[F457]
STUDY XI
THE PASSOVER OF THE NEW CREATION
The Yoke of Egypt and Deliverance Therefrom, in Type and Antitype--
"The Church of the First-Born"--"We, Being Many, are One
Loaf"--
The Memorial Still Appropriate--Who May Celebrate--Who May
Officiate--An Order of Service--Easter-Passover--Extracts from
McClintock and Strong's Encyclopedia.
"Christ our Passover is sacrificed for us; therefore let us keep the
feast, not with old leaven, neither with the leaven of malice and wickedness;
but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth." 1 Cor. 5:7,8
NOTABLE amongst the experiences of typical Israel was
the Passover. The Feast of the Passover, celebrated every
year for seven days, began with the fifteenth day of the first
month. It celebrated in a general way the deliverance of the
people of Israel from the bondage of Egypt--but particularly
the passing over, or sparing alive, of the first-born of
that nation during the plague of death which came upon
the Egyptians, and which, as the last of the plagues, finally
compelled them to release the Israelites from their compulsory
servitude. The passing over of the first-born of Israel
became the precursor of the liberation of the whole nation
of Israel, and their passing in safety over the Red Sea
into freedom from the bondage of Egypt. We can readily
see that so portentous an event would properly be commemorated
by the Israelites as intimately identified with
the birth of their nation; and thus it is celebrated by Jews to
this day. The members of the New Creation are interested
in those events, as they are interested in all the doings and
arrangements of their Heavenly Father, both in respect to
his typical people, Israel after the flesh, and in respect to the
whole world of mankind. But the New Creation has a still
deeper interest in those matters which occurred in Egypt, in
view of the fact that the Lord has revealed to them the
"mystery" that those things which happened unto natural
[F458]
Israel were intended to typify and foreshadow still grander
things in the divine plan respecting antitypical Spiritual
Israel--the New Creation.
In reference to these spiritual things, the Apostle declares
that the "natural man receiveth them not, neither can he
know them, because they are spiritually discerned; but God
hath revealed them unto us [the New Creation] by his
Spirit." (1 Cor. 2:14,10) God used the apostles as his
mouthpieces to give us certain clues whereby, under the
guidance of his Spirit, we may understand the deep things
of God. One of these clues is found in the text heading this
chapter. Following the Apostle's indication, we see clearly
that Israel according to the flesh typified the whole people
of God--all who shall ultimately become his people, down
to the close of the Millennial age; that the Egyptians represented
the opponents of the people of God, Pharaoh, their
ruler, representing Satan, the prince of evil and darkness;
and Pharaoh's servants and horsemen representing fallen
angels and men who have associated or who will associate
themselves with Satan as opponents to the Lord and his
people--the New Creation, and in general the household of
faith. As the people of Israel longed for deliverance, and
groaned under their taskmasters, yet were weak and unable
to deliver themselves, and could never have freed themselves
from the yoke of Egypt had it not been for the Lord's
intervention on their behalf, and his appointment and
sending of Moses to be their deliverer, so we see the world of
mankind at the present time and throughout the past
groaning and travailing in pain together under the exactions
of "the prince of this world" and his minions, Sin and
Death. These hundreds of millions of humanity have a
craving for liberty from bondage to their own sins and
weaknesses, as well as for release from the penalties of
these--pain and death. But without divine aid, mankind is
powerless. A few make a vigorous struggle, and accomplish
something; but none get free. The entire race of Adam is in
bondage to sin and death, and their only hope is in God
and in the antitypical Moses, who he has promised shall deliver
[F459]
his people in his appointed time--bringing them
across the Red Sea--representing the Second Death, in
which Satan and all who affiliate or sympathize with him
and his evil course shall be everlastingly destroyed, as was
typified in the overwhelming of Pharaoh and his hosts in
the literal Red Sea. But the Lord's people "shall not be hurt
of the Second Death."
The foregoing is the general picture; but inside of it, and
yet a part of it, was another, a particular picture, which related,
not to mankind in general and their deliverance from
the bondage of sin and death, but only to a special class
amongst them--the first-born. Corresponding to these as
their antitype, we have brought to our attention by the inspired
word "the Church of the first-born, which are written
in heaven"--the New Creation. In the type, the first-born
occupied a special place--they were the heirs; a special
place also in that they were subjected to a special testing or
trial in advance of their brethren. They became liable to
death before the general exodus, and when the exodus did
occur these first-born ones had a special place in it--a special
work to do in connection with the general deliverance,
for they became a separated class, represented in the tribe
of Levi. They were separated from their brethren, giving up
entirely their inheritance in the land, that according to the
divine arrangement they might be the teachers of their
brethren.
This tribe or house of Levi clearly represents the household
of faith, which is represented in turn by the preparatory
Royal Priesthood, which gives up inheritance in
earthly things on behalf of the brethren, and shall by and
by constitute actually the Royal Priesthood, whose Chief
Priest is the Lord, and which shall bless, rule and instruct
the world during the Millennial age. As the first-born of Israel
in Egypt were subject to death, but were passed over,
escaped it, and losing the earthly inheritance became a
priesthood, so the antitypical Church of first-borns in the
present time is subject now to Second Death, having their
testing or trial for everlasting life or everlasting death in advance
[F460]
of the remainder of mankind, and passes from death
unto life, through the merit of the Redeemer's blood--
death.
Becoming participants in their Lord's grace, they renounce
or sacrifice with him, the earthly inheritance, the
earthly portion, the earthly life, that they may attain
heaven and its "life more abundant." Thus, while the
Church of the first-born, the New Creation, "all die like
men," and in respect to earthly things seem to lose and renounce
more than do others, nevertheless, though the natural
man understands it not, these are passed over, or rescued
from death, and, as the Royal Priesthood, will, with their
Chief Priest, Jesus, be made partakers of glory, honor and
immortality. These, whose passing over occurs during the
nighttime of this Gospel age--before the Millennial morning
dawns, and its Sun of Righteousness arises--are to be
the leaders of the Lord's host, to bring it forth from the
bondage of Sin and Satan. Mark how this agrees with the
language of the Apostle (Rom. 8:22,19), "The whole creation
groaneth and travaileth in pain together"--"waiting
for the manifestation of the sons of God"--waiting for the
complete passing over of the Church of the first-born in the
First Resurrection, to glory, honor and immortality.
