HISTORY of the CHRISTIAN CHURCH*
CHAPTER IX.
WORSHIP IN THE APOSTOLIC AGE.
Literature.
Th Harnack: Der
christliche Gemeindegottesdienst im Apost. und altkathol. Zeitalter. Erlangen,
1854. The same: Prakt. Theol., I. 1877.
P. Probst (R. C.): Liturgie
der drei ersten Jahrhunderte. Tüb., 1870.
W. L. Volz: Anfänge des
christl. Gottesdienstes, in "Stud. und Krit." 1872.
H. Jacoby: Die constitutiven
Factoren des Apost. Gottesdienstes, in "Jahrb. für deutsche Theol." for 1873.
C. Weizsäcker: Die
Versammlungen der ältesten Christengemeinden, 1876; and
Das Apost. Zeitalter, 1886, pp. 566 sqq.
Th Zahn: Gesch.
des Sonntags in der alten Kirche. Hann., 1878.
Schaff: Hist.
of the Apost. Ch., pp. 545-586.
Comp. the Lit. on Ch. X., and on the Didache, vol. II. 184.
§ 51. The Synagogue.
Campeg. Vitringa (d. at Franeker, 1722): De Synagoga Vetere libri tres. Franeker, 1696. 2 vols. (also
Weissenfels, 1726). A standard work, full of biblical and rabbinical learning.
A condensed translation by J. L. Bernard:
The Synagogue and the Church. London, 1842.
C. Bornitius: De Synagogis veterum Hebraeorum. Vitemb., 1650. And in Ugolinus: Thesaurus Antiquitatum sacrarum (Venet., 1744-69), vol. XXI.
495-539.
Ant. Th. Hartmann: Die enge Verbindung des A. Testamenes mit dem Neuen. Hamburg, 1831 (pp. 225-376).
Zunz (a
Jewish Rabbi): Die gottesdienstlichen Vorträge der Juden. Berlin, 1832
The Histories of
the Jews, by Jost, Herzfeld, and
Milman.
The Histories of
N. T. Times, by Hausrath (I. 73 sqq.
2d ed.) and Schürer (463-475, and the literature there given).
Art.
"Synag.," by Ginsburg in
"Kitto"; Plumptre: in "Smith" (with additions by Hackett,
IV. 3133, Am. ed.); Leyrer in "Herzog" (XV. 299, first ed.); Kneuker
in "Schenkel" (V. 443).
As the Christian Church rests
historically on the Jewish Church, so Christian worship and the congregational
organization rest on that of the synagogue, and cannot be well understood
without it.
The synagogue was and is still
an institution of immense conservative power. It was the local centre of the
religious and social life of the Jews, as the temple of Jerusalem was the
centre of their national life. It was a school as well as a church, and the
nursery and guardian of all that is peculiar in this peculiar people. It dates
probably from the age of the captivity and of Ezra.641 It was fully organized at the time of Christ and the apostles,
and used by them as a basis of their public instruction.642 It survived the temple, and continues to this day unaltered in
its essential features, the chief nursery and protection of the Jewish
nationality and religion.643
The term "synagogue"
(like our word church) signifies first the congregation, then also the building
where the congregation meet for public worship.644 Every town, however small, had a synagogue, or at least a place
of prayer in a private house or in the open air (usually near a river or the
sea-shore, on account of the ceremonial washings). Ten men were sufficient to
constitute a religious assembly. "Moses from generations of old hath in
every city them that preach him, being read in the synagogues every
Sabbath."645 To erect a
synagogue was considered a work of piety and public usefulness.646 In large cities, as Alexandria and Rome, there were many; in
Jerusalem, about four hundred for the various sects and the Hellenists from
different countries.647
1. The building was a
plain, rectangular ball of no peculiar style of architecture, and in its inner
arrangement somewhat resembling the Tabernacle and the Temple. It had benches,
the higher ones ("the uppermost seats") for the elders and richer
members,648 a reading-desk or pulpit, and a wooden ark or closet for
the sacred rolls (called "Copheret" or Mercy Seat, also
"Aaron"). The last corresponded to the Holy of Holies in the
Tabernacle and the Temple. A sacred light was kept burning as a symbol of the
divine law, in imitation of the light in the Temple, but there is no mention
made of it in the Talmud. Other lamps were brought in by devout worshippers at
the beginning of the Sabbath (Friday evening). Alms-boxes were provided near
the door, as in the Temple, one for the poor in Jerusalem, another for local
charities. Paul imitated the example by collecting alms for the poor Christians
in Jerusalem.
