have though but a seed or spawne of those right and genuine graces which are differenced and distinguisht from all semblances and counterfeits which are called by the same name If every faith confessing Christ were saving If every nollem factum I am sorry were true repentance If every mans saying dolet it grieves me were godly sorrow there are few or none that could be called unworthy but there is a difference that makes distinction between semblance and truth which few do finde in themselves becaUse they rest in generals and equivocals I have in a Sermon upon this point formerly given the Characters of true grace and need not say it over again at this time Let every man examine the truth of his graces by these Characters and so make Use of this priviledge Let him eat c. And if I might give you the Iliads in a nut-shell these are the differences and the characters §. 5. The Differences between true Grace and what is not such § 5 The Difference between Nature and Grace is 1. Nature begins all his actions from and refers all unto self pride profit pleasure glory common honesty of men to men Grace hath this Character it turns the face of and sets a by as on the heart whereby it intends aims to seek to please to know God and therefore discovers that we saw not that emptinesse of and enmity to God which is in us In a word it sets up Gods interest above self which nature cannot do 2. Between knowledge and knowledge There is a special knowledge of God and of the Word which is large and beautifull but the character of true knowledge is affection as the light that 's joyn'd with heat and assimilation of a man to that he knows forming 2 Cor. 3. ult and conforming to the image of God We are changed into the same image We shall be like him for we shall see him 1 Joh. 3. 1. 3. Between faith and faith There is a Christ confessing a Christ acknowledging faith Alii cogitant pij credunt saith Austin but the character of true faith is That it accepts of and closes with Christ himself both as a Lord and Saviour and that upon Gospel-terms to deny self and take up his Cross and be his and this faith is inseparable from holinesse or a godly life never to be found in a wicked or unregenerate man 4. Between Repentance and Repentance There is a Repentance like that of Judas full of anguish a tormenting anguish of spirit But the character of repentance unto salvation is the rise of it from godly sorrow which feels love the nature of it is a purpose to sinne no more but to cleave to God the effect of it is fruit unto holinesse Conviction contrition conversion make it perfect 5. Between Love and Love There is a love of God arising from self-love so one Publican loves another as a Benefactour But the character of true love is that it rises from sense of his first and saving love to us lost sinners and carries us on to desire him to delight in him to have fellowship to be in friendship with him and to be like him 6. Between Desire and Desire There is a desire of salvation to be out of hell a desire of grace meerly as a sign and security for heaven to ease our painfull anguish But the character of true desire is sanctification as well as salvation grace not meerly for a bridge to heaven but for Union Communion and Conformity with and unto Christ Jesus I will proceed no further this is a taste of what I before delivered These are the graces of a Communicant These are their Differences and Characters These lead you on to the priviledge granted And so let him come and eat c. Great Use may be made of this point and the Use is rather to be made by you than me for so the Text Let a man examine himself but I will point you to it in a word or two §. 6. § 6 You see your duty and you see the priviledge So let him eat Let me exhort you to perform this work carefully conscionably I have said enough to move you enough to direct you the benefit is great the danger great the means to obtain the benefit to escape the danger is this If you finde sinne labour to bring repentance If you need a Saviour come and take him as freshly bleeding but bring thirst and faith with you Have an eye to the Serpent on a pole rest your souls as the Dove did upon this Ark a crucified Christ but do not deceive your souls by a slight performance Call your lives and wayes to the bar Examine judge your selves Do not neglect becaUse no body sees you there is a God will search out your sinne and judge also You have great imployments make opportunity you are in suits one Ordinance of God doth not disable another you may lawfully pursue your right and yet pursue peace and keep charity If you suffer wrong forgive it 's glorious If you do wrong Leave your gift at the Altar and be reconciled first that 's more glorious Set apart time set apart your selves Commune with your heart in your closet in silence no man casts up his accounts in a croud or throng you need no other businesse while you do this Seek of God by prayer and fasting a self-searching heart and do it as if ye were to die make the accounts between God and your souls even and seQuester your selves to that purpose for so when you cast up your accounts you Use to shut up your shops 2. That Donatistical principle of separation from Congregations or Churches wherein there is a mixture of worthy and unworthy doth from hence receive