But, now, another feature of the type is important. In order
to effect the passing over of the first-born, and the consequent
deliverance of all the Lord's people in the type, it
was necessary that the Passover lamb should be slain, that
its blood should be sprinkled upon the doorposts and lintels
of the house, that its flesh should be eaten that night with
bitter herbs, and with unleavened bread. Thus each house
of Israel represented the household of faith, and each lamb
represented the Lamb of God which taketh away the sin of
the world, and the first-born in each family represented the
Christ, Head and Body, the New Creation. The bitter herbs
represented the trials and afflictions of this present time,
which all the more serve to whet the appetite of the household
of faith for the Lamb and the unleavened bread.
[F461]
Moreover, as each household was to eat with staff in hand
and girded for a journey, it represented that the antitypical
first-born and household of faith who would thus partake
of the Lamb during the night time of this Gospel age would
be pilgrims and strangers in the world, who would realize
the bondage of sin and death, and be desirous of being led
by the Lord into freedom from sin and corruption--into
liberty of the sons of God.
Our Lord's Memorial
It was in harmony with this type of the killing of the Passover
lamb on the 14th day of the first month--the day preceding
the seven days' Feast of the Passover, celebrated by
the Jews--that our Lord died, as the antitypical Passover
Lamb, "the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the
world." At no other time was it possible for our Lord to
have finished in death the sacrifice which he began when he
was thirty years of age, in his baptism unto death. Hence it
was that, although the Jews many times sought to take him,
no man laid hands on him, because "his hour was not yet
fully come." John 7:8,30
As the Jews were commanded to select the lamb of sacrifice
on the tenth day of the first month, and to receive it into
their houses on that date, the Lord appropriately offered
himself to them on that date, when, five days before the
Passover, he rode into the city on the ass, the multitude
crying, "Hosanna to the Son of David! Blessed is he that
cometh in the name of the Lord!" "He came unto his own,
and his own [as a nation] received him not, but as many as
received him [individually] to them gave he liberty to become
sons of God." The nation, through its representatives, the
rulers, instead of receiving him, rejected him, and thus
identified themselves for the time with the Adversary. Nevertheless,
by God's grace the blood of the New Covenant is
efficacious for the house of Jacob also, and upon all who desire
harmony with God, and they were partakers of the merits
of the Lamb--yet they refused to eat of the antitypical
[F462]
Lamb--they lost the opportunity of becoming as a nation
the first-born ones, the Royal Priesthood, the holy nation,
the peculiar people of Messiah--they lost the opportunity
of passing over and becoming members of the New Creation,
with life more abundant in glory, honor and immortality;
but we are glad to be informed elsewhere in the Scripture
that they will, nevertheless, have a glorious opportunity of
accepting the Lamb of God, of eating, appropriating, his
flesh, his sacrifice, and of thus escaping the bondage of sin
and death, under the leadership of the Lord and of his
faithful brethren, spiritual Israel, the antitypical Church of
the First-born. Rom. 11:11-26
It was at the close of our Lord's ministry, on the 14th day
of the first month, in "the same night in which he was
betrayed,"
and in the same day, therefore, in which he died, as
the antitypical Lamb, that he celebrated with his disciples
the typical Passover of the Jews--eating, with his twelve
apostles, the typical lamb which represented himself, his
own sacrifice for the sins of the world and the "meat indeed,"
in the strength of which the life, the liberties and the
blessings of the sons of God are alone obtained. The eating
of this supper on the night preceding our Lord's death, and
yet the same day, was made possible by the Jewish custom,
which began each day, not at midnight, but in the evening.
The Lord evidently arranged all the affairs of Israel in conformity
with the types which they were to express.
As Jews "born under the Law," it was obligatory upon
our Lord and his apostles to celebrate this type, and at its
proper time; and it was after they had thus observed the
Jewish Supper, eating the lamb with unleavened bread and
herbs, and probably also, as was customary, with "fruit of
the vine," that the Lord--taking part of the unleavened
bread and of the fruit of the vine remaining over from the
Jewish Supper, the type--instituted amongst his disciples
and for his entire Church, whom they represented (John 17:20),
a new thing, that with them, as the spiritual Israel,
the Church of the First-born, the New Creation, should
[F463]
take the place of, and supplant, the Jewish Passover Supper.
Our Lord was not instituting another and a higher type of
the Passover. On the contrary, the type was about to begin
its fulfilment, and, hence, would be no longer appropriate
to those who accepted the fulfilment. Our Lord, as the antitypical
Lamb, was about to be slain, as the Apostle expresses
it in the text at the head of this chapter: "Christ our
Passover [Lamb] is slain."
None accepting Christ as the Passover Lamb, and thus
accepting the antitype as taking the place of the type, could
any longer with propriety prepare a typical lamb and eat it
in commemoration of the typical deliverance. The appropriate
thing thenceforth for all believers in Jesus as the true
Passover Lamb would be the sprinkling of the doorposts of
the heart with his blood: "Having their hearts sprinkled
from a consciousness of evil" [from present condemnation--
realizing their sins propitiated through his blood, and that
through his blood they now have forgiveness of sins]. These
henceforth must eat, or appropriate to themselves, the merits
of their Redeemer--the merits of the man Christ Jesus,
who gave himself a ransom for all. By faith they must partake
of those merits, and realize that as their sins were laid
upon the Lord, and he died for them, so his merits and
righteousness are imputed to them. These things they eat,
or appropriate by faith.
If, then, our Lord's Supper took the place of the Passover
Supper, yet not as a higher type--the antitype having commenced
--what was it? We answer that it was a Memorial of
the antitype--a remembrancer for his followers of the beginning
of the fulfilment of the antitypical Passover.