There was no artistic (except
vegetable) ornamentation; for the second commandment strictly forbids all
images of the Deity as idolatrous. In this, as in many other respects, the
Mohammedan mosque, with its severe iconoclastic simplicity, is a second edition
of the synagogue. The building was erected on the most elevated spot of the
neighborhood, and no house was allowed to overtop it. In the absence of a
commanding site, a tall pole from the roof rendered it conspicuous.649
2. Organization._Every
synagogue had a president,650 a number of elders (Zekenim) equal in rank,651 a reader and interpreter,652 one or more envoys or clerks,
called "messengers" (Sheliach),653 and a sexton or beadle (Chazzan) for the humbler mechanical
services.654 There were also
deacons (Gabae
zedaka) for the
collection of alms in money and produce. Ten or more wealthy men at leisure,
called Batlanim, represented the congregation at every service. Each synagogue
formed an independent republic, but kept up a regular correspondence with other
synagogues. It was also a civil and religious court, and had power to
excommunicate and to scourge offenders.655
3. Worship._It was simple, but rather long, and embraced three
elements, devotional, didactic, and ritualistic. It included prayer, song,
reading, and exposition of the Scripture, the rite of circumcision, and
ceremonial washings. The bloody sacrifices were confined to the temple and
ceased with its destruction; they were fulfilled in the eternal sacrifice on
the cross. The prayers and songs were chiefly taken from the Psalter, which may
be called the first liturgy and hymn book.
The opening prayer was called
the Shema or Keriath Shema, and consisted of two
introductory benedictions, the reading of the Ten Commandments (afterward
abandoned) and several sections of the Pentateuch, namely, Deut. 6:4-9;
11:13-21; Num. 15:37-41. Then followed the eighteen prayers and benedictions (Berachoth). This is one of them:
"Bestow peace, happiness, blessing, grace, mercy, and compassion upon us
and upon the whole of Israel, thy people. Our Father, bless us all unitedly
with the light of thy countenance, for in the light of thy countenance didst
thou give to us, O Lord our God, the law of life, lovingkindness, justice,
blessing, compassion, life, and peace. May it please thee to bless thy people
lsrael at all times, and in every moment, with peace. Blessed art thou, O Lord,
who blessest thy people Israel with peace." These benedictions are traced
in the Mishna to the one hundred and twenty elders of the Great Synagogue. They
were no doubt of gradual growth, some dating from the Maccabean struggles, some
from the Roman ascendancy. The prayers were offered by a reader, and the
congregation responded "Amen." This custom passed into the Christian
church.656
The didactic and homiletical
part of worship was based on the Hebrew Scriptures. A lesson from the Law
(called parasha),657 and one from the Prophets (haphthara) were read in the original,658 and followed by a paraphrase or
commentary and homily (midrash)
in the vernacular Aramaic or Greek. A benediction and the "Amen" of
the people closed the service.
As there was no proper
priesthood outside of Jerusalem, any Jew of age might get up to read the
lessons, offer prayer, and address the congregation. Jesus and the apostles
availed themselves of this democratic privilege to preach the gospel, as the
fulfilment of the law and the prophets.659 The strong didactic element which distinguished this service from
all heathen forms of worship, had the effect of familiarizing the Jews of all
grades, even down to the servant-girls, with their religion, and raising them
far above the heathen. At the same time it attracted proselytes who longed for
a purer and more spiritual worship.
The days of public service were
the Sabbath, Monday, and Thursday; the hours of prayer the third (9 a.m.), the sixth (noon), and the ninth
(3 p.m.).660
The sexes were divided by a low wall or screen, the men
on the one side, the women on the other, as they are still in the East (and in
some parts of Europe). The people stood during prayer with their faces turned
to Jerusalem.
§ 52. Christian Worship.
Christian worship, or cultus, is
the public adoration of God in the name of Christ; the celebration of the
communion of believers as a congregation with their heavenly Head, for the
glory of the Lord, and for the promotion and enjoyment of spiritual life. While
it aims primarily at the devotion and edification of the church itself, it has
at the same time a missionary character, and attracts the outside world. This
was the case on the Day of Pentecost when Christian worship in its distinctive
character first appeared.
As our Lord himself in his youth
and manhood worshipped in the synagogue and the temple, so did his early
disciples as long as they were tolerated. Even Paul preached Christ in the
synagogues of Damascus, Cyprus, Antioch in Pisidia, Amphipolis, Beraeea,
Athens, Corinth, Ephesus. He "reasoned with the Jews every sabbath in the
synagogues" which furnished him a pulpit and an audience.
The Jewish Christians, at least
in Palestine, conformed as closely as possible to the venerable forms of the
cultus of their fathers, which in truth were divinely ordained, and were an
expressive type of the Christian worship. So far as we know, they scrupulously observed
the Sabbath, the annual Jewish feasts, the hours of daily prayer, and the whole
Mosaic ritual, and celebrated, in addition to these, the Christian Sunday, the
death and the resurrection of the Lord, and the holy Supper. But this union was
gradually weakened by the stubborn opposition of the Jews, and was at last
entirely broken by the destruction of the temple, except among the Ebionites
and Nazarenes.
In the Gentile-Christian
congregations founded by Paul, the worship took from the beginning a more
independent form. The essential elements of the Old Testament service were
transferred, indeed, but divested of their national legal character, and
transformed by the spirit of the gospel. Thus the Jewish Sabbath passed into
the Christian Sunday; the typical Passover and Pentecost became feasts of the
death and resurrection of Christ, and of the outpouring of the Holy Spirit; the
bloody sacrifices gave place to the thankful remembrance and appropriation of
the one, all-sufficient, and eternal sacrifice of Christ on the cross, and to
the personal offering of prayer, intercession, and entire self-consecration to
the service of the Redeemer; on the ruins of the temple made without hands
arose the never ceasing worship of the omnipresent God in spirit and in truth.661 So early as the close of the apostolic period this more free and
spiritual cultus of Christianity had no doubt become well nigh universal; yet
many Jewish elements, especially in the Eastern church, remain to this day.
