"Till He Come" -- Communion with Christ and His People
"TILL HE COME"
Communion Meditations And Addresses by C.H. Spurgeon, 1896
Communion with Christ and His People.
An address at a communion service at Mentone.
"The cup of blessing which we bless, is it not the communion
of the blood of Christ? The bread which we break, is it not the
communion of the body of Christ? For we being many are one bread,
and one body: for we are all partakers of that one bread." -- 1 Cor.
x. 16, 17.
I will read you the text as it is given in the Revised Version:
"The cup of blessing which we bless, is it not a communion of the
blood of Christ?" That is to say, -- Is it not one form of
expressing the communion of the blood of Christ? "The bread," or
as it is in the margin, "the loaf which we break, is it not a
communion of the body of Christ? seeing that we, who are many, are
one loaf, one body: for we all partake of the one loaf." The word
"loaf" helps to bring out more clearly the idea of unity intended
to be set forth by the apostle.
It is a lamentable fact that some have fancied that this
simple ordinance of the Lord's supper has a certain magical, or at
least physical power about it, so that, by the mere act of eating
and drinking this bread and wine, men can be made partakers of the
body and blood of Christ. It is marvellous that so plain a symbol
should have been so complicated by genuflexions, adornments, and
technical phrases. Can anyone see the slightest resemblance
between the Master's sitting down with the twelve, and the mass of
the Roman community? The original rite is lost in the superimposed
ritual. Superstition has produced a sacrament where Jesus
intended a fellowship. Too many, who would not go the length of
Rome, yet speak of this simple feast as if it were a mystery dark
and obscure. They employ all manner of hard words to turn the
children's bread into a stone. It is not the Lord's supper, but
the Eucharist; we see before us no plate, but a "paten"; the cup
is a "chalice" and the table is an "altar." These are
incrustations of superstition, whereby the blessed ordinance of
Christ is likely to be again overgrown and perverted.
What does this supper mean? It means communion: communion
with Christ, and communion with one another.
What is communion? The word breaks up easily into union, and
its prefix com, which means with, union with. We must,
therefore, first enjoy union with Christ, and with His Church, or
else we cannot enjoy communion. Union lies at the basis of communion.
We must be one with Christ in heart, and soul, and life;
baptized into His death; quickened by His life, and so brought to
be members of His body, one with the whole Church of which He is
the Head. We cannot have communion with Christ till we are in
union with Him; and we cannot have communion with the Church
till we are in vital union with it.
I. The teaching of the Lord's supper is just this -- that while
we have many ways of communion with Christ, yet the receiving of
Christ into our souls as our Saviour is the best way of communion
with Him.
I said, dear friends, that we have many ways of communion
with Christ; let me show you that it is so.
Communion is ours by personal intercourse with the Lord
Jesus. We speak with Him in prayer, and He speaks with us through
the Word. Some of us speak oftener with Christ than we do with
wife or child, and our communion with Jesus is deeper and more
thorough than our fellowship with our nearest friend. In
meditation and its attendant thanksgiving we speak with our risen
Lord, and by His Holy Spirit He answers us by creating fresh
thought and emotion in our minds. I like sometimes in prayer, when
I do not feel that I can say anything, just to sit still, and look
up; then faith spiritually descries the Well-beloved, and hears
His voice in the solemn silence of the mind. Thus we have
intercourse with Jesus of a closer sort than any words could
possibly express. Our soul melts beneath the warmth of Jesus'
love, and darts upward her own love in return. Think not that I am
dreaming, or am carried off by the memory of some unusual
rhapsody: no, I assert that the devout soul can converse with the
Lord Jesus all the day, and can have as true fellowship with Him
as if He still dwelt bodily among men. This thing comes to me, not
by the hearing of the ear, but by my own personal experience: I
know of a surety that Jesus manifests Himself unto His people as
He doth not unto the world.
Ah, what sweet communion often exists between the saint and
the Well-beloved, when there is no bread and wine upon the table,
for the Spirit Himself draws the heart of the renewed one, and it
runs after Jesus, while the Lord Himself appears unto the longing
spirit! Truly our fellowship is with the Father, and with His Son
Jesus Christ. Do you enjoy this charming converse?