Thus to accept our Lamb, and so to commemorate his
death for us, means expectancy regarding the promised deliverance
of the people of God, and therefore signifies that
those appreciating and memorializing intelligently while in
the world shall not be of the world; but shall be as pilgrims
and as strangers, who seek more desirable conditions, free
from the blights and sorrows and bondage of the present
[F464]
time of the reign of Sin and Death. These partake of the
true, the antitypical unleavened bread: they seek to have it
in its purity, without the corruption (leaven) of human theory,
blight, ambitions, selfishness, etc., that they may be
strong in the Lord and in the power of his might. They partake
also of the bitter herbs of persecution, in accord with
the Master's word, that the servant is not above his Lord,
and that if the Lord himself was reviled and persecuted and
rejected, they must expect similar treatment, because the
world knoweth them not, even as it knew him not. Yea, his
testimony is that none will be acceptable to him whose
faithfulness will not draw upon them the world's disfavor.
His words are, "Whosoever will live godly shall suffer persecution."
"They shall say all manner of evil against you
falsely for my sake. Rejoice and be exceeding glad, for great
is your reward in heaven." Matt. 5:11,12; 2 Tim. 3:12
When our Lord instituted his Memorial Supper, called
the Last Supper, it was, as above stated, a new symbol, built
upon and related to the old Passover type, though not a
part of it, being a commemoration, or memorial of the antitype.
As we read, he "took bread, and when he had given
thanks he brake it, and said, Take, eat; this is my body,
which is broken for you [this represents me, the antitypical
Lamb; it represents my flesh]. This do in remembrance of
me." Our Lord's evident intention was to fix in the minds of
his followers the fact that he is the antitypical Lamb to the
antitypical first-borns and household of faith. The expression,
"This do in remembrance of me," implies that this new
institution should take the place with his followers of the
former one, which must now become obsolete by reason of
fulfilment. "After the same manner also he took the cup,
when he had supped, saying, this cup is the new testament
[covenant] in my blood"--the blood of the covenant--the
blood which seals the New Covenant. "This do ye, as oft as
ye drink it, in remembrance of me." We would not understand
this to imply the doing of it without respect to time
and place, etc., but as signifying that when this cup and unleavened
[F465]
bread thenceforth were used as a celebration of
the Passover, it should on every occasion be considered a
celebration, not of the type but of the antitype. As it would
not have been lawful, proper or typical to celebrate the Passover
at any other time than that appointed of the Lord,
likewise it is still not appropriate to celebrate the antitype
at any other time than its anniversary. 1 Cor. 11:23-25
The Apostle adds, "For as oft as ye eat this bread and
drink this cup ye do show forth the Lord's death till he
come." (1 Cor. 11:26) This shows us that the disciples
clearly understood that thenceforth to all of the Lord's followers
the annual Passover celebration must have a new
meaning: the broken loaf representing the Lord's flesh, the
cup representing his blood. Although this new institution
was not laid upon his followers as a law, and although no
penalties were attached for failure of its proper observance,
nevertheless the Lord knew well that all trusting in him and
appreciating him as the antitypical Passover Lamb would
be glad to take up the Memorial which he thus suggested to
them. And so it is still. Faith in the ransom continues to find
its illustration in this simple memorial, "till he come"--not
only until our Lord's parousia, or presence, in the harvest or
end of this age, but until during his parousia one by one his
faithful ones have been gathered to him, beyond the "Veil,"
there to participate to a still fuller degree, and, as our Lord
declared, partake of it "anew in the Kingdom."
"We, Being Many, Are One Loaf"
"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 [loaf]--one body; for we are all
partakers of that one bread." 1 Cor. 10:16,17
The Apostle, under the guidance of the holy Spirit, here
sets before us an additional thought respecting this Memorial
instituted by our Lord. He does not deny, but affirms,
that primarily the bread represents our Lord's broken
body, sacrificed on our behalf; and that the cup represents
[F466]
his blood, which seals our pardon. But now, in addition, he
shows that we, as members of the Ecclesia, members of the
body of Christ, the prospective First-borns, the New Creation,
become participators with our Lord in his death,
sharers in his sacrifice; and, as he has elsewhere stated, it is a
part of our covenant to "fill up that which is behind of the
afflictions of Christ." (Col. 1:24) The thought here is the
same as that expressed by the words, "We are baptized into
his death." Thus, while our Lord's flesh was the loaf broken
for the world, the believers of this Gospel age, the faithful,
the elect, the New Creation, are counted in as parts of that
one loaf, "members of the body of Christ"; and hence, in
the breaking of the loaf, after recognizing it as the sacrifice
of our Lord on our behalf, we are to recognize it, further, as
the breaking or sacrificing of the whole Church, of all those
consecrated to be dead with him, to be broken with him, to
share his sufferings.
This is the exact thought contained in the word "communion"
--common-union, common-participation. Hence,
with every annual celebration of this Memorial we not only
recognize the foundation of all our hopes as resting in the
dear Redeemer's sacrifice for our sins, but we revive and renew
our own consecration to "be dead with him, that we
may also live with him"--to "suffer with him, that we may
also reign with him." How grandly comprehensive is the
meaning of this divinely instituted celebration! We are not
putting the symbols instead of the reality; nothing surely
could be further from our Lord's intention, nor further
from propriety on our part. The heart-communion with
him, the heart-feeding upon him, the heart-communion
with the fellow-members of the body, and the heart-realization
of the meaning of our covenant of sacrifice, is the real
communion, which, if we are faithful, we will carry out day
by day throughout the year--being daily broken with our
Lord, and continually feeding upon his merit, growing
strong in the Lord and in the power of his might. What a
blessing comes to us with the celebration of this Memorial!
[F467]
What a burning of heart for further appreciation and
growth in grace and knowledge, and for further participation
in the privileges of the service to which we are called,
not only as respects the present but also as respects the
future!