§ 53. The Several Parts of Worship.
The several parts of public
worship in the time of the apostles were as follows:
1. The Preaching of the gospel. This appears in the first period
mostly in the form of a missionary address to the unconverted; that is, a
simple, living presentation of the main facts of the life of Jesus, with
practical exhortation to repentance and conversion. Christ crucified and risen
was the luminous centre, whence a sanctifying light was shed on all the
relations of life. Gushing forth from a full heart, this preaching went to the
heart; and springing from an inward life, it kindled life_a new, divine life_in
the susceptible hearers. It was revival preaching in the purest sense. Of this
primitive Christian testimony several examples from Peter and Paul are
preserved in the Acts of the Apostles.
The Epistles also may be
regarded in the wider sense as sermons, addressed, however, to believers, and
designed to nourish the Christian life already planted.
2. The Reading of portions of the Old Testament,662 with practical exposition and
application; transferred from the Jewish synagogue into the Christian church.663 To these were added in due time lessons from the New Testament;
that is, from the canonical Gospels and the apostolic Epistles, most of which
were addressed to whole congregations and originally intended for public use.664 After the death of the apostles their writings became doubly
important to the church, as a substitute for their oral instruction and
exhortation, and were much more used in worship than the Old Testament.
3. Prayer, in its various forms of petition, intercession, and
thanksgiving. This descended likewise from Judaism, and in fact belongs
essentially even to all heathen religions; but now it began to be offered in
childlike confidence to a reconciled Father in the name of Jesus, and for all
classes and conditions, even for enemies and persecutors. The first Christians
accompanied every important act of their public and private life with this holy
rite, and Paul exhorts his readers to "pray without ceasing." On
solemn occasions they joined fasting with prayer, as a help to devotion, though
it is nowhere directly enjoined in the New Testament.665 They prayed freely from the heart, as they were moved by the
Spirit, according to special needs and circumstances. We have an example in the
fourth chapter of Acts. There is no trace of a uniform and exclusive liturgy;
it would be inconsistent with the vitality and liberty of the apostolic
churches. At the same time the frequent use of psalms and short forms of
devotion, as the Lord’s Prayer, may be inferred with certainty from the Jewish
custom, from the Lord’s direction respecting his model prayer,666 from the strong sense of
fellowship among the first Christians, and finally from the liturgical spirit
of the ancient church, which could not have so generally prevailed both in the
East and the West without some apostolic and post-apostolic precedent. The
oldest forms are the eucharistic prayers of the Didache, and the petition for rulers in
the first Epistle of Clement, which contrasts most beautifully with the cruel
hostility of Nero and Domitian.667
4. The Song, a form of prayer, in the festive dress of poetry and
the elevated language of inspiration, raising the congregation to the highest
pitch of devotion, and giving it a part in the heavenly harmonies of the
saints. This passed immediately, with the psalms of the Old Testament, those inexhaustible
treasures of spiritual experience, edification, and comfort, from the temple
and the synagogue into the Christian church. The Lord himself inaugurated
psalmody into the new covenant at the institution of the holy Supper,668 and Paul expressly enjoined the
singing of "psalms and hymns and spiritual songs," as a means of
social edification.669 But to this
precious inheritance from the past, whose full value was now for the first time
understood in the light of the New Testament revelation, the church, in the
enthusiasm of her first love, added original, specifically Christian psalms,
hymns, doxologies, and benedictions, which afforded the richest material for
Sacred poetry and music in succeeding centuries; the song of the heavenly
hosts, for example, at the birth of the Saviour;670 the "Nunc dimittis"
of Simeon;671 the "Magnificat" of the Virgin Mary;672 the "Benedictus" of
Zacharias;673 the thanksgiving of Peter after his miraculous
deliverance;674 the speaking with tongues in the apostolic churches,
which, whether song or prayer, was always in the elevated language of
enthusiasm; the fragments of hymns scattered through the Epistles;675 and the lyrical and liturgical
passages, the doxologies and antiphonies of the Apocalypse.676
5. Confession Of Faith. All the above-mentioned acts of worship
are also acts of faith. The first express confession of faith is the testimony
of Peter, that Jesus was the Christ, the Son of the living God. The next is the
trinitarian baptismal formula. Out of this gradually grew the so-called
Apostles’ Creed, which is also trinitarian in structure, but gives the
confession of Christ the central and largest place. Though not traceable in its
present shape above the fourth century, and found in the second and third in
different longer or shorter forms, it is in substance altogether apostolic, and
exhibits an incomparable summary of the leading facts in the revelation of the
triune God from the creation of the world to the resurrection of the body; and
that in a form intelligible to all, and admirably suited for public worship and
catechetical use. We shall return to it more fully in the second period.
6. Finally, the administration
of the Sacraments, or sacred
rites instituted by Christ, by which, under appropriate symbols and visible
signs, spiritual gifts and invisible grace are represented, sealed, and applied
to the worthy participators.
