COMMUNION IN CHRIST'S BODY AND BLOOD
by B.B. Warfield
[From Faith and Life: 'Conferences' In
The Oratory of Princeton Seminary, published by Longmans, Green, and
Co. New York, 1916]
1 Cor. 10:16, 17:- "The cup of
blessing which we bless, is it not communion of the blood of Christ?
The bread which we break, is it not a communion of the body of
Christ? Seeing that we, who are many, are one bread, one body: for
we all partake of the one bread."
THERE are few injunctions as to methods of interpretation
more necessary or more fruitful than the simple one, Interpret
historically. That is to say, read your text in the light of the
historical circumstances in which it was written, and not according
to the surroundings in which, after say two thousand years, you may
find yourself. And there is no better illustration of the importance
of this injunction than the interpretations which have been put on
the passages in the New Testament which speak of the Lord's Supper.
Little will be hazarded in saying that each expositor brings his own
point of view to the interpretation of these passages, and seems
incapable of putting himself in the point of sight of the New
Testament writers themselves. He who reads the several comments of
the chief commentators, for instance, on our present passage,
quickly feels himself in atmospheres of very varied compositions,
which have nothing in common except their absolute dissimilarity to
that which Paul's own passage breathes. If we are ever to understand
what the Lord's Supper was intended by the founder of Christianity
to be, we must manage somehow to escape from the commentators back
to Paul and Paul's Master. Here then is a specially pressing
necessity for interpreting according to the historical
circumstances.
The allusion to the Lord's Supper in our present passage, it
will be noted, is purely incidental, The Apostle is reasoning with
the Corinthians on a totally different matter; on a question of
casuistry which affected their every-day life. Immersed in a heathen
society, intertwined with every act of the life of which was some
heathen ordinance, the early Christian was exposed at every step to
the danger of participating in idolatrous worship. One of the places
at which he was thus menaced with what we may call constructive
apostacy was in the very provision for meeting his need of daily
food. The victims offered in sacrifice to heathen divinities
provided the common meat-supply of the community. If one were
invited to a social meal with a friend, it was to an idol's feast
that he was bidden. If he even bought meat in the markets, it was a
portion of the idol sacrifice alone that he could purchase. How, in
such circumstances, was he to avoid idolatry?
The Apostle devotes a number of paragraphs in the first Epistle
to the Corinthians to solving this pressing question. The wisdom and
moderation with which he deals with it are striking. His fundamental
proposition is that an idol is nothing in the world, and meats
offered to idols are nothing after all but meats, good or bad as the
case may be, and are to be used simply as such, on the principle
that the earth is the Lord's and the fullness thereof. But, side by
side with this, he lays a second proposition, that any involvement
in idol worship is idolatry and must be shunned by all who would be
servants of the One True God and His Son. Whether any special act of
partaking of meats offered to idols involves sharing an idol worship
or not, will depend mainly on the subjective state of the
participant; and his freedom with respect to it is conditioned only
by his debt of love to his fellow Christians, who may or may not be
as enlightened as he is. The Corinthians appear to have been a heady
set and the Apostle evidently feels it to be the more pressing need
to restrain them from hasty and unguarded use of their new-found
freedom. He does not urge them to treat the idols as nothing. He
urges them to avoid entanglement with idolatrous acts. And our
passage is a part of his argument to secure their avoidance of such
idolatrous acts.
The argument here turns on a matter of fact which would be
entirely lucid to the readers for whom it was first intended, but
can be fathomed by us only by placing ourselves in their historical
position. Its whole force depends on the readers' ready
understanding of the nature and significance of a sacrificial feast.
This was essentially the same under all sacrificial systems. The
eating of the victim offered whether by the Israelite in obedience
to the Divine ordinances of the Old Covenant, or by the heathen in
Corinth, meant essentially the same thing to the participant.
Therefore the Apostle begins the passage by appealing to the
intelligence of his former heathen readers and submitting the matter
to their natural judgment. He asks them themselves to judge whether
it is consistent to partake in the sacrificial feasts of both
heathen and Christian. This is the gist of the whole passage.
Participation in a sacrificial feast bore such a meaning, stood
in such a relation to the act of sacrifice itself, that it was
obvious to the meanest intelligence that no one could properly
partake both of the victims offered to idols and of that One Victim
offered at Calvary to God. To feel this as the Corinthians were
expected to feel it, we must put ourselves in their historical
position. They were heathen, lived in a sacrificial system, and knew
by nature what participation in the victim offered in sacrifice
meant. We may put ourselves most readily in their place by attending
to what Paul says here of the Jewish sacrificial feasts, which he
adduces as altogether parallel, so far, with the significance of the
same act on heathen ground. "Consider Israel after the flesh," he
says, "are not those that eat the sacrifices, communicants in the
altar?" Here it is all in a nut-shell. All those who partake of the
victim offered in sacrifice were by that act made sharers in the act
of sacrifice itself. They - this body of participants - were
technically the offerers of the sacrifice, to whose benefit it
inured, and whose responsible act it was. Whether a Greek, sharing
in the victim offered to Artemis or Aphrodite, or a Jew sharing in
the victim offered to Jehovah, or a Christian sharing in that One
Victim who offered Himself up without spot to God, the principle was
the same; he who partook of the victim shared in the altar - in the
sacrificial act, in its religious import and in its benefits. Is it
not capable of being left to any man's judgment in these premises,
whether one who shared in the One Offering of Christ to God could
innocently take part in the offerings which had been dedicated to
Artemis?