It will be noticed that the Apostle includes the cup for
which we praise God. "Is it not the communion, [common-union,
common-participation] of the blood of Christ?" Oh,
what a thought--that the truly consecrated, faithful "little
flock" of the New Creation throughout this Gospel age, has
been Christ in the flesh; and that the suffering and trials
and ignominy and death of these whom the Lord has accepted
and recognized as "members of his body" in the
flesh, are all counted in as parts of his sacrifice, because associated
with, and under him who is our Head, our Chief
Priest! Who that understands the situation, who that appreciates
the invitation of God to membership in this Ecclesia,
and the consequent participation in the sacrifice unto
death now, and in the glorious work of the future, does not
rejoice to be accounted worthy to suffer reproaches for the
name of Christ, and to lay down his life in the service of the
Truth, as members of his flesh and of his bones? What matters
it to these that the world knows us not, even as it knew
him not? (1 John 3:1) What matters it to these, though they
should suffer the loss of the choicest of earthly blessings and
advantages, if they as the body of Christ may but be
counted worthy of a share with the Redeemer in his future
glories?
As these grow in grace and knowledge and zeal they are
every one enabled to weigh and judge the matter from the
standpoint of the Apostle, when he said, respecting earthly
favors and advantages, "I count all things but loss and
dross." "I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are
not worthy to be compared with the glory that shall be revealed
in us." Phil. 3:8; Rom. 8:18
Another thought is in respect to the mutual love, sympathy
and interest which should prevail amongst all the members
[F468]
of this "one body" of the Lord. As the Lord's Spirit
comes more and more to rule in our hearts it will cause us to
rejoice in every occasion to do good unto all men as we have
opportunity, but especially unto the household of faith. As
our sympathies grow and go out toward the whole world of
mankind, they must grow especially toward the Lord, and,
consequently, especially also toward those whom he recognizes,
who have his Spirit, and who are seeking to walk in
his footsteps. The Apostle indicates that the measure of our
love for the Lord will be indicated by our love for the brethren,
the fellow-members of his body. If our love is to be such
as will endure all things and bear all things in respect to
others, how much more will this be true as respects these fellow-members
of the same body, so closely united to us
through our Head! No wonder the Apostle John declares
that one of the prominent evidences of our having passed
from death unto life is that we love the brethren. (1 John 3:14)
Indeed, we remember that in speaking of our filling
up the measure of the afflictions of Christ, the Apostle Paul
adds, "for his body's sake, which is the Church." Col. 1:24
The same thought is again expressed in the words, "We
ought also to lay down our lives for the brethren." (1 John 3:16)
What a brotherhood is thus implied! Where else
could we hope to find such love for the brethren as would
lay down life itself on their behalf? We are not now speaking
of how the Lord may be pleased to apply the sacrifice of
the Church, represented in the "Lord's goat" as a part of
the Atonement Day sacrifices.* We merely, with the
Apostle, note the fact that, so far as we are concerned, the
sacrifice, the laying down of life, is to be done in the main
for the brethren--in their service; the service for the world
belongs chiefly to the age to come, the Millennium. Under
present conditions, our time and talents and influence and
means are, more or less, mortgaged to others (the wife or
children or aged parents or others depending on us), and we
[F469]
are obligated also to the provision of "things needful,"
"decent,"
and "honest in the sight of all men" for ourselves.
Hence, we find comparatively little left at our disposal for
sacrifice, comparatively little to lay down for the brethren,
and this little the world and the flesh and the devil are continually
attempting to claim from us, and to divert from
the sacrificing to which we have consecrated it.
*Tabernacle Shadows of the Better Sacrifices, p. 59.
The Lord's selection of the Church, during this time
when evil prevails, is to the intent that surrounding circumstances
may prove the measure of the love and loyalty of
each to him and his. If our love be cool, the claims of the
world, the flesh and the Adversary will be too much for us,
and attract our time, our influence, our money. On the
other hand, in proportion as our love for the Lord is strong
and warm, in that same proportion we will delight to sacrifice
these to him--not only to give our surplus of energy and
influence and means, laying these down as we find opportunity
in the service of the brethren, but additionally, this
spirit of devotion to the Lord will prompt us to curtail
within reasonable, economical limits the demands of the
home and family, and especially of self, that we may have
the more to sacrifice upon the Lord's altar. As our Lord was
for three and a half years breaking his body, and for three
and a half years giving his blood, his life, and only finished
these sacrifices at Calvary, so with us: the laying down of
our lives for the brethren is in small affairs of service, either
temporal or spiritual, the spiritual being the higher, and
hence the more important, though he who would shut up
his compassion toward a brother having temporal need
would give evidence that he did not have the Spirit of the
Lord ruling in his heart in any proper degree.
The Memorial Still Appropriate
The original celebration of the Memorial of our dear
Redeemer's death (with the still larger meaning attached to
it by the holy Spirit through the Apostle, as including our
participation or communion with him in his sacrifice) was,
[F470]
as we have seen, upon a particular date--the fourteenth day
of the first month, Jewish reckoning.* And the same date,
reached by the same method of counting, is still appropriate,
and will appeal to all who are inquiring for the "old
paths" and desirous of walking therein. This annual commemoration
of the Lord's death, etc., as instituted by our
Lord and observed by the early Church, has been revived of
late amongst those coming into the light of Present Truth.
*The Hebrew year begins in the spring, with the first appearance of a new
moon after the Spring Equinox. The 14th day is easily reckoned, but
should not be confounded with Feast Week, which began on the 15th
and continued for a week following it--the Jewish celebration. That week
of unleavened bread, celebrated by the Jews with rejoicing, corresponds
to the entire future of a Christian--especially representing the entire year
until his next celebration of the Memorial Supper. With the Jew the sacrifice
of the lamb was a means to the end; a start for the feast of the week,
which had his special attention. Our Memorial relates to the killing of
the Lamb, and hence belongs to the 14th of Nisan (the first month).
Moreover, we are to remember that with the change of counting the
hours of the day, the night of the 14th of Nisan would correspond to what
we would now call the evening of the 13th.