Next, we have communion with Christ in His thoughts, views,
and purposes; for His thoughts are our thoughts according to our
capacity and sanctity. Believers take the same view of matters as
Jesus does; that which pleases Him pleases them, and that which
grieves Him grieves them also. Consider, for instance, the
greatest theme of our thought, and see whether our thoughts are
not like those of Christ. He delights in the Father, He loves to
glorify the Father: do not we? Is not the Father the centre of our
soul's delight? Do we not rejoice at the very sound of His name?
Does not our spirit cry, "Abba, Father"? Thus it is clear we feel
as Jesus feels towards the Father, and so we have the truest
communion with Him. This is but one instance; your contemplations
will bring before you a wide variety of topics wherein we think
with Jesus. Now, identity of judgment, opinion, and purpose forms
the highway of communion; yea, it is communion.
We have also communion with Christ in our emotions. Have
you never felt a holy horror when you have heard a word of
blasphemy in the street? Thus Jesus felt when He saw sin, and bore
it in His own person: only He felt it infinitely more than you do.
Have you never felt as you looked upon sinners that you must weep
over them? Those are holy tears, and contain the same ingredients
as those which Jesus shed when He lamented over Jerusalem. Yes, in
our zeal for God, our hatred of sin, our detestation of falsehood,
our pity for men, we have true communion with Jesus.
Further, we have had fellowship with Christ in many of our
actions. Have you ever tried to teach the ignorant? This Jesus
did. Have you found it difficult? So Jesus found it. Have you
striven to reclaim the backslider? Then you were in communion with
the Good Shepherd who hastens into the wilderness to find the one
lost sheep, finds it, lays it upon His shoulders, and brings it
home rejoicing. Have you ever watched over a soul night and day
with tears? Then you have had communion with Him who has borne all
our names upon His broken heart, and carries the memorial of them
upon His pierced hands. Yes, in acts of self-denial, liberality,
benevolence, and piety, we enter into communion with Him who went
about doing good. Whenever we try to disentangle the snarls of
strife, and to make peace between men who are at enmity, then are
we doing what the great Peace-maker did, and we have communion
with the Lord and Giver of peace. Wherever, indeed, we co-operate
with the Lord Jesus in His designs of love to men, we are in true
and active communion with Him.
So it is with our sorrows. Certain of us have had large
fellowship with the Lord Jesus in affliction. "Jesus wept": He
lost a friend, and so have we. Jesus grieved over the hardness of
men's hearts: we know that grief. Jesus was exceedingly sorry that
the hopeful young man turned away, and went back to the world: we
know that sorrow. Those who have sympathetic hearts, and live for
others, readily enter into the experience of "the Man of sorrows."
The wounds of calumny, the reproaches of the proud, the venom of
the bigoted, the treachery of the false, and the weakness of the
true, we have known in our measure; and therein have had communion
with our Lord Jesus.
Nor this alone: we have been with our Divine Master in His
joys. I suppose there never lived a happier man than the Lord
Jesus. He was rightly called "the Man of sorrows"; but He might,
with unimpeachable truth, have been called, "the Man of joys." He
must have rejoiced as He called His disciples, and they came unto
Him; as He bestowed healing and relief; as He gave pardon to
penitents, and breathed peace on believers. His was the joy of
finding the sheep, and taking the piece of money out of the dust.
His work was His joy: such joy that, for its sake, He endured the
cross, despising the shame. The exercise of benevolence is joy to
loving hearts: the more pain it costs, the more joy it is. Kind
actions make us happy, and in such joy we find communion with the
great heart of Jesus.