The two sacraments of Baptism
and the Lord’s Supper, the antitypes of circumcision and the passover under the
Old Testament, were instituted by Christ as efficacious signs, pledges, and
means of the grace of the new covenant. They are related to each other as
regeneration and sanctification, or as the beginning and the growth of the
Christian life. The other religious rites mentioned in the New Testament, as
confirmation and ordination, cannot be ranked in dignity with the sacraments,
as they are not commanded by Christ.
§ 54. Baptism.
Literature.
The commentaries on
Matt. 28:19; Mark 16:16; John 3:5; Acts 2:38; 8:13, 16, 18, 37; Rom. 6:4; Gal.
3:27; Tit. 3:5; 1 Pet 3:21.
G. J. Vossius: De Baptismo
Disputationes XX.
Amsterdam, 1648.
W. Wall (Episcopalian): The History of
Infant Baptism (a very learned work), first published in London, 1705, 2
vols., best edition by H. Cotton, Oxford, 1836, 4 vols., and 1862, 2 vols.,
together with Gale’s (Baptist) Reflections and Wall’s Defense. A
Latin translation by Schlosser appeared, vol. I., at Bremen, 1743, and vol. II
at Hamburg, 1753.
F. Brenner (R. Cath.): Geschichtliche
Darstellung der Verrichtung der Taufe von Christus his auf unsere Zeiten. Bamberg, 1818.
Moses Stuart
(Congregat.): Mode of Christian Baptism Prescribed in the New Testament.
Andover, 1833 (reprinted 1876).
Höfling
(Lutheran): Das Sacrament der Taufe. Erlangen, 1846 and 1848, 2
vols.
Samuel Miller
(Presbyterian): Infant Baptism Scriptural and Reasonable; And Baptism By
Sprinkling Or Affusion, The Most Suitable and Edifying Mode. Philadelphia,
1840.
Alex. Carson
(Baptist): Baptism in its Mode and Subjects. London, 1844; 5th Amer.
ed., Philadelphia, 1850.
Alex. Campbell
(founder of the Church of the Disciples, who teach that baptism by immersion is
regeneration): Christian Baptism, with its Antecedents and Consequents.
Bethany, 1848, and Cincinnati, 1876.
T. J. Conant (Baptist): The Meaning and
Use of Baptism Philologically and Historically Investigated for the American (Baptist)
Bible Union. New York, 1861.
James W. Dale
(Presbyterian, d. 1881): Classic Baptism. An inquiry into the meaning of the
word baptizo. Philadelphia, 1867. Judaic Baptism, 1871. Johannic Baptism,
1872. Christic and Patristic Baptism, 1874. In all, 4 vols. Against
the immersion theory.
R. Ingham (Baptist): A Handbook on
Christian Baptism, in 2 parts. London, 1868.
D. B. Ford (Baptist): Studies on Baptism.
New York, 1879. (Against Dale.)
G. D. Armstrong (Presbyterian minister at
Norfolk, Va.): The Sacraments of the New Testament, as Instituted by Christ.
New York, 1880. (Popular.)
Dean Stanley:
Christian Institutions. London and Now York, 1881. Chap. I.
On the
(post-apostolic) archaeology of baptism see the archaeological works of Martene (De Antiquis Eccles. Ritibus),
Goar (Euchologion Graecorum), Bingham, Augusti, Binterim, Siegel, Martigny, and Smith and Cheetham
(Dict. of Christ. Ant., I., 155 sqq.).
On the baptismal
pictures in the catacombs see the works of De
Rossi, Garrucci, and Schaff on the Didache, pp. 36 sqq.
1. The Idea of Baptism. It was solemnly instituted by Christ,
shortly before his ascension, to be performed in the name of the Father, the
Son, and the Holy Spirit. It took the place of circumcision as a sign and seal
of church membership. It is the outward mark of Christian discipleship, the
rite of initiation into the covenant of grace. It is the sacrament of
repentance (conversion), of remission of sins, and of regeneration by the power
of the Holy Spirit.677 In the nature
of the case it is to be received but once. It incorporates the penitent sinner
in the visible church, and entitles him to all the privileges, and binds him to
all the duties of this communion. Where the condition of repentance and faith
is wanting, the blessing (as in the case of the holy Supper, and the preaching
of the Word) is turned into a curse, and what God designs as a savor of life
unto life becomes, by the unfaithfulness of man, a savor of death unto death.
The necessity of baptism for
salvation has been inferred from John 3:5 and Mark 16:16; but while we are
bound to God’s ordinances, God himself is free and can save whomsoever and by
whatsoever means he pleases. The church has always held the principle that the
mere want of the sacrament does not condemn, but only the contempt. Otherwise
all unbaptized infants that die in infancy would be lost. This horrible
doctrine was indeed inferred by St. Augustin and the Roman church, from the supposed
absolute necessity of baptism, but is in direct conflict with the spirit of the
gospel and Christ’s treatment of children, to whom belongs the kingdom of
heaven.