The point of interest for us to-day in all this turns on the
implication of this argument as to the nature of the Lord's Supper
in the view of Paul and of his readers in the infant Christian
community at Corinth. Clearly to Paul and the Corinthians, the
Lord's Supper was just a sacrificial feast. As such - as the
Christians' sacrificial feast - it is put in comparison here with
the sacrificial feasts of the Jews and the heathen. The whole pith
of the argument is that it is a sacrificial feast. And if we wish to
know what the Lord's Supper is, here is our proper starting point.
It is the sacrificial feast of Christians, and bears the same
relation to the sacrifice of Christ that the heathen sacrificial
feasts did to their sacrifices and that the Jewish sacrificial
feasts did to their sacrifices. It is a sacrificial feast, offering
the victim, in symbols of bread and wine, to our participation, and
signifying that all those who partake of the victim in these
symbols, are sharers in the altar, are of those for whom the
sacrifice was offered and to whose benefit it inures.
Are we then to ask, what is the nature of the Lord's Supper? A
Babel of voices may rise about us. One will say, It is the badge of
a Christian man's profession. Another, It is the bloodless sacrifice
continuously offered up by the vested priest to God in behalf of the
sins of men. History says, briefly and pointedly, it is the
Christian passover. And, so saying, it will carry us back to that
upper room where we shall see Jesus and His disciples gathered about
the passover meal, the typical sacrificial feast. There lay the lamb
before Him; the lamb which represented Himself who was the Lamb
slain before the foundation of the world. And there was the company
of those for whom this particular lamb was offered and who now, by
partaking of its flesh, were to claim their part in the sacrifice.
And there stood the Antitype, who had for centuries been represented
year after year by lambs like this. And He is now about to offer
Himself up in fulfilment of the type, for the sins of the world! No
longer will it be possible to eat this typical sacrifice typical
sacrifices were now to cease, in their fulfilment in the Antitype.
And so our Lord, in the presence of the last typical lamb, passes it
by and taking a ]oaf, when He had given thanks, broke it and said,
This - I hope the emphasis will not be missed that falls on this
word, this - no longer the lamb but this loaf - is my
body which is broken for you; this do in remembrance of me. And in
like manner also the cup after supper, saying, This cup is the New
Covenant in my blood; this do in remembrance of me; for as
often as ye eat this bread and drink this cup, ye proclaim the
Lord's death, until He come.
How simple, how significant, the whole is, when once it is
approached on the historical point of view. The Lord's Supper is the
continuation of the passover feast. The symbol only being changed,
it is the passover feast. And the eating of the bread and drinking
of the wine mean precisely what partaking of the lamb did then. It
is communion in the altar. Christ our Passover is sacrificed for us;
and we eat the passover whenever we eat this bread and drink this
wine in remembrance of Him. In our communing thus in the body and
the blood of Christ we partake of the altar, and are made
beneficiaries of the sacrifice He wrought out upon it.
The primary lesson of our text to-day is, then, that in
partaking of the Lord's Supper we claim a share in the sacrifice
which Christ wrought out on Calvary for the sins of men. This is the
fundamental meaning of the Lord's Supper as a sacrificial feast. The
bread and wine of the Lord's Supper represent the body and blood of
Christ; but they represent that body and blood not absolutely but as
a sacrifice as broken and outpoured for us. We are not to puzzle our
minds and hearts by asking how His blood and body become ours; how
they, having become ours, benefit us; and the like. We are to
recognize from the beginning that they were broken and outpoured in
sacrifice for us, and that we share in them only that, by the law of
sacrificial feast, we may partake of the benefits obtained by the
sacrifice. It is as a sacrifice and only so that we enter into this
union.
A second lesson of our text today is, that in the Lord's Supper
we take our place in the body of Christ's redeemed ones and exhibit
the oneness of His people. The text lays special stress on this. The
appeal of the Apostle is that by partaking of these symbols
Christians mark themselves on the one hand off from the Jews and
heathen, as a body apart, having their own altar and sacrifice, and,
on the other hand, bind themselves together in internal unity, for
"by all having a share out of the one loaf, we who are many are one
body because there is (only) one loaf." The whole Christian world is
a passover company gathered around the paschal lamb, and by their
participation in it exhibiting their essential unity. When we bless
the cup of blessing, it is a communion in the blood of Christ; when
we break the loaf, it is a communion in the body of Christ; and
because it is one loaf, however many we are, we are one body, as all
sharing from one loaf. The Apostle very strongly emphasizes this
idea of communion here; and it is accordingly no accident that we
have so largely come to call the Lord's Supper the "Communion." It
is the symbol of the oneness of Christians.
Another lesson which our text to-day brings us is that the root
of our communion with one another as Christians lies in our common
relation to our Lord. We are "many," says the Apostle; that is what
we are in ourselves. But we "all" - all of this "many " - are "one "
- one body, because there is but one loaf and we all share from that
one loaf. Christ is one and we come into relations of communion with
one another only through our common relation to Him. The root of
Christian union is, therefore, the uniqueness, the solity of Christ.
There is but one salvation; but one Christian life; because there is
but one Saviour and one source of life; and all those who share it
must needs stand side by side to imbibe it from the one fountain. |