in Second Thessalonians, and
we're gonna be confronted with two really important doctrines.
One is church discipline, and the other is the doctrine of
work. So by way of introduction, I wanna look at some teaching
from the Westminster Confession of Faith. It'll set the stage
for this morning's sermon as we begin to think about church
discipline. So if you could grab your hymnals
again and turn to page 938, 938, we're going to read the third
paragraph of chapter 30, which is of church censures. Page 938,
that third paragraph, it's on the
top left-hand side of the page. Church censures are necessary. for the reclaiming and gaining
of offending brethren, for deterring of others from the like offenses,
for purging out of that leaven which might infect the whole
lump, for vindicating the honor of Christ and the holy profession
of the gospel, and for preventing the wrath of God which might
justly fall upon the church if they should suffer his covenant
and the seals thereof, to be profaned by notorious and obstinate
offenders. When the Westminster Confession
of Faith speaks of church censures, it's simply another way of reminding
the church of its duty to carry out church And we didn't read
them, but the first two paragraphs essentially say that the Lord
Jesus is the king of the church, and as the king, he's entrusted
this responsibility of church discipline to the church. And of course, he's given specific
responsibilities to the church, to those who serve as office
bearers. Formal church discipline is an
element of church life that's conspicuous by its absence in
a great many churches. And I'm sure there are many reasons
for that. There are probably a throng of excuses that, for
which it's earnestly avoided. And some of them might even be
understandable. The truth is, most people don't
like confrontation. Often, it's difficult to know
what to say or how to say something to people who are in the grip
of a moral or theological error. Most of us don't want to come
off as judgmental or as hypercritical. And also, we're aware of our
own sin, and so we might think that confronting a brother or
sister might make us appear to be hypocrites. So it's really
easy to say, you know, that sin that they're engaged in, that's
really just a private matter. That's a choice they've made
for themselves. I'm just gonna stay out of it.
After all, it's really none of my business. That sounds very
noble, doesn't it? The problem with that is if we
love Jesus Christ and we love His church, it most certainly
is our business. Listen about the Apostle writes
in Galatians 6, Verses one and two. Brothers, if anyone is caught
in any transgression, you who are spiritual should restore
him in a spirit of gentleness. Keep watch on yourself, lest
you too be tempted, bear one another's burdens, and so fulfill
the law of Christ. I would imagine those verses
are familiar to most of you, but there's something I want
to make sure you pick up on from those two verses in Galatians
6. Did you notice that this isn't
church officers? who are being called to the work
of restoring sinners. It's the church body. Keep that in mind. Church discipline
isn't exclusively the work of elders. It is the work of the
entire congregation. We'll store that away. One of
the things we're gonna see in 2 Thessalonians in a few minutes
is that the congregation has responsibilities. and church
discipline. Now that third paragraph that
we read, it spells out five reasons that church discipline is necessary.
First, for the reclaiming and restoring of a brother or sister
who's fallen into sin. Listen to how James ends his
letter in chapter five, verse 19 and 20. Brethren, if anyone
among you wanders from the truth and someone turns him back, Let
him know that he who turns a sinner from the error of his way will
save a soul from death and cover a multitude of sin. So that's
the first reason and certainly a main one to restore a brother
or sister. And again, I hope as we just
read James 5, you picked up that that's a congregational responsibility,
not just an elder responsibility. The second reason our confession
reminds us to do church discipline is to deter others. First Timothy
5.20, the apostle urged his young pastor, as for those who persist
in sin, rebuke them in the presence of all so that the rest may stand
in fear. So church discipline is a deterrent
to those who might be flirting with a particular sin pattern.
Third, it's for purging out the leaven that it might affect the
whole lump. That is, it's necessary for the
purity of the church. And this is something that matters
to Christ, the purity of His church. Oh, dear ones, a little
bit of poison administered just a couple drops at a time is still
deadly. Fourth, church discipline is
for the honor of Christ. The church is to reflect the
beauty of her bridegroom, and she can't do that if unrepentant
sin is left unchecked in her midst. And fifth, church discipline
is necessary because we don't want the severe chastisement
of God to fall on us because we tolerate all manner of gross
sin. As I mentioned, when we return
to 2 Thessalonians 3, the doctrine of church discipline and the
doctrine of work are front and center. To that end, I entitled
this sermon, Laboring with the Lazy. And we're gonna actually
spend three weeks looking at these two topics. This morning,
we're gonna do quite a bit of foundational work, but these
are important, important doctrines. So let's ask the Lord to bless
our time of study together. Pray with me once more. Our great
God in heaven, we're thankful again just to be men and women
of God who can bow before your word and to offer our hearts
to you and ask you to write eternal truths on them, that we might
be men and women whose lives reflect these truths. So work
in us powerfully, oh God. Do something great for your name.