Thus have I given you a list of windows of agate and gates of
carbuncle through which you may come at the Lord; but the
ordinance of the Lord's supper sets forth a way which surpasses
them all. It is the most accessible and the most effectual method
of fellowship. Here it is that we have fellowship with the Lord
Jesus by receiving Him as our Saviour. We, being guilty, accept of
His atonement as our sacrificial cleansing, and in token thereof
we eat this bread and drink this cup. "Oh!" says one, "I do not
feel that I can get near to Christ. He is so high and holy, and I
am only a poor sinner." Just so. For that very reason you can have
fellowship with Christ in that which lies nearest to His heart: He
is a Saviour, and to be a Saviour there must be a sinner to be
saved. Be you that one, and Christ and you shall at once be in
union and communion: He shall save, and you shall be saved; He
shall sanctify, and you shall be sanctified; and twain shall thus
be one. This table sets before you His great sacrifice. Jesus has
offered it; will you accept it? He does not ask you to bring
anything, -- no drop of blood, no pang of flesh; all is here, and
your part is to come and partake of it, even as of old the offerer
partook of the peace-offering which he had brought, and so feasted
with God and with the priest. If you work for Christ, that will
certainly be some kind of fellowship with Him; but I tell you that
the communion of receiving him into your inmost soul is the
nearest and closest fellowship possible to mortal man. The
fellowship of service is exceedingly honourable, when we and
Christ work together for the same objects; the fellowship of
suffering is exceedingly instructive, when our heart has graven
upon it the same characters as were graven upon the heart of
Christ: but the fellowship of the soul which receives Christ, and
is received by Christ, is closer, more vital, more essential than
any other.
Such fellowship is eternal. No power upon earth can
henceforth take from me the piece of bread which I have just now
eaten, it has gone where it will be made up into blood, and nerve,
and muscle, and bone. It is within me, and of me. That drop of
wine has coursed through my veins, and is part and parcel of my
being. So he that takes Jesus by faith to be his Saviour has
chosen the good part which shall not be taken away from him. He
has received the Christ into his inward parts, and all the men on
earth, and all the devils in hell, cannot extract Christ from him.
Jesus saith, "He that eateth Me, even he shall live by Me." By our
sincere reception of Jesus into our hearts, an indissoluble union
is established between us and the Lord, and this manifests itself
in mutual communion. To as many as received Him, to them has He
given this communion, even to them that believe on His name.
II. I have now to look at another side of communion, -- namely,
the fellowship of true believers with each other. We have many
ways of communing the one with the other, but there is no way of
mutual communing like the common reception of the same Christ in
the same way. I have said that there are many ways in which
Christians commune with one another, and these doors of fellowship
I would mention at some length.
Let me go over much the same ground as before. We commune by
holy converse. I wish we had more of this. Time was when they
that feared the Lord spake often one to another; I am afraid that
now they more often speak one against another. It is a grievous
thing that full often love lies bleeding by a brother's hand.
Where we are not quite so bad as that, yet we are often backward
and silent, and so miss profitable converse. Our insular reserve
has often made one Christian sit by another in utter isolation,
when each would have been charmed with the other's company.
Children of one family need not wait to be introduced to each
other: having eaten of this one bread, we have given and received
the token of brotherhood; let us therefore act consistently with
our relationship, and fall into holy conversation next time we
meet. I am afraid that Christian brotherhood in many cases begins
and ends inside the place of worship. Let it not be so among us.
Let it be our delight to find our society in the circle of which
Jesus is the centre, and let us make those our friends who are the
friends of Jesus. By frequent united prayer and praise, and by
ministering the one to the other the things which we have learned
by the Spirit, we shall have fellowship with each other in our
Lord Jesus Christ.
I am sure that all Christians have fellowship together in
their thoughts. In the essentials of the gospel we think alike:
in our thoughts of God, of Christ, of sin, of holiness, we keep
step; in our intense desire to promote the kingdom of our Lord, we
are as one. All spiritual life is one. The thoughts raised by the
Spirit of God in the souls of men are never contrary to each
other. I say not that the thoughts of all professors agree, but I
do assert that the minds of the truly regenerate in all sects, and
in all ages, are in harmony with each other, -- a harmony which
often excites delighted surprise in those who perceive it. The
marks that divide one set of nominal Christians from another set
are very deep and wide to those who have nothing of religion but
the name; yet living believers scarcely notice them. Boundaries
which separate the cattle of the field are no division to the
birds of the air. Our minds, thoughts, desires, and hopes are one
in Christ Jesus, and herein we have communion.
