"Till He Come" -- Christ and His Table-companions
"TILL HE COME"
Communion Meditations And Addresses by C.H. Spurgeon, 1896
Christ and His Table-companions.
"And when the hour was come, He sat down, and the twelve
apostles with Him." -- Luke xxii. 14.
The outward ordinances of the Christian religion are but two, and
those two are exceedingly simple, yet neither of them has escaped
human alteration; and, alas! much mischief has been wrought, and
much of precious teaching has been sacrificed, by these miserable
perversions. For instance, the ordinance of baptism as it was
administered by the apostles betokened the burial of the believer
with Christ, and his rising with his Lord into newness of life.
Men must needs exchange immersion for sprinkling, and the
intelligent believer for an unconscious child, and so the
ordinance is slain. The other sacred institution, the Lord's
supper, like believers' baptism, is simplicity itself. It consists
of bread broken, and wine poured out, these viands being eaten and
drunk at a festival -- a delightful picture of the sufferings of
Christ for us, and of the fellowship which the saints have with
one another and with Him. But this ordinance, also, has been
tampered with by men. By some, the wine has been taken away
altogether, or reserved only for a priestly caste; and the simple
bread has been changed into a consecrated host. As for the table,
the very emblem of fellowship in all nations -- for what expresses
fellowship better than surrounding a table, and eating and
drinking together? -- this, forsooth, must be put away, and an altar
must be erected, and the bread and wine which were to help us to
remember the Lord Jesus are changed into an "unbloody sacrifice",
and so the whole thing becomes an unscriptural celebration instead
of a holy institution for fellowship. Let us be warned by these
mistakes of others never either to add to or take from the Word of
God so much as a single jot or tittle. Keep upon the foundation of
the Scriptures, and you stand safely, and have an answer for those
who question you; yea, and an answer which you may render at the
bar of God; but once allow your own whim, or fancy, or taste, or
your notion of what is proper and right, to rule you, instead of
the Word of God, and you have entered upon a dangerous course, and
unless the grace of God prevent, boundless mischief may ensue. The
Bible is our standard authority; none may turn from it. The wise
man says, in Ecclesiastes, "I counsel thee to keep the King's
commandment;" we would repeat his advice, and add to it the sage
precept of the mother of our Lord, at Cana, when she said, "Whatsoever
He saith unto you, do it."
We shall now ask you in contemplation to gaze upon the first
celebration of the Lord's supper. You perceive at once that there
was no altar in that large upper room. There was a table, a table
with bread and wine upon it, but no altar; and Jesus did not
kneel, -- there is no sign of that, -- but He sat down, I doubt not,
after the Oriental mode of sitting, that is to say, by a partial
reclining, He sat down with His apostles. Now, He who ordained
this supper knew how it ought to be observed, and as the first
celebration of it was the model for all others, we may be assured
that the right way of coming to this communion is to assemble
around a table, and to sit or recline while we eat and drink
together of bread and wine in remembrance of our Lord.
While we see the Saviour sitting down with His twelve
apostles, let us enquire, first, what did this make them? Then,
secondly, what did this imply? And, thirdly, what further may
we legitimately infer from it?
I. First, then, we see the Great Master, the Lord, the King
in Zion, sitting down at the table to eat and drink with His
twelve apostles, -- what did this make them?
Note what they were at first. By His first calling of them
they became His followers, for He said unto them, "Follow Me."
That is to say, they were convinced, by sundry marks and signs,
that He was the Messias, and they, therefore, became His
followers. Followers may be at a great distance from their leader,
and enjoy little or no intercourse with him, for the leader may be
too great to be approached by the common members of his band. In
the case of the disciples, their following was unusually close,
for their Master was very condescending, but still their intercourse
was not always of the most intimate kind at first, and
therefore it was not at the first that He called them to such a
festival as this supper. They began with following, and this is
where we must begin. If we cannot enter as yet into closer
association with our Lord, we may, at least, know His voice by His
Spirit, and follow Him as the sheep follow the shepherd. The most
important way of following Him is to trust Him, and then
diligently to imitate His example. This is a good beginning, and
it will end well, for those who walk with Him to-day shall rest
with Him hereafter; those who tread in His footsteps shall sit on
His throne.