It is not surprising that, as more and more the real meaning
of the Lord's symbolical supper was lost sight of, the
proprieties attaching to its annual observance were also
neglected. This becomes more plain of comprehension as
we come to understand the history of the matter, as
follows:
After the apostles and their immediate successors had
fallen asleep--somewhere about the third century--Roman
Catholicism was becoming influential in the Church. One
of its false doctrines was to the effect that while Christ's
death secured a cancellation of the past guilt, it could not
offset personal transgressions after the believer had come
into relationship with Christ--after baptism; but that a
fresh sacrifice was necessary for such sins. On the basis of
this error was built the doctrine of the Mass, which, as we
have heretofore explained in some detail, was considered a
fresh sacrifice of Christ for the particular sins of the individual
for whom the Mass is offered, or sacrificed--the fresh
[F471]
sacrifice of Christ being made to appear reasonable by the
claim that the officiating priest had the power to turn the
bread and wine into the actual body and actual blood of
Christ; and then, by breaking the wafer, to break or sacrifice
the Lord afresh for the sins of the individual for whom
the Mass is performed. We have already shown that from
the divine standpoint this teaching and practice was an abhorrence
in the sight of the Lord--"the abomination which
maketh desolate." Dan. 11:31; 12:11*
*Vol. II, Chap. ix, and Vol. III, Chap. iv.
That false doctrine did make desolate, and in its wake
came the Church's multitudinous errors, the great falling
away or apostasy which constituted the Roman system--
the chiefest of all anti-Christs. Century after century rolled
around, with this view the predominating one, the controlling
one throughout Christendom, until, in the sixteenth
century, the Great Reformation movement began to
stir up an opposition and, proportionately, began to find
the truths which had been hidden during the Dark Ages
under the false doctrines and false practices of anti-Christ.
As the Reformers were granted additional light respecting
the entire testimony of God's Word, that light included
clearer views of the sacrifice of Christ, and they began to see
that the Papal theory and practice of the Mass was indeed
the "abomination of desolation," and they disavowed it,
with varying degrees of positiveness. The Church of England
revised its Prayer-book in 1552 and excluded the word
Mass.
The custom of the Mass practically took the place of the
annual celebrations of the Lord's Memorial Supper; for the
Masses were said at frequent intervals, with a view to cleansing
the people repeatedly from sin. As the Reformers saw
the error of this they attempted to come back to the original
simplicity of the first institution, and disowned the Romish
Mass as being an improper celebration of the Lord's Memorial
Supper. However, not seeing the close relationship
between the type of the Passover and the antitype of our
[F472]
Lord's death, and the Supper as a memorial of the antitype,
they did not grasp the thought of the propriety of its observance
on its annual recurrence. Hence, we find that amongst
Protestants some celebrate monthly, others every three
months, and some every four months--each denomination
using its own judgment--the "Disciples" celebrating
weekly, through a misunderstanding of the Scriptures
somewhat similar to their misunderstanding respecting
baptism. They base their weekly celebration of the supper
on the statements of the Acts of the Apostles to the effect
that the early Church came together on the first day of the
week, and at such meetings had "breaking of bread."
Acts 2:42,46; 20:7
We have already observed* that these weekly celebrations
were not commemorations of the Lord's death; but,
on the contrary, were love-feasts, commemorative of his resurrection,
and of the number of breakings of bread which
they enjoyed with him on several first-days during the forty
days before his ascension. The remembrance of these breakings
of bread, in which their eyes were opened and they
knew him, probably led them to meet on each first day of
the week thereafter, and, not improperly, led them to have
together a social meal, a breaking of bread. As we have already
noticed, the cup is never mentioned in connection
with these, while in every mention of the Lord's Memorial
Supper it occupies fully as important a place as does the
loaf.
*See previous chapter.
Who May Celebrate?
We answer, first of all, that none should commune who
do not trust in the precious blood of Christ as the sacrifice
for sins. None should commune except by faith he have on
the doorposts and lintel of his earthly tabernacle the blood
of sprinkling that speaketh peace for us, instead of calling
for vengeance, as did the blood of Abel. (Heb. 12:24) None
should celebrate the symbolical feast unless in his heart he
[F473]
has the true feast, and has accepted Christ as his Life-giver.
Further, none should commune unless he is a member of
the one body, the one loaf, and unless he has reckoned his
life, his blood, sacrificed with the Lord's in the same chalice,
or cup. There is here a clearly drawn line of distinction, not
only between the believers and unbelievers, but also between
the consecrated and the unconsecrated. However,
the line is to be drawn by each individual for himself--so
long as his professions are good and reasonably attested by
his outward conduct. It is not for one member to be the
judge of another, nor even for the Church to judge, unless,
as already pointed out, the matter has come before it in
some definite form, according to the prescribed regulations.
Otherwise the elders, or representatives of the Church,
should set before those who assemble themselves these
terms and conditions--(1) faith in the blood; and (2) consecration
to the Lord and his service, even unto death. They
should then invite all who are thus minded and thus consecrated
to join in celebrating the Lord's death and their
own. This, and all invitations connected with this celebration,
should be so comprehensively stated as to leave no
thought of sectarianism. All should be welcomed to participate,
regardless of their faith and harmony on other subjects,
if they are in full accord in respect to these foundation
truths--the redemption through the precious blood, and a
full consecration unto death, giving them justification.
It is appropriate here to consider the words of the
Apostle:
"Whosoever shall eat this bread and drink this cup of the Lord
unworthily
shall be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord. But let a man examine
himself, and so let him eat of that bread and drink of that cup. For he that
eateth and drinketh unworthily, eateth and drinketh condemnation to himself,
if he discern not the Lord's body." 1 Cor. 11:27-29
The Apostle's warning here seems to be against a careless
celebration of this Memorial, which would make of it a
feast, and against inviting persons to it in a promiscuous
manner. It is not such a feast. It is a solemn Memorial, intended
only for the members of the Lord's "body"; and
[F474]
whoever does not discern this, whoever does not discern
that the loaf represents the flesh of Jesus, and that the cup
represents his blood, would, in partaking of it, properly
come under condemnation--not "damnation" as in the
common version, but a condemnation in the Lord's sight,
and a condemnation also in his own conscience. Before partaking
of these emblems each individual, therefore, should
decide for himself whether or not he believes and trusts in
the broken body and shed blood of our Lord as being his
ransom price; and secondly, whether or not he has made
the consecration of his all that he may thus be counted in as
a member of that "one body."