The first administration of this
sacrament in its full Christian sense took place on the birthday of the church,
after the first independent preaching of the apostles. The baptism of John was
more of a negative sort, and only preparatory to the baptism with the Holy
Spirit. In theory Christian baptism is preceded by conversion, that is the human
act of turning from sin to God in repentance and faith, and followed by
regeneration, that is the divine act of forgiveness of sin and inward cleansing
and renewal. Yet in practice the outward sign and inward state and effect do
not always coincide; in Simon Magus we have an example of the baptism of water
without that of the Spirit, and in Cornelius an example of the communication of
the Spirit before the application of the water. In the case of infants,
conversion, as a conscious act of the will, is impossible and unnecessary. In
adults the solemn ordinance was preceded by the preaching of the gospel, or a
brief instruction in its main facts, and then followed by more thorough
inculcation of the apostolic doctrine. Later, when great caution became necessary
in receiving proselytes, the period of catechetical instruction and probation
was considerably lengthened.
2. The usual Form of baptism was immersion. This is
inferred from the original meaning of the Greek baptivzein and baptismov";678 from the analogy of John’s baptism in the Jordan; from
the apostles’ comparison of the sacred rite with the miraculous passage of the
Red Sea, with the escape of the ark from the flood, with a cleansing and refreshing
bath, and with burial and resurrection; finally, from the general custom of the
ancient church which prevails in the East to this day.679 But sprinkling, also, or copious pouring rather, was practised at
an early day with sick and dying persons, and in all such cases where total or
partial immersion was impracticable. Some writers suppose that this was the
case even in the first baptism of the three thousand on the day of Pentecost;
for Jerusalem was poorly supplied with water and private baths; the Kedron is a
small creek and dry in summer; but there are a number of pools and cisterns
there. Hellenistic usage allows to the relevant expressions sometimes the wider
sense of washing, bathing, sprinkling, and ceremonial cleansing.680 Unquestionably, immersion expresses the idea of baptism, as a
purification and renovation of the whole man, more completely than pouring or
sprinkling; but it is not in keeping with the genius of the gospel to limit the
operation of the Holy Spirit by the quantity or the quality of the water or the
mode of its application. Water is absolutely necessary to baptism, as an
appropriate symbol of the purifying and regenerating energy of the Holy Spirit;
but whether the water be in large quantity or small, cold or warm, fresh or
salt, from river, cistern, or spring, is relatively immaterial, and cannot
affect the validity of the ordinance.
3. As to the Subjects of baptism: the apostolic
origin of infant baptism is denied not only by the Baptists, but also by
many paedobaptist divines. The Baptists assert that infant baptism is contrary
to the idea of the sacrament itself, and accordingly, an unscriptural
corruption. For baptism, say they, necessarily presupposes the preaching of the
gospel on the part of the church, and repentance and faith on the part of the
candidate for the ordinance; and as infants can neither understand preaching,
nor repent and believe, they are not proper subjects for baptism, which is intended
only for adult converts. It is true, the apostolic church was a missionary
church, and had first to establish a mother community, in the bosom of which
alone the grace of baptism can be improved by a Christian education. So even
under the old covenant circumcision was first performed on the adult Abraham;
and so all Christian missionaries in heathen lands now begin with preaching,
and baptizing adults. True, the New Testament contains no express command to
baptize infants; such a command would not agree with the free spirit of the
gospel. Nor was there any compulsory or general infant baptism before the union
of church and state; Constantine, the first Christian emperor, delayed his
baptism till his deathbed (as many now delay their repentance); and even after
Constantine there were examples of eminent teachers, as Gregory Nazianzen,
Augustin, Chrysostom, who were not baptized before their conversion in early
manhood, although they had Christian mothers.
But still less does the New
Testament forbid infant baptism; as it might be expected to do in view
of the universal custom of the Jews, to admit their children by circumcision on
the eighth day after birth into the fellowship of the old covenant.
On the contrary, we have
presumptive and positive arguments for the apostolic origin and character of
infant baptism, first, in the fact that circumcision as truly prefigured
baptism, as the passover the holy Supper; then in the organic relation between
Christian parents and children; in the nature of the new covenant, which is
even more comprehensive than the old; in the universal virtue of Christ, as the
Redeemer of all sexes, classes, and ages, and especially in the import of his
own infancy, which has redeemed and sanctified the infantile age; in his express
invitation to children, whom he assures of a title to the kingdom of heaven,
and whom, therefore, he certainly would not leave without the sign and seal of
such membership; in the words, of institution, which plainly look to the
Christianizing, not merely of individuals, but of whole nations, including, of
course, the children; in the express declaration of Peter at the first
administration of the ordinance, that this promise of forgiveness of sins and
of the Holy Spirit was to the Jews "and to their children;" in the
five instances in the New Testament of the baptism of whole families, where the
presence of children in most of the cases is far more probable than the absence
of children in all; and finally, in the universal practice of the early church,
against which the isolated protest of Tertullian proves no more, than his other
eccentricities and Montanistic peculiarities; on the contrary, his violent
protest implies the prevailing practice of infant baptism. He advised delay of
baptism as a measure of prudence, lest the baptized by sinning again might
forever forfeit the benefit of this ordinance; but he nowhere denies the
apostolic origin or right of early baptism.
We must add, however, that infant baptism is unmeaning,
and its practice a profanation, except on the condition of Christian parentage
or guardianship, and under the guarantee of a Christian education. And it needs
to be completed by an act of personal consecration, in which the child, after
due instruction in the gospel, intelligently and freely confesses Christ,
devotes himself to his service, and is thereupon solemnly admitted to the full
communion of the church and to the sacrament of the holy Supper. The earliest
traces of confirmation are supposed to be found in the apostolic practice of
laying on hands, or symbolically imparting the Holy Spirit. after baptism.681
§ 55. The Lord’s Supper.