Being His followers, they came next to be His disciples. A
man may have been a follower for a while, and yet may not have
reached discipleship. A follower may follow blindly, and hear a
great deal which he does not understand; but when he becomes a
disciple, his Master instructs him, and leads him into truth. To
explain, to expound, to solve difficulties, to clear away doubts,
and to make truth intelligible, is the office of a teacher amongst
his disciples. Now, it was a very blessed thing for the followers
to become disciples, but still disciples are not necessarily so
intimate with their Master as to sit and eat with him. Socrates
and Plato knew many in the Academy whom they did not invite to
their homes. My brethren, if Jesus had but called us to be His
disciples, and no more we should have had cause for great
thankfulness; if we had been allowed to sit at His feet, and had
never shared in such an entertainment as that before us, we ought
to have been profoundly grateful; but now that He has favoured us
with a yet higher place, let us never be unfaithful to our
discipleship. Let us daily learn of Jesus, let us search the Bible
to see what it was that He taught us, and then by the aid of His
Holy Spirit let us scrupulously obey. Yet is there a something
beyond.
Being the Lord's disciples, the chosen ones next rose to
become His servants, which is a step in advance, since the
disciple may be but a child, but the servant has some strength,
has received some measure of training, and renders somewhat in
return. Their Master gave them power to preach the gospel, and to
execute commissions of grace, and happy were they to be called to
wait upon such a Master, and aid in setting up His kingdom. My
dear brethren and sisters, are you all Christ's servants
consciously? If so, though the service may at times seem heavy
because your faith is weak, yet be very thankful that you are
servants at all, for it is better to serve God than to reign over
all the kingdoms of this world. It is better to be the lowest
servant of Christ than to be the greatest of men, and remain
slaves to your own lusts, or be mere men-pleasers. His yoke is
easy, and His burden is light. The servant of such a Master should
rejoice in his calling; yet is there something beyond.
Towards the close of His life, our Master revealed the yet
nearer relation of His disciples, and uttered words like these:
"Henceforth I call you not servants, for the servant knoweth not
what his lord doeth, but I have called you friends, for all
things that I have heard of My Father I have made known unto you."
This is a great step in advance. The friend, however humble,
enjoys much familiarity with his friend. The friend is told what
the servant need not know. The friend enjoys a communion to which
the mere servant, disciple, or follower has not attained. May we
know this higher association, this dearer bond of relationship!
May we not be content without the enjoyment of our Master's
friendship! "He that hath friends must show himself friendly;" and
if we would have Christ's friendship, we must befriend His cause,
His truth, and His people. He is a Friend that loveth at all
times; if you would enjoy His friendship, take care to abide in
Him.
Now note that, on the night before His Passion, our Lord led
His friends a step beyond ordinary friendship. The mere follower
does not sit at table with his leader; the disciple does not claim
to be a fellow-commoner with his master; the servant is seldom
entertained at the same table with his lord; the befriended one is
not always invited to be a guest; but here the Lord Jesus made His
chosen ones to be His table-companions; He lifted them up to sit
with Him at the same table, to eat of the same bread, and drink of
the same cup with Himself. From that position He has never
degraded them; they were representative men, and where the Lord
placed them, He has placed all His saints permanently. All the
Lord's believing people are sitting, by sacred privilege and
calling, at the same table with Jesus, for truly, our fellowship
is with the Father and with His Son Jesus Christ. He has come into
our hearts, and He sups with us, and we with Him; we are His
table-companions, and shall eat bread with Him in the kingdom of
God.
Table-companions, then, that is the answer to the question,
"What did this festival make the apostles?" This festival shows
all the members of the Church of Christ to be, through divine
grace, table-companions with one another, and with Christ Jesus
their Lord.
II. So now we shall pass on, in the second place, to ask,
what did this table-companionship imply?