Having noted who are excluded, and who properly have
access to the Lord's table, we see that every true member of
the Ecclesia has the right to participate, unless that right has
been debarred by a public action of the whole Church, according
to the rule therefor laid down by the Lord. (Matt. 18:15-17)
All such may celebrate; all such will surely desire
to celebrate--will surely desire to conform to the Master's
dying admonition, "Eat ye all of it; drink ye all of it." They
will realize that unless we eat the flesh of the Son of Man,
and drink his blood, we have no life in us; and that if they
have in heart and mind partaken of the merits of the Lord's
sacrifice really, and of his life, that it is both a privilege and
a pleasure to memorialize this, and to confess it before each
other and before the Lord.
Who May Officiate
The false doctrine of the Mass, and the creation of a class
in the Church called the clergy, to administer this and similar
services, has created so deep an impression upon the
public mind that Protestants even to this day generally
hold that the presence of "an ordained minister," to ask a
blessing and to officiate in such a memorial service, is of absolute
necessity, and that any other procedure would be
sacrilegious. How utterly wrong this whole theory is will be
very readily recognized when we remember that all who
have the privilege of partaking of this Memorial are consecrated
[F475]
members of the "Royal Priesthood"--each fully
commissioned of the Lord to preach his Word according to
their talents and opportunities, and fully ordained also to
perform any service or ministry of which they are capable
to him and the members of his body, and, in his name, to
others. "All ye are brethren," is the Lord's standard, and is
not to be forgotten when we hold communion with him,
and celebrate his redemptive work, and our common-union
with him and with each other as members of his body.
Nevertheless, in every little group of the Lord's people, in
every little Ecclesia, or body of Christ, as we have already
pointed out, the Scriptures indicate that there should be
order, and that a part of that order is that there should be
"elders in every Church." While each member of the Ecclesia,
the New Creation, has a sufficient ordination of the
Lord to permit him to take any part in connection with the
Memorial Supper, yet the Church, in electing elders, indicates
that they should be representatives of the entire Ecclesia
in respect to such matters as this. Therefore, the duty of
arranging and ministering this Memorial would devolve
upon them as a service to which they have already been selected
by the Church.
Our Lord's declaration, "Where two or three of you are
met together in my name, there am I in the midst"--shows
us conclusively that, wherever it is possible, this memorial
should be celebrated in company with fellow-members of
the body. The blessing attached was intended to draw the
members one toward the other, not only in this annual
gathering, but whenever possible. Wherever even two or
three may meet to claim this promise, it being impossible or
inconvenient to meet with a larger group, they are privileged
to celebrate as a Church, as an Ecclesia, complete; and
even where an individual may be so circumstanced that he
cannot possibly meet with others, we suggest that his faith
go out with sufficient strength to the Lord to claim the
promise--regarding the Lord and himself as the two. We
advise that such unavoidable isolation be not permitted to
hinder any from the annual celebration of the great sacrifice
[F476]
for sin, and of our participation in it with our Lord;
that the solitary individual provide bread--(unleavened
bread, if obtainable--such as soda biscuit or water cracker)
and fruit of the vine (raisin juice or grape juice or wine*)
and that he celebrate in communion of spirit with the Lord
and with the fellow-members of the body, from whom he is
of necessity separated.
*So far as we are able to judge, the Lord used fermented wine when he
instituted this Memorial. Nevertheless, in view of his not specifying wine,
but simply "fruit of the vine," and in view also of the fact that the
alcoholic habit has obtained so great and so evil a power in our day, we
believe we have the Lord's approval in the use of unfermented grape juice,
or raisin juice, to which, if convenient, a few drops of fermented wine
may be added, so as to satisfy the consciences of any who might be inclined
to consider that obedience to the Lord's example would require
the use of fermented wine. In this manner there will be no danger to any
of
the Lord's brethren, even the weakest in the flesh.
An Order of Service
Since the Lord laid down no rule or order of service it is
not for us to do so--yet without impropriety we believe we
may suggest what commends itself to us as a moderate, reasonable,
orderly celebration of this Memorial. We do so, not
with the intention of making a rule or law, but with the
view of assisting to a moderate view of the matter some who
have been used to elaborate service and others who have
been accustomed to nothing of the kind. Let our expression,
then, be considered merely in the light of suggestion, subject
to such modification, etc., as may seem advisable. It is
as follows:
(1) The opening of the service with one or more hymns,
appropriate to the occasion--of solemn spirit, and drawing
the mind in the direction of the Memorial.
(2) Prayer for divine blessing upon the assembly, and especially
upon those who shall participate, remembering
also fellow-members of the same body, known to us and unknown,
in all the world, and especially such as are celebrating
this Memorial on its anniversary.
[F477]
(3) The Elder officiating might read an account of the
original institution of the Memorial from the Scriptures.
(4) He or another Elder might then present an account
of the matter, type and antitype, either speaking extemporaneously
or with equal propriety, if he please, reading
some such explanation of the entire matter as, for instance,
the foregoing dissertation.
(5) Calling attention to the fact that our Lord blessed the
bread before he broke it, the leader might now call upon
some competent brother to ask a blessing upon the bread,
or--none present but himself being competent--he should
invoke the divine blessing upon the bread and upon those
who would partake of it, that the eyes of their understanding
might be opened widely to an appreciation or
comprehension of the depths of meaning properly attaching
to it, and that all participating might have blessed communion
with the Lord in the use of this symbol of his flesh
and to make renewal of their own consecration to be broken
with him.
(6) One of the crackers or pieces of unleavened bread
might then be broken, using the Lord's words, "This is my
body, broken for you; eat ye all of it"; and the platter might
be served by one of the brethren or by the officiating person
himself; or, if the congregation were a large one, a number
of plates of bread might be served simultaneously by
two, four, six or any necessary number of the consecrated
brethren.
(7) Silence would well be maintained during the passing
of the emblems, except that brief remarks, much to the
point respecting the signification of the bread, and how we
feed upon the Lord, might not be inappropriate--though
generally it would be well that this matter be covered either
by the leader or some other speaker when explaining the
signification of the celebration in general, before the distribution,
that the communion of the participants be not
intruded upon.