The commentaries on
Matt. 26:26 sqq., and the parallel passages in Mark and Luke; 1 Cor. 10:16, 17;
11:23 sqq.; John 6:47-58, 63.
D. Waterland (Episcopal., d. 1740): A
Review of the Doctrine of the Eucharist, a new edition, 1868 (Works, vols.
IV. and V.).
J. Döllinger: Die Lehre
von der Eucharistie in den drei ersten Jahrhunderten. Mainz, 1826. (Rom. Cath.)
Ebrard: Das Dogma vom heil. Abendmahl u. seine Geschichte. Frankf. a. M., 1845, 2 vols.,
vol. I., pp. 1-231. (Reformed.)
J. W. Nevin: The Mystical Presence. A
Vindication of the Reformed or Calvinistic soctrine of the Holy Eucharist. Philadelphia,
1846, pp. 199-256. (Reformed.)
Kahnis: Die Lehre vom heil. Abendmahl. Leipz., 1851. (Lutheran.)
Robert Wilberforce: The Doctrine of the Holy Eucharist. London, 1853. (Anglican, or
rather Tractarian or Romanizing.)
L. Imm. Ruckert: Das
Abendmahl. Sein Wesen und seine Geschichte in der alten Kirche. Leipz., 1856. (Rationalistic.)
E. B. Pusey: The Doctrine of the Real
Presence, as contained in the Fathers, from St. John to the Fourth General
Council. Oxford, 1855. (Anglo-Catholic.)
Philip Freeman:
The Principles of Divine Service. London, 1855-1862, in two parts.
(Anglican, contains much historical investigation on the subject of eucharistic
worship in the ancient Catholic church.)
Thos. S. L. Vogan: The True Doctrine of the Eucharist. London, 1871.
John Harrison:
An Answer to Dr. Pusey’s Challenge respecting the Doctrine of the Real
Presence. London, 1871, 2 vols. (Anglican, Low Church. Includes the
doctrine of the Scripture and the first eight centuries.)
Dean Stanley:
Christian Institutions, London and New York, 1881, chs. IV., V., and VI.
(He adopts the Zwinglian view, and says of the Marburg Conference of 1529:
"Everything which could be said on behalf of the dogmatic, coarse, literal
interpretation of the institution was urged with the utmost vigor of word and
gesture by the stubborn Saxon. Everything which could be said on behalf of the
rational, refined, spiritual construction was urged with a union of the utmost
acuteness and gentleness by the sober-minded Swiss.")
L. Gude (Danish Lutheran): Den
hellige Nadvere. Copenhagen, 1887, 2 vols. Exegetical and historical. Reviewed in
Luthardt’s "Theol. Literaturblatt.," 1889, Nos. 14 sqq.
The sacrament of the holy Supper
was instituted by Christ under the most solemn circumstances, when he was about
to offer himself a sacrifice for the salvation of the world. It is the feast of
the thankful remembrance and appropriation of his atoning death, and of the
living union of believers with him, and their communion among themselves. As
the Passover kept in lively remembrance the miraculous deliverance from the
land of bondage, and at the same time pointed forward to the Lamb of God; so
the eucharist represents, seals, and applies the now accomplished redemption
from sin and death until the end of time. Here the deepest mystery of
Christianity is embodied ever anew, and the story of the cross reproduced
before us. Here the miraculous feeding of the five thousand is spiritually
perpetuated. Here Christ, who sits at the right hand of God, and is yet truly
present in his church to the end of the world, gives his own body and blood,
sacrificed for us, that is, his very self, his life and the virtue of his
atoning death, as spiritual food, as the true bread from heaven, to all who,
with due self-examination, come hungering and thirsting to the heavenly feast.
The communion has therefore been always regarded as the inmost sanctuary of
Christian worship.
In the apostolic period the
eucharist was celebrated daily in connection with a simple meal of brotherly
love (agape), in which the Christians, in communion with their common
Redeemer, forgot all distinctions of rank, wealth, and culture, and felt
themselves to be members of one family of God. But this childlike exhibition of
brotherly unity became more and more difficult as the church increased, and led
to all sorts of abuses, such as we find rebuked in the Corinthians by Paul. The
lovefeasts, therefore, which indeed were no more enjoined by law than the
community of goods at Jerusalem, were gradually severed from the eucharist, and
in the course of the second and third centuries gradually disappeared.
The apostle requires the
Christians682 to prepare themselves for the Lord’s Supper by
self-examination, or earnest inquiry whether they have repentance and faith,
without which they cannot receive the blessing from the sacrament, but rather
provoke judgment from God. This caution gave rise to the appropriate custom of
holding special preparatory exercises for the holy communion.