It implied, first of all, mutual fidelity. This solemn
eating and drinking together was a pledge of faithfulness to one
another. It must have been so understood, or otherwise there would
have been no force in the complaint: "He that eateth bread with Me
hath lifted up his heel against Me." Did not this mean that,
because Judas had eaten bread with his Lord, he was bound not to
betray Him, and so to lift up his heel against Him? This was the
seal of an implied covenant; having eaten together, they were
under bond to be faithful to one another. Now, as many of you as
are really the servants and friends of Christ may know that the
Lord Jesus, in eating with you at His table, pledges Himself to be
faithful to you. The Master never plays the Judas, -- the Judas is
among the disciples. There is nothing traitorous in the Lord; He
is not only able to keep that which we have committed to Him, but
He is faithful, and will do it. He will be faithful, not only as
to the great and main matter, but also to every promise He has
made. Know ye then, assuredly, that your Master would not have
asked you to His table to eat bread with Him if He intended to
desert you. He has received you as His honoured guests, and fed
you upon His choicest meat, and thereby He does as good as say to
you, "I will never leave you, come what may, and in all times of
trial, and depression, and temptation, I will be at your right
hand, and you shall not be moved, and to the very last you shall
prove My faithfulness and truth."
But, beloved, you do not understand this supper unless you
are also reminded of the faithfulness that is due from you to your
Lord, for the feast is common, and the pledge mutual. In eating
with Him, you plight your troth to the Crucified, Beloved, how
have you kept your pledge during the past year? You have eaten
bread with Him, and I trust that in your hearts you have never
gone so far aside as to lift up your heel against Him, but have
you always honoured Him as you should? Have you acted as guests
should have done? Can you remember His love to you, and put your
love to Him side by side with it, without being ashamed? From this
time forth, may the Holy Ghost work in our souls a jealous
fidelity to the Well-beloved which shall not permit our hearts to
wander from Him, or suffer our zeal for His glory to decline!
Again, remember that there is in this solemn eating and
drinking together a pledge of fidelity between the disciples
themselves, as well as between the disciples and their Lord. Judas
would have been a traitor if he had betrayed Peter, or John, or
James: so, when ye come to the one table, my brethren, ye must
henceforth be true to one another. All bickerings and jealousies
must cease, and a generous and affectionate spirit must rule in
every bosom. If you hear any speak against those you have communed
with, reckon that, as you have eaten bread with them, you are
bound to defend their reputations. If any railing accusation be
raised against any brother in Christ, reckon that his character is
as dear to you as your own. Let a sacred Freemasonry be maintained
among us, if I may liken a far higher and more spiritual union to
anything which belongs to common life. Ye are members one of
another, see that ye love each other with a pure heart fervently.
Drinking of the same cup, eating of the same bread, you set forth
before the world a token which I trust is not meant to be a lie.
As it truly shows Christ's faithfulness to you, so let it as
really typify your faithfulness to Christ, and to one another.
In the next place, eating and drinking together was a token
of mutual confidence. They, in sitting there together,
voluntarily avowed their confidence in each other. Those disciples
trusted their Master, they knew He would not mislead or deceive
them. They trusted each other also, for when they were told that
one of them would betray their Lord, they did not suspect each
other, but each one said, "Lord, is it I?" They had much
confidence in one another, and the Lord Jesus, as we have seen,
had placed great confidence in them by treating them as His
friends. He had even trusted them with the great secret of His
coming sufferings, and death. They were a trustful company who sat
at that supper-table. Now, beloved, when you gather around this
table, come in the spirit of implicit trustfulness in the Lord
Jesus. If you are suffering, do not doubt His love, but believe
that He works all things for your good. If you are vexed with
cares, prove your confidence by leaving them entirely in your
Redeemer's hands. It will not be a festival of communion to you if
you come here with suspicions about your Master. No, show your
confidence as you eat of the bread with Him. Let there also be a
brotherly confidence in each other. Grievous would it be to see a
spirit of suspicion and distrust among you. Suspicion is the death
of fellowship. The moment one Christian imagines that another
thinks hardly of him, though there may not be the slightest truth
in that thought, yet straightway the root of bitterness is
planted. Let us believe in one another's sincerity, for we may
rest assured that each of our brethren deserves to be trusted more
than we do. Turn your suspicions within, and if you must suspect,
suspect your own heart; but when you meet with those who have
communed with you at this table, say within yourself, "If such can
deceive me, and alas I they may, then will I be content to be imposed
upon rather than entertain perpetual mistrust of my fellow-Christians."