(8) A blessing should then be asked upon the cup, even as
we read our Lord "took the cup and blessed it," and gave to
[F478]
his disciples. Some brother might be called upon for this
prayer of thanks, and of request for the Lord's blessing
upon those participating, and it should be similarly served
in quietness.
(9) The service being thus ended, we advise that the
course of the Lord and the apostles be followed to the end--
that a hymn be sung in conclusion, and the congregation
thus dismissed--without any concluding prayer. We advise
that on this occasion the usual greetings, inquiries for
health, etc., be dispensed with, and that each go to his home
avoiding, as far as possible, anything that might disturb his
reflections and communion, and that so far as possible each
seek to continue to commune, not only on that night, but
during the following day, having in memory the Lord's experiences
in Gethsemane, and his need of sympathy and
help, and the fact that each member of his body may also
have Gethsemane occasions, and need the comfort and help
of fellow-disciples.
Of the Master it is written, "Of the people there was none
with him"--none able to sympathize with him in his own
hour of trial. With us it is different. We have fellow-members
of the body, similarly baptized into death, similarly
pledged to be "broken" as members of the one loaf,
and accepted and anointed with the same holy Spirit. And
as we remember this, let us the more earnestly seek to be
helpful to the fellow-members of the body, remembering
that whatsoever is done to the least member of the body is
done unto the Head, and is appreciated by him. We can appropriately
remember at the same time the example of Peter
--his earnest impulsiveness, as a servant of the Lord, and
yet his weakness in a moment of trial, and his need of the
Lord's help and prayers. "I have prayed for thee, that thy
faith fail not." To remember this may be a special aid to us,
as it undoubtedly was subsequently to the Apostle Peter. It
will enable us all the more to look to the Lord for "grace to
help in every time of need."
It will be well at the same time that we remember Judas,
and that his fall came through selfishness--ambition, covetousness;
[F479]
and as we remember how through this door of
selfishness Satan more and more entered into him, it may
help us to be on our guard lest we should similarly fall into
a snare of the Adversary; lest we, for any consideration,
should deny the Lord that bought us; lest we should ever in
any sense of the word betray the Lord or his brethren or his
Truth. Let us through the day following have in memory
our dear Redeemer's experiences; not only that we may
thus enter the more keenly into sympathy with him, but additionally
that we may not think strange of the fiery trials
which may be permitted to come upon us as his followers,
but that we may follow him to the consummation and ever
keep in memory his dying words, "It is finished," and realize
that this meant a completion of his sin-offering on our
behalf, so that through his stripes we may realize ourselves
healed, and so that we may also realize that he ever liveth to
make intercession for us, and to render us assistance in
every time of need.
Easter-Passover
The word "Easter" occurs once in the Scriptures (Acts 12:4),
and there it is a mistranslation; it should be rendered
"Passover." The name Easter was adopted from the heathen.
It is of Saxon origin, and imports a goddess of the
Saxons, or rather of the East, Estera, whose festival was celebrated
in the spring of the year, about the Passover season.
The adoption of this name, and the application of it to the
period celebrating our Lord's death and resurrection and
ascension, down to the coming of the Pentecostal blessing,
was evidently an attempt to let Christian institutions the
more easily supplant those of heathenism. Like most of
these concessions, it dates from somewhere about the third
century. This heathen origin of the name Easter need make
no particular difference in our minds, for we no longer use it
to celebrate the goddess of the East. Amongst Protestants
the name has been definitely attached to one day instead of
to a period, as in old time, and as it is still used by Catholics.
That one day is called Easter Sunday. Any memorial of our
[F480]
Lord's resurrection will always be precious with his people,
but to those who rightly appreciate the matter, every Sunday
is an Easter Sunday, because every Sunday is a Memorial
commemorative of our Lord's resurrection from the
dead.
Our thought in introducing the subject here is more particularly
to draw attention to the larger view of the term
Easter, held by Catholics, which includes Good Friday as
well as Easter Sunday, and is merely used as a synonym for
the Passover season. The introduction of the Mass, and its
frequent observance, might have been expected to have entirely
made void the annual celebration of our Lord's death
on its anniversary; but not so. The original custom of the
early Church, to celebrate the great central fact, and the
very foundation of her existence, continued, although the
celebration of the supper at its appropriate time ceased, superseded
by the numerous sacrifices of the Mass--and thus
this one particular memorial lost its meaning.
For centuries it was the custom to count the date of our
Lord's crucifixion according to the Jewish calendar, as we
have already explained it; but subsequently, with a desire
to cut loose so far as possible from Jewish institutions, a
change in the method of counting the date of the death of
Christ, our Passover, was instituted. "The Ecumenical
Council" of Nice decreed that thenceforth Easter should be
celebrated on the Friday following the first full moon after
the Spring equinox. This not only fixed the celebration of
the Lord's death universally on a Friday, called "Good
Friday," but additionally it insured that the celebration
would very rarely indeed be exactly in accord with the Jewish
celebration of the Passover. The difference in the
method of counting, be it remembered, is that the Jews
then waited and still wait until the Spring Equinox, and
begin their month with the first new moon thereafter, and
keep the Passover at the full of that moon, or the 14th day.
This change occasionally makes a difference of nearly a
month between the two methods of counting.
[F481]
It is not for us to say which is the superior method, but
our preference is to hold to that which the Lord and the
apostles practiced--not with a subserviency which would
make us feel that we had committed a crime if we erred in
the calculation, and celebrated on a wrong date, but nevertheless
with a satisfaction that we have endeavored to follow
as closely as possible the divine institution, the pattern.
Someone might perhaps suggest that it would be still better
to fix the date according to our modern calendar--say the
15th of April or the 1st of April, or other date--and all calculations,
etc., would in consequence be unnecessary. We
answer, that the Lord evidently had a reason for arranging
the Jewish calendar as he did, and we prefer in this matter
to continue to recognize his institution.