Beloved friends, our emotions are another royal road of
fellowship. You sit down and tell your experience, and I smile to
think that you are telling mine. Sometimes a young believer
enlarges upon the sad story of his trials and temptations,
imagining that nobody ever had to endure so great a fight, when
all the while he is only describing the common adventures of those
who go on pilgrimage, and we are all communing with him. When we
talk together about our Lord, are we not agreed? When we speak of
our Father, and all His dealings with us, are we not one? And when
we weep, and when we sigh, and when we sing, and when we rejoice,
are we not all akin? Heavenly fingers touching like strings within
our hearts bring forth the self-same notes, for we are the
products of the same Maker, and tuned to the same praise. Real
harmony exists among all the true people of God: Christians are
one in Christ.
We have communion with one another, too, in our actions. We
unite in trying to save men: I hope we do. We join in instructing,
warning, inviting, and persuading sinners to come to Jesus. Our
life-ministry is the same: we are workers together with God. We
live out the one desire, -- "Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done in
earth, as it is in heaven."
Certainly we have much communion one with the other in our
sufferings. There is not a poor sick or despondent saint upon
the earth with whom we do not sympathize at this moment, for we
are fellow-members, and partakers of the sufferings of Christ. I
hope we can say,
"Is there a lamb in all Thy flock,
I would disdain to feed?
Is there a foe, before whose face,
I fear Thy cause to plead?"
No, we suffer with each other, and bear each other's burden,
and so fulfil the law of Christ. If we do not, we have reason for
questioning our own faith; but if we do so, we have communion with
each other.
I hope we have fellowship in our joys. Is one happy? We
would not envy him, but rejoice with him. Perhaps this is not so
universal as it should be among professors. Are we at once glad
because another prospers? If another star outshines ours, do we
delight in its radiance? When we meet a brother with ten talents,
do we congratulate ourselves on having such a man given to help
us, or do we depreciate him as much as we can? Such is the
depravity of our nature, that we do not readily rejoice in the
progress of others if they leave us behind; but we must school
ourselves to this. A man will speedily sit down and sympathize
with a friend's griefs; but if he sees him honoured and esteemed,
he is apt to regard him as a rival, and does not so readily
rejoice with him. This ought not to be; without effort we ought to
be happy in our brother's happiness. If we are ill, be this our
comfort, that many are in robust health; if we are faint, let us
be glad that others are strong in the Lord. Thus shall we enjoy a
happy fellowship like that of the perfected above.
When I have put all these modes of Christian communion
together, no one of them is so sure, so strong, so deep, as
communion in receiving the same Christ as our Saviour, and
trusting in the same blood for cleansing unto eternal life. Here
on the table you have the tokens of the broadest and fullest
communion. This is a kind of communion which you and I cannot
choose or reject: if we are in Christ, it is and must be ours.
Certain brethren restrict their communion in the outward
ordinance, and they think they have good reasons for doing so; but
I am unable to see the force of their reasoning, because I
joyfully observe that these brethren commune with other believers
in prayer, and praise, and hearing of the Word, and other ways:
the fact being that the matter of real communion is very largely
beyond human control, and is to the spiritual body what the
circulation of the blood is to the natural body, a necessary
process not dependent upon volition. In perusing a deeply
spiritual book of devotion, you have been charmed and benefitted,
and yet upon looking at the title-page it may be you have found
that the author belonged to the Church of Rome. What then? Why,
then it has happened that the inner life has broken all barriers,
and your spirits have communed. For my own part, in reading
certain precious works, I have loathed their Romanism, and yet I
have had close fellowship with their writers in weeping over sin,
in adoring at the foot of the cross, and in rejoicing in the
glorious enthronement of our Lord. Blood is thicker than water,
and no fellowship is more inevitable and sincere than fellowship
in the precious blood, and in the risen life of our Lord Jesus
Christ. Here, in the common reception of the one loaf, we bear
witness that we are one; and in the actual participation of all
the chosen in the one redemption, that unity is in very deed
displayed and matured in the most substantial manner. Washed in
the one blood, fed on the same loaf, cheered by the same cup, all
differences pass away, and "we, being many, are one body in
Christ, and every one members one of another."