A third meaning of the assembling around the table is this,
hearty fraternity. Our Lord, in sitting down at the table with
His disciples, showed Himself to be one with them, a Brother
indeed. We do not read that there was any order of priority by
which their seats were arranged. Of course, if the Grand
Chamberlain at Rome had arranged the table, he would have placed
Peter at the right hand of Christ, and the other apostles in
graduated positions according to the dignity of their future
bishoprics, but all that we know about their order is this, that
John sat next to the Saviour, and leaned upon His bosom, and that
Peter sat a good way off, -- we feel sure he did, because it is said
that he "beckoned" unto John; if he had sat next to him, he would
have whispered to him, but he beckoned to him, and so he must have
been some way down the table, if, indeed, there was any "down"
or "up" in the arrangement of the guests. We believe the fact
was, that they sat there on a sacred equality, the Lord Jesus, the
EIder Brother, among them, and all else arranged according to
those words, "One is your Master, even Christ, and all ye are
brethren." Let us feel, then, in coming to the table again at this
time, that we are linked in ties sacred relationship with Jesus
Christ, who is exalted in heaven, and that through Him our
relationship with our fellow-Christians is very near and intimate.
Oh, that Christian brotherhood were more real! The very word
"brother" has come to be ridiculed as a piece of hypocrisy, and
well it may, for it is mostly used as a cant phrase, and in many
cases means very little. But it ought to mean something. You have
no right to come to that table unless you really feel that those
who are washed in Jesus' blood have a claim upon the love of your
heart, and the activity of your benevolence. What! are ye to live
together for ever in heaven, and will ye show no affection for one
another here below? It is your Master's new command that ye love
one another; will ye disregard it? He has given this as the badge
of Christians: "By this shall all men know that ye are My
disciples," -- not if ye wear a gold cross, but -- "if ye have love
one to another." That is the Christian's badge of his being, in
very truth, a disciple of Jesus Christ. Here, at this table, we
find fraternity. Whosoever eateth of this sacred supper declares
himself to be one of a brotherhood in Christ, a brotherhood
striving for the same cause, having sincere sympathy, being
members of each other, and all of them members of the body of
Christ. God make this to be a fact throughout Christendom even
now, and how will the world marvel as it cries, "See how these
Christians love one another!"
But this table means more yet: it signifies common
enjoyment. Jesus eats, and they eat, the same bread. He drinks,
and they drink, of the same cup. There is no distinction in the
viands. What meaneth this? Doth it not say to us that the joy of
Christ is the joy might remain in you, and that your joy might be
full"? The very joy that delights Christ is that which He prepares
for His people. You, if you are a true believer, have sympathy in
Christ's joy, you delight to see His kingdom come, the truth
advanced, sinners saved, grace glorified, holiness promoted, God
exalted; this also is His delight. But my dear brethren and
fellow-professors, are you sure that your chief joy is the same as
Christ's? Are you certain that the mainstay of your life is the
same as that which was His meat and His drink, namely, to do the
will of the heavenly Father? If not, I am afraid you have no
business at this table; but if it be so, and you come to the
table, then I pray that you may share the joy of Christ. May you
joy in Him as He joys in you, and so may your fellowship be sweet!