In the course of time this holy
feast of love has become the subject of bitter controversy, like the sacrament
of baptism and even the Person of Christ himself. Three conflicting theories_transubstantiation,
consubstantiation, and spiritual presence of Christ-have been deduced from as
many interpretations of the simple words of institution ("This is my
body," etc.), which could hardly have been misunderstood by the apostles
in the personal presence of their Lord, and in remembrance of his warning
against carnal misconception of his discourse on the eating of his flesh.683 The eucharistic controversies in the middle ages and during the
sixteenth century are among the most unedifying and barren in the history of
Christianity. And yet they cannot have been in vain. The different theories
represent elements of truth which have become obscured or perverted by
scholastic subtleties, but may be purified and combined. The Lord’s Supper is:
(1) a commemorative ordinance, a memorial of Christ’s atoning sacrifice on the
cross; (2) a feast of living union of believers with the Saviour, whereby they
truly, that is spiritually and by faith, receive Christ, with all his benefits,
and are nourished with his life unto life eternal; (3) a communion of believers
with one another as members of the same mystical body of Christ; (4) a
eucharist or thankoffering of our persons and services to Christ, who died for
us that we might live for him.
Fortunately, the blessing of the
holy communion does not depend upon the scholastic interpretation and
understanding of the words of institution, but upon the promise of the Lord and
upon childlike faith in him. And therefore, even now, Christians of different
denominations and holding different opinions can unite around the table of
their common Lord and Saviour, and feel one with him and in him.
§ 56. Sacred Places.
Although, as the omnipresent
Spirit, God may be worshipped in all places of the universe, which is his
temple,684 yet our finite, sensuous nature, and the need of united
devotion, require special localities or sanctuaries consecrated to his worship.
The first Christians, after the example of the Lord, frequented the temple at
Jerusalem and the synagogues, so long as their relation to the Mosaic economy
allowed. But besides this, they assembled also from the first in private
houses, especially for the communion and the love feast. The church itself was
founded, on the day of Pentecost, in the upper room of an humble dwelling.
The prominent members and first
converts, as Mary, the mother of John Mark in Jerusalem, Cornelius in Caesarea,
Lydia in Philippi, Jason in Thessalonica, Justus in Corinth, Priscilla in
Ephesus, Philemon in Colosse, gladly opened their houses for social worship. In
larger cities, as in Rome, the Christian community divided itself into several
such assemblies at private houses,685 which, however, are always
addressed in the epistles as a unit.
That the Christians in the
apostolic age erected special houses of worship is out of the question, even on
account of their persecution by Jews and Gentiles, to say nothing of their
general poverty; and the transition of a whole synagogue to the new faith was
no doubt very rare. As the Saviour of the world was born in a stable, and
ascended to heaven from a mountain, so his apostles and their successors down
to the third century, preached in the streets, the markets, on mountains, in
ships, sepulchres, eaves, and deserts, and in the homes of their converts. But
how many thousands of costly churches and chapels have since been built and are
constantly being built in all parts of the world to the honor of the crucified
Redeemer, who in the days of his humiliation had no place of his own to rest
his head!686
§ 57. Sacred Times_The Lord’s Day.
Literature.
George Holden:
The Christian Sabbath. London, 1825. (See ch. V.)
W. Henstenberg: The Lord’s Day.
Transl. from the German by James Martin, London, 1853. (Purely exegetical;
defends the continental view, but advocates a better practical observance.)
John T. Baylee:
History of the Sabbath. London, 1857. (See chs. X. XIII.)
James Aug. Hessey: Sunday: Its Origin, History, and Present Obligation. Bampton
Lectures, preached before the University of Oxford, London, 1860. (Defends
the Dominican and moderate Anglican, as distinct both from the Continental
latitudinarian, and from the Puritanic Sabbatarian, view of Sunday, with proofs
from the church fathers.)
James Gilfillan: The Sabbath viewed in the Light of Reason, Revelation, and History,
with Sketches of its Literature. Edinb. 1861, republished and widely
circulated by the Am. Tract Society and the "New York Sabbath
Committee," New York, 1862. (The fullest and ablest defence of the Puritan
and Scotch Presbyterian theory of the Christian Sabbath, especially in its
practical aspects.)
Robert Cox
(F.S.A.): Sabbath Laws and Sabbath Duties. Edinb. 1853. By the same:
The Literature of the Sabbath Question. Edinb. 1865, 2 vols. (Historical,
literary, and liberal.)
Th. Zahn: Geschichte
des Sonntags in der alten Kirche. Hannover, 1878.
There is a very
large Sabbath literature in the English language, of a popular and practical
character. For the Anglo-American theory and history of the Christian Sabbath,
compare the author’s essay, The Anglo-American Sabbath, New York, 1863 (in
English and German), the publications of the New York Sabbath Committee from
1857-1886, the Sabbath Essays, ed. by Will. C. Wood, Boston
(Congreg. Publ. Soc.), 1879; and A. E. Waffle:
The Lord’s Day, Philad. 1886.
As every place, so is every day
and hour alike sacred to God, who fills all space and all time, and can be
worshipped everywhere and always. But, from the necessary limitations of our
earthly life, as well as from the nature of social and public worship, springs
the use of sacred seasons. The apostolic church followed in general the Jewish
usage, but purged it from superstition and filled it with the spirit of faith
and freedom.
1. Accordingly, the Jewish Hours of daily prayer,
particularly in the morning and evening, were observed as a matter of habit,
besides the strictly private devotions which are bound to no time.
2. The Lord’s Day took the place of the Jewish Sabbath as the
weekly day of public worship. The substance remained, the form was changed.