In a particular sense we see that as the sun is the symbol
of the spiritual Kingdom of God, the moon is the symbol of
the Law Covenant, and of the people who were under that
Law Covenant. Thus there was a special appropriateness in
our Lord's being crucified by them exactly at the full of the
moon, and that by God's predetermination as concerned
the time, so that they could not take him previously,
though they desired to do so, because "his hour was not yet
come." (John 7:30; 8:20) His crucifixion at the full
of the
moon, and the fact that the moon immediately began to
wane, points a lesson to the effect that there Israel brought
upon itself as a nation a divine rejection, or casting off for a
season, symbolized by the waning of the moon, which represented
their national decline.
* * *
We append here some pertinent extracts from a recognized
authority, corroborative of the foregoing, as
follows:
From McClintock and Strong's Encyclopedia
"EASTER, i.e., PASSOVER--Easter is a word of Saxon origin,
and imports a goddess of the Saxons, or rather of the East,
Estera, in honor of whom sacrifices being offered annually
[F482]
about the Passover time of year (Spring), the name began
to be attached by association of ideas to the Christian festival
of the resurrection, which happened at the time of the
Passover: hence we say Easter-day, Easter Sunday, but very
improperly, as this by no means refers to the festival then
kept to the goddess of the ancient Saxons. So the present
German word is used, Ostern, for Easter, and refers to the
same goddess, Estera or Ostera. The occurrence of this word
in the Authorized Version (Acts 12:4)--'Intending after
Easter to bring him forth to the people'--is chiefly noticeable
as an example of the want of consistency in the translators.
...At the last revision 'Passover' was substituted in
all passages but this....
"The Churches of Asia Minor celebrated the death of the
Lord on the day corresponding to the 14th of the month Nisan,
on which day, according to the opinion of the whole
ancient Church, the crucifixion took place. The Western
Churches (Rome), on the other hand were of opinion that
the crucifixion should be annually commemorated on the
particular day of the week on which it occurred, i.e., Friday....
The Western Churches viewed the death-day of Christ as a
day of mourning, and they did not terminate the time of
fasting until the day of the resurrection. The Churches of
Asia Minor, on the other hand, looked upon the death of
Christ wholly as for the redemption of mankind, and terminated
the day of fasting at the hour of Christ's death, three
o'clock in the afternoon, and immediately afterward celebrated
the agape and the Lord's Supper. Both parties (orthodox
Eastern and Western Churches) adhered to the
name PASCHA (Passover), by which they understood sometimes
the specially festive days of this week, and sometimes
the whole week commemorating the Passover.
"The first serious dispute between the parties within the
old Church broke out about 196 (A.D.), when Bishop Victor
of Rome issued a circular to the leading bishops of the
Church, requesting them to hold synods in their various
provinces, and to introduce the western practice (the practice
of celebrating on Friday and Sunday, instead of on the
[F483]
exact day, 14th and 16th of Nisan). Some complied with
the request, but the synod held by Bishop Polycrates, of
Ephesus, emphatically refused, and approved the letter of
Bishop Polycrates, who in the defense of the Asiatic practice
referred Victor to the authority of the Apostles Philip and
John, to Polycarp, and to seven of his relations who before
him had been bishops of Ephesus...
"Thus far the controversy between the Asiatic and the
Western (Roman) Churches had only concerned two
points, viz., (1) whether the day of the week or the day of
the month on which the death of Christ occurred should be
commemorated; (2) whether the fasting ought to be terminated.
Now a third point in dispute arose, as to the time
when the 14th day of Nisan really occurred. Many of the
Church Fathers are of the opinion that, according to the
original calculation of the Jews up to the time of the destruction
of Jerusalem, the 14th of Nisan had always been
after the Spring equinox, and that it was only in consequence
of that miscalculation of the later Jews that the
14th of Nisan occasionally fell before the equinox. They
therefore insisted that the 14th of Nisan, which for both
parties within the Church determined the time of Easter,
should always be after the equinox.
"As the year of the Jews is a lunar year and the 14th of
Nisan always a full-moon day, the Christians who adopted
the above astronomical view, whenever the 14th of Nisan
fell before the equinox would celebrate the death of Christ
one month later than the Jewish Passover. As the Christians
could now no longer rely on the Jewish Calendar they had
to make their own calculations of the time of Easter. These
calculations frequently differed, partly from reasons already
set forth, and partly because the date of the equinox
was fixed by some at the 18th of March, by others at the
19th, by others at the 21st of March. The Council of Arles
in 314 endeavored to establish uniformity, but its decrees
do not appear to have had great effect. The subject was,
therefore, again discussed and acted upon by the Ecumenical
Council of Nice, which decreed that Easter should be
[F484]
celebrated throughout the Church after the equinox on the
Friday following the 14th of Nisan. It was also provided
that the Church of Alexandria, as being distinguished in astronomical
science, should annually inform the Church of
Rome on what day of the Calends the Ides of Easter should
be celebrated, and the Church of Rome should notify all
the Churches of the world. But even these decrees of the
Council of Nice did not put a stop to all difference, and it
was reserved to the calculation of Dionysius Exiguus to
gradually introduce uniformity of practice into the old
Church. Some countries, like Great Britain, did not abandon
their ancient practice until after a long resistance. At
the time of Charlemagne uniformity [in observing Friday
and in disregarding the Jewish reckoning of full moon day]
seems to have been established, and [thereafter] no trace is to
be found [of the observance] of the Quarto decimani (the celebration
according to the actual day--the 14th of Nisan, the full moon after
the spring equinox)....
"The revision of the Calendar by Pope Gregory XIII, on
the whole retained the Dionysian era; but determined more
accurately the Easter full moon, and made careful provision
for avoiding any future deviation of the calendar from
the astronomical time. By these minute calculations, however,
the Christians' Easter sometimes, contrary to the decrees
of the Nicean Council, coincides with the Jewish
Passover."
The same authority says respecting the word:
PASSOVER--"It was the representative festival of the year,
and in this unique position it stood in a certain relation to
circumcision as the second sacrament of the Hebrew
Church. (Exod. 12:44) We may see this in what occurred at
Gilgal, when Joshua, in reviewing the divine covenant, celebrated
the Passover immediately after the circumcision of
the people. But the nature of the relationship in which these
two rites stood to each other did not become fully developed
until its antitypes were fulfilled, and the Lord's supper
took its place as the sacramental feast of the elect people of
God."
|