Lastly, on this point, the feast at the one table indicated
familiar affection. It is the child's place to sit at the table
with its parents, for there affection rules. It is the place of
honour to sit at the table: "Martha served, but Lazarus was one of
them that sat at the table." But the honour is such as love and
not fear suggests. Men at the table often reveal their minds more
fully than elsewhere. If you want to understand a man, you do not
go to see him at the Stock Exchange, or follow him into the
market; for there he keeps himself to himself; but you go to his
table, and there he unbosoms himself. Now, the Lord Jesus Christ
sat at the table with His disciples. 'Twas a meal; 'twas a meal of
a homely kind; intimate intercourse ruled the hour. Oh, brethren
and sisters, I am afraid we have come to this table sometimes, and
Christ, and then it has been an empty formality and nothing more.
I thank God that, coming to this table every Sabbath-day, as some
of us do, and have done for many years, we have yet for the most
part enjoyed the nearest communion with Christ here that we have
ever known, and have a thousand times blessed His name for this
ordinance. Still, there is such a thing as only eating the bread
and drinking the wine, and losing all the sacred meaning thereof.
Do pray the Lord to reveal Himself to you. Ask that it may not be
a dead form to you, but that now in very deed you may give to
Christ your heart, while He shall show to you His hands and His
side, and make known to you His agonies and death, wherewith He
redeemed you from the wrath to come. All this, and vastly more, is
the teaching of the table at which Jesus sat with the twelve. I
have often wondered why the Church of Rome does not buy up all
those pictures by one of its most renowned painters, Leonardo da
Vinci, in which our Lord is represented as sitting at the table
with His disciples, for these are a contradiction of the Popish
doctrine on this subject. As long as that picture remains on the
wall, and as long as copies of it are spread everywhere, the
Church of Rome stands convicted of going against the teaching of
the earlier Church by setting up an altar when she confesses herself
that aforetime it was not considered to be an altar of
sacrifice but a table of fellowship, at which the Lord did not
kneel, nor stand as an officiating priest, but at which He and His
disciples sat. We, at least, have no rebukes to fear from
antiquity, for we follow, and mean to follow, the primitive
method. Our Lord has given us commandment to do this until He
comes, -- not to alter it, but just to "do this," and nothing else,
in the same manner until He shall come.
III. We will draw to a close by asking -- What further may be
inferred from this sitting of Christ with his disciples at the
table?
I answer: first, there may be inferred from it the equality
of all the saints. There were here twelve apostles. Their
apostleship, however, is not concerned in the matter. When the
Lord's supper was celebrated after all the apostles had gone to
heaven, was there to be any alteration because the apostles had
gone? Not at all. Believers are to do this in remembrance of their
Lord until He shall come. There was no command for a change when
the first apostles were all gone from the Church: No, it was to be
the same still, -- bread and wine and the surrounding of the table,
until the Lord came. I gather, then, the equality of all saints.
There is a difference in office, there was a difference in
miraculous gift, and there are great differences in growth of
grace; but still, in the household of God, all saints, whether
apostles, pastors, teachers, deacons, elders, or private members,
being all equal, eat at one table. There is but one bread, there
is but one juice of the vine here.
It is only in the Church of God that those words, so wild
politically, can ever be any more than a dream, "Liberty,
Equality, and Fraternity." There you have them, where Jesus is;
not in a republic, but in the kingdom of our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ, where all rule and dominion are vested in Him, and
all of us willingly acknowledge Him as our glorious Head, and all
we are brethren. Never fall into the idea that older believers
were of a superior nature to ourselves. Do not talk of Saint
Paul, and Saint Matthew, and Saint Mark, unless you are
prepared to speak of Saint William and Saint Jane sitting over
yonder, for if they be in Christ they are as truly saints as those
first saints were, and I ween there may be some who have attained
even to higher saintship than many whom tradition has canonized.
The heights of saintship are by grace open to us all, and the Lord
invites us to ascend. Do not think that what the Lord wrought in
the early saints cannot be wrought in you. It is because you think
so that you do not pray for it, and because you do not pray for it
you do not attain it. The grace of God sustained the apostles;
that grace is not less to-day than it was then. The Lord's arm is
not shortened; His power is not straitened. If we can but believe,
and be as earnest as those first saints were, we shall subdue
kingdoms yet, and the day shall come when the gods of Hindooism,
and the falsehoods of Mohammed, and the lies of Rome, shall as
certainly be overthrown as were the ancient philosophies and the
classic idolatries of Greece and Rome by the teaching of the first
ministers of Christ. There is the same table for you, and the same
food is there in emblem, and grace can make you like those holy
men, for you are bought with the same blood, and quickened by the
same Spirit. Believe only, for all things are possible to him that
believeth.