The institution of a periodical weekly day of rest for the body and the soul is
rooted in our physical and moral nature, and is as old as man, dating, like
marriage, from paradise.687 This is implied
in the profound saying of our Lord: "The Sabbath is made for man."
It is incorporated in the
Decalogue, the moral law, which Christ did not come to destroy, but to fulfil,
and which cannot be robbed of one commandment without injury to all the rest.
At the same time the Jewish
Sabbath was hedged around by many national and ceremonial restrictions, which
were not intended to be permanent, but were gradually made so prominent as to
overshadow its great moral aim, and to make man subservient to the sabbath
instead of the sabbath to man. After the exile and in the hands of the
Pharisees it became a legal bondage rather than a privilege and benediction.
Christ as the Lord of the Sabbath opposed this mechanical ceremonialism and
restored the true spirit and benevolent aim of the institution.688 When the slavish, superstitious, and self-righteous
sabbatarianism of the Pharisees crept into the Galatian churches and was made a
condition of justification, Paul rebuked it as a relapse into Judaism.689
The day was transferred from the
seventh to the first day of the week, not on the ground of a particular
command, but by the free spirit of the gospel and by the power of certain great
facts which he at the foundation of the Christian church. It was on that day
that Christ rose from the dead; that he appeared to Mary, the disciples of
Emmaus, and the assembled apostles; that he poured out his Spirit and founded
the church;690 and that he revealed to his beloved disciple the
mysteries of the future. Hence, the first day was already in the apostolic age
honorably designated as "the Lord’s Day." On that day Paul met with
the disciples at Troas and preached till midnight. On that day he ordered the
Galatian and Corinthian Christians to make, no doubt in connection with divine
service, their weekly contributions to charitable objects according to their
ability. It appears, therefore, from the New Testament itself, that Sunday was
observed as a day of worship, and in special commemoration of the Resurrection,
whereby the work of redemption was finished.691
The universal and uncontradicted
Sunday observance in the second century can only be explained by the fact that
it had its roots in apostolic practice. Such observance is the more to be
appreciated as it had no support in civil legislation before the age of
Constantine, and must have been connected with many inconveniences, considering
the lowly social condition of the majority of Christians and their dependence
upon their heathen masters and employers. Sunday thus became, by an easy and
natural transformation, the Christian Sabbath or weekly day of rest, at once
answering the typical import of the Jewish Sabbath, and itself forming in turn
a type of the eternal rest of the people of God in the heavenly Canaan.692 In the gospel dispensation the Sabbath is not a degradation, but
an elevation, of the week days to a higher plane, looking to the consecration
of all time and all work. It is not a legal ceremonial bondage, but rather a
precious gift of grace, a privilege, a holy rest in God in the midst of the
unrest of the world, a day of spiritual refreshing in communion with God and in
the fellowship of the saints, a foretaste and pledge of the never-ending
Sabbath in heaven.
The due observance of it, in
which the churches of England, Scotland, and America, to their incalculable
advantage, excel the churches of the European continent, is a wholesome school
of discipline, a means of grace for the people, a safeguard of public morality
and religion, a bulwark against infidelity, and a source of immeasurable
blessing to the church, the state, and the family. Next to the Church and the
Bible, the Lord’s Day is the chief pillar of Christian society.
Besides the Christian Sunday,
the Jewish Christians observed their ancient Sabbath also, till Jerusalem was
destroyed. After that event, the Jewish habit continued only among the
Ebionites and Nazarenes.
As Sunday was devoted to the
commemoration of the Saviour’s resurrection, and observed as a day of
thanksgiving and joy, so, at least as early as the second century, if not
sooner, Friday came to be observed as a day of repentance, with prayer and
fasting, in commemoration of the sufferings and death of Christ.
3. Annual festivals. There is no injunction for their
observance, direct or indirect, in the apostolic writings, as there is no basis
for them in the Decalogue. But Christ observed them, and two of the festivals,
the Passover and Pentecost, admitted of an easy transformation similar to that
of the Jewish into the Christian Sabbath. From some hints in the Epistles,693 viewed in the light of the
universal and uncontradicted practice of the church in the second century it
may be inferred that the annual celebration of the death and the resurrection
of Christ, and of the outpouring of the Holy Spirit, originated in the
apostolic age. In truth, Christ crucified, risen, and living in the church, was
the one absorbing thought of the early Christians; and as this thought
expressed itself in the weekly observance of Sunday, so it would also very
naturally transform the two great typical feasts of the Old Testament into the
Christian Easter and Whit-Sunday. The Paschal controversies of the second
century related not to the fact, but to the time of the Easter festival, and
Polycarp of Smyrna and Anicet of Rome traced their customs to an unimportant
difference in the practice of the apostles themselves.
Of other annual festivals, the
New Testament contains not the faintest trace. Christmas came in during the
fourth century by a natural development of the idea of a church year, as a sort
of chronological creed of the people. The festivals of Mary, the Apostles,
Saints, and Martyrs, followed gradually, as the worship of saints spread in the
Nicene and post-Nicene age, until almost every day was turned first into a holy
day and then into a holiday. As the saints overshadowed the Lord, the saints’
days overshadowed the Lord’s Day.