consequent that therefore here where the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Do this plainly limits it to the actions of the Communicants as I have said The Ordinances of God are most powerfull and proper when they are themselves pure plain naked of all humane disguizes or embellishments and therefore I bespeak all Communicants Ministers and people not to study how to add more glory or gracefulnesse to this Ordinance as they suppose but to rest in and submit to that which we finde in Christs example or first original and suffer your selves to be limited to do this Do this in remembrance of me §. 5. Who are commanded to receive this Sacrament § 5 Thirdly This charge or command Do this is given to the Church the Saints Disciples of Christ It is true the Apostles only were present at Christs first celebration He sate down with the twelve saith the Text and so the command was directed to them only But how Not to the Apostles as Apostles but as Communicants as representing the Church Lucas Brug in Evang. or people of Christ or to the Apostles as Dispensers of it and to them as receivers of it For when Christ said to the Apostles Go and baptize Do this in remembrance of me he intended not that either Sacrament should die with them but from them continue in succession of all times therefore Do it in remembrance of me they received it in anticipation of his death but it was to endure as a memorial of it as the Passeover-Lamb was first eaten in Aegypt or slain before the destroying Angel passed through the Land but intended for a memorial for ever in all generations till Christ came and therefore the Apostle here delivers it to the Church of Corinth the very institution of Christ is deliver'd to this Church and the Use of it enjoyned to them and all Churches till he come again ver 26. When I say it is a command given to the Church or to the Saints I mean that it is an inner commandment an inner Ordinance as there was inner Ordinances in the Temple for Church-members and Disciples The command of hearing the Word is given to all The commandment of being baptized is to believers as a Sacrament of their initiation or entrance or admission To make a Disciple and to baptize one seems to be put for the same John 4. 1 2. but this commandment Do this lies more inner yet it appertains to them that are Disciples already or Church-members which was signified in the ancient Christian Churches by the baptistery or font at the Church-door and by the Table intra Cancellos within the Chancel so in the Passeover a stranger was not admitted to the Pasleover but when he was circumcised then let him come near and keep it Exod. 12. 44 48. Let him come near saith the Text for it is an inner Ordinance and the Communicants must be such at least whom the Apostle cals 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Cor. 5. those that are within for here is that inner fellowship and communion of the Saints and members of Christ exercised and professed This then is that peculiar and most inward command and priviledge that appertains to an inclosed company it is a pasture inclosed not a common Here Christ holds a more familiar presence and fellowship with his peculiar people to whom he vouchsafes an interiour admission Shall not we then keep this charge and Observe this commandment and enjoy this priviledge properly belonging to Disciples Oh it was this that made Christians of old when they were for their sinne debarred and excluded so cry weep lament their sad case that they should depart as it were from the presence of their Lord and stand aloof in the court that had been admitted into the parlour or chamber of presence and for those that were in the school of catechism called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it was the utmost end to which they did aspire and for which they waited a long attendance to be admitted to this communion and then properly called sideles this was the highest form §. 6. The End of the Institution and Celebration of this Ordinance § 6 Fourthly The end wherefore this Ordinance was instituted and is celebrated is for the remembrance of Christ for it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a memorial of that great that universal Sacrifice Christ Jesus Memorials of dying friends though plain are precious and of great account with all men being kept amongst their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or esteemed tReasures and we may see how little Christ receded from the intent of the Passeover which was a memorial of the Hebrews deliverance in Aegypt Exod. 12. 14. and transferr'd to a greater memorial of himself by whom is wrought a greater and more universal deliverance of the Church The day of the Jews Sabbath was changed to the first day of the week for celebration of the resurrection of Christ and so the creating of a new Heaven and a new earth that day The paschal rite of the Jew was changed from a memorial of their deliverance from Aegypt into a memorial of the death of Christ by which we have a greater deliverance Their Passeover was to be Observed by them in their generations for ever Exod. 12. 24. and our Supper is an Ordinance to be Observed by the Gospel-churches for ever Their ever was Christs first coming our ever is till he come again It 's twice repeated For remembrance of me both the eating of the bread and drinking of the wine are but one memorial which is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or bufinesse of this Ordinance All Churches and Christians could not see the Lord dying for he died but once and therefore they have a glasse or representation of that death which as it is alwayes in the efficacy and effect so it might alwayes live and be fresh in our memory the commemoration of that Sacrifice which never is never needs to be repeated is repeated often in this Sacrament and this Sacrifice of Christ as it was promised and prefigured in old Types and Sacrifices so was it performed ence in truth upon the crosse and is often celebrated in this Sacrament of memory This memorial is solemn this remembrance must be practical CHAP. XII Of doing this in remembrance of Christ The Properties of this Memorial § 1 IT 's a solemn memorial instituted by Christ himself Great deliverances have solemn commemorations such was the Passeover the feast of Purim the Encaenia or feast of Dedication Great victories have their dayes of Thanksgiving great deliverances benefits Benefactours are honoured with solemn memorials private remembrances which every man may agitate in his own minde are too low expressions of publick and eminent and universal benefits therefore Christ will set up his own monument and ordain a solemn Ordinance for remembrance of himself to be Observed by all that have his memory and it is one of the great Sea-marks of the Church of Christ he did not set