Another inference, only to be hinted at, is this, that the
wants of the Church in all ages will be the same, and the supplies
for the Church's wants will never vary. There will be the table
still, and the table with the same viands upon it, -- bread still,
nothing more than bread for food; wine still, nothing less than
wine for drink. The Church will always want the same food, the
same Christ, the same gospel. Out on ye, traitors, who tell us
that we are to shape our gospel to suit this enlightened
nineteenth century! Out on ye, false-hearts, who would have us
tone down the everlasting truth that shall outlive the sun, and
moon, and stars, to suit your boasted culture, which is but
varnished ignorance! No, that truth which of old was mighty
through God to the pulling down of strongholds, is mighty still,
and we will maintain it to the death; the Church wants the
doctrines of grace to-day as much as when Paul, or Augustine, or
Calvin preached them; the Church wants justification by faith, the
substitutionary atonement, and regeneration, and divine
sovereignty to be preached from her pulpits as much as in days of
yore, and by God's grace she shall have them, too.
Lastly, there is in this truth, that Christ has brought all
His disciples into the position of table-companions, a prophecy
that this shall be the portion of all His people for ever. In
heaven there cannot be less of privilege than on earth. It cannot
be that in the celestial state believers will be degraded from
what they have been below. What were they, then, below? Table-companions.
What shall they be in heaven above? Table-companions
still, and blessed is he that shall eat bread in the kingdom of
God. "Many shall come from the east and from the west, and shall
sit down with Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob in the kingdom of
God," and the Lord Jesus shall be at the head of the table. Now,
what will His table of joy be? Set your imagination to work, and
think what will be His festival of soul when His reward shall be
all before Him, and His triumph all achieved. Have ye imagined it?
Can ye conceive it? Whatever it is, you shall share in it. I
repeat those words, whatever it is, the least believer shall share
in it. You, poor working-woman, oh, what a change for you, to sit
among princes, near to your Lord Jesus, all your toil and want for
ever ended! And you, sad child of suffering, scarcely able to come
up to the assembly of God's people, and going back, perhaps, to
that bed of languishing again, you shall have no pains there, but
you shall be for ever with the Lord, and the joy of Christ shall
be your joy for ever and ever! Oh, can you not realize those words
of Dr. Watts, --
"Yes, and before we rise
To that immortal state,
The thoughts of such amazing bliss
Should constant joys create"?
In the anticipation of the joy that shall be yours, forget
your present troubles, rise superior to the difficulties of the
hour, and if you cannot rejoice in the present, yet rejoice in the
future, which shall so soon be your own.
We finish with this word of deep regret, -- regret that many
here cannot understand what we have been talking about, and have
no part in it. There are some of you who must not come to the
table of communion because you do not love Christ. You have not
trusted Him; you have no part in Him. There is no salvation in
sacraments. Believe me, they are but delusions to those who do not
come to Christ with their heart. You must not come to the outward
sign if you have not the thing signified. Here is the way of
Salvation: believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be
saved. To believe in Him is to trust Him; to use an old word, it
is recumbency; it is leaning on Him, resting on Him. Here I lean,
I rest my whole weight on this support before me; do so with
Christ in a spiritual sense: lean on Him. You have a load of sin,
lean on Him, sin and all. You are all unworthy, and weak, and
perhaps miserable; then cast on Him the weakness, the unworthiness,
the misery and all. Take Him to be all in all to you,
and when you have thus trusted Him, you will have become His
follower; go on by humility to be His disciple, by obedience to be
His servant, by love to be His friend, and by communion to be His
table-companion.
The Lord so lead you, for Jesus' sake! Amen.
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