Now, then, dear friends, if this kind of fellowship be the
best, let us take care to enjoy it. Let us at this hour avail
ourselves of it.
Let us take care to see Christ in the mirror of this
ordinance. Have any of you eaten the bread, and yet have you not
seen Christ? Then you have gained no benefit. Have you drunk the
wine, but have you not remembered the Lord? Alas! I fear you have
eaten and drunk condemnation to yourselves, not discerning the
Lord's body. But if you did see through the emblems, as aged
persons see through their spectacles, then you have been thankful
for such aids to vision. But what is the use of glasses if there
is nothing to look at? and what is the use of the communion if
Christ be not in our thoughts and hearts?
If you did discern the Lord, then be sure, again, to accept
Him. Say to yourself, "All that Christ is to any, He shall be to
me. Does He save sinners? He shall save me. Does He change men's
hearts? He shall change mine. Is He all in all to those that trust
Him? He shall be all in all to me." I have heard persons say that
they do not know how to take Christ. What says the apostle? "The
Word is nigh thee, even in thy mouth, and in thy heart." If you
have something in your mouth that you desire to eat, what is the
best thing to do? Will you not swallow it? That is exactly what
faith does. Christ's word of grace is very near you, it is on your
tongue; let it go down into your inmost soul. Say to your Saviour,
"I know I am not fit to receive Thee, O Jesus, but since Thou dost
graciously come to me as bread comes to the hungry, I thankfully
receive Thee, rejoicing to feed upon Thee! Since Thou dost come to
me as the fruit of the vine to a thirsty man, Lord, I take Thee,
willingly, and I thank Thee that this reception is all that Thou
dost require of me. Has not Thy Spirit so put it -- 'As many as
received Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God,
even to them that believe on His name'?"
Beloved friends, when you have thus received Jesus, fail not
to rejoice in Him as having received Him. How many there are who
have received Christ, who talk and act as if they never had
received Him! It is a poor dinner of which a man says, after he
has eaten it, that he feels as if he had not dined; and it is a
poor Christ of whom anyone can say, "I have received Him, but I am
none the happier, none the more at peace." If you have received
Jesus into your heart, you are saved, you are justified. Do
you whisper, "I hope so"? Is that all? Do you not know? The
hopings and hoppings of so many are a poor way of going; put both
feet down, and say, "I know whom I have believed, and am persuaded
that He is able to keep that which I have committed unto Him
against that day." You are either saved or lost; there is no state
between the two. You are either pardoned or condemned; and you
have good reason for the highest happiness, or else you have grave
causes for the direst anxiety. If you have received the atonement,
be as glad as you can be; and if you are still an unbeliever, rest
not till Christ is yours.
Oh, the joy of continually entering into fellowship with
Christ, in such a way that you never lose His company! Be this
yours, beloved, every day, and all the day! May His shadow fall
upon you as you rest in the sun, or stray in the gardens! May His
voice cheer you as you lie down upon the sea-shore, and listen to
the murmuring of the waves; may His presence glorify the mountain
solitude as you climb the hills! May Jesus be to you an all-surrounding
presence, lighting up the night, perfuming the day,
gladdening all places, and sanctifying all pursuits! Our Beloved
is not a Friend for Lord's-days only, but for week-days, too; He
is the inseparable Companion of His loving disciples. Those who
have had fellowship with His body and His blood at this table may
have the Lord as an habitual Guest at their own tables; those who
have met their Master in this upper room may expect Him to make
their own chamber bright with His royal presence. Let fellowship
with Jesus and with the elect brotherhood be henceforth the
atmosphere of our life, the joy of our existence. This will give
us a heaven below, and prepare us for a heaven above.
Next Sermon: The Sin-Bearer.
Previous Sermon: The Believer not an Orphan.
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