We ask in Jesus' name, amen. Well, please turn in your copy
of Scripture to 2 Thessalonians 3. We're gonna read verses six through
15. 2 Thessalonians 3, beginning in verse six. But we command
you, brethren, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that you
would draw from every brother who walks disorderly and not
according to the tradition which he received from us. For you
yourselves know how you ought to follow us, for we were not
disorderly among you, nor did we eat anyone's bread free of
charge, but worked with labor and toil night and day, that
we might not be a burden to any of you, not because we don't
have authority, but to make ourselves an example of how you should
follow us. For even when we were with you,
we commanded you this, if anyone will not work, neither shall
he eat. For we hear that there are some
who walk among you in a disorderly manner, not working at all, but
are busybodies. Now those who are such, we command
and exhort through our Lord Jesus Christ that they work in quietness
and eat their own bread. But as for you, brethren, do
not grow weary in doing good. And if anyone does not obey our
word in this epistle, note that person and do not keep company
with him that he may be ashamed. Yet do not count him as an enemy
but admonish him as a brother. The grass withers, the flowers
fade, but the word of our God endures forever. May he bless
it to our hearts this morning. Well, dearest congregation of
our Lord Jesus Christ, in the first five verses of this chapter,
the apostle focused on the work of the Lord. He makes it clear
that the success of the gospel ministry, the protection of his
people from wicked men as well as the evil one, the obedience
of God's people and even Christian affections are all grounded in
the sovereign and kind work of the Lord. And it was Paul's earnest
desire, it was his benedictory prayer wish that the Lord would
direct our hearts into a fuller knowledge of the work of the
Lord. In this morning's passage, Paul
turns our attention to the importance of our work, what God calls us
to do. And basically, as I've already
alluded to, there are two big ideas in these verses. First, as a general rule, God
expects his people to labor for themselves so as to not be a
burden to others. The second big idea in these
verses is that if there are brothers and sisters who refuse to work,
the congregation has a responsibility to discipline them. Now we're
gonna spend, as I said, I think three weeks on this passage. And what we just read, it's not
a comprehensive treatment on the doctrine of church discipline,
nor is it a comprehensive treatment on the doctrine of vocation or
the doctrine of work. So we are gonna do a little spade
work so we can see how these particular teachings in Second
Thessalonians fit into the broader biblical teaching. So the first
thing we want to see is that Paul's teaching on discipline
and his teaching on work come with the force of a strong command. Verse six, we command you. Verse
10, we command you. Verse 12, we command you. Now
this word command, conveys the image of a general who's giving
orders to his captains. It's military jargon. In this instance, the apostle
is giving the church her marching orders regarding discipline and
work. Now listen again to verse six
where Paul begins this discourse on discipline. We command you,
brethren, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that you withdraw
from every brother who walks disorderly and not according
to the tradition which he received from us. I want to unpack some
of the basics here. First off, even before we look
at what Paul's commanding, We need to see that this command
is given to the brethren. That is, it's a command to the
church. I know I've said that a few times.
I'm gonna say it a few more times, because I'm sure we need to hear
that. The point is, whatever Paul is
gonna tell the church to do, it's not primarily or firstly
directed at elders or leaders in the church. It's to all of
us as a congregation. So second, notice the force of
the command is grounded in the power and the authority of Christ. Now Paul can just speak with
apostolic authority, but he's using that to put a special emphasis
on this. And in all likelihood, Paul was
reflecting on the Lord's own teaching on discipline, which
we'll look at in just a couple minutes. So Paul, as an apostle,
is very careful at this point to say, look, I know I'm gonna
say some difficult things to you. I'm saying these things
in the name and the authority of the king and head of the church,
even the Lord Jesus. Third, we wanna see that Paul's
concern has to do with those who walk disorderly. Now I have to tell you, scholars
rack their brains trying to define that word that's translated as
disorderly. In fact, I would imagine some
of you probably have translations that use the word idleness. Some
might use the word unruly. Idleness is probably the best.
But despite the inability to hammer out a specific translated
word, the context makes it clear. It's idleness or disorderliness
that flows from laziness. That's the big issue. It's describing
people who won't work for their own bread. And this disorderliness
isn't simply laziness. Verse 11 tells us, because they're
lazy, they're actually also becoming busybodies. They think it's their
job to be in everybody else's business. Instead of handling
their business, they want to handle others. Now, even as we
hear these introductory remarks, they might sound familiar to
you. And it's because Paul gave a similar exhortation back in
1 Thessalonians 4, only back there he was much more gentle.
Excuse me. I don't want my notes to get blown
away. Listen to 1 Thessalonians 4.
I'm going to begin in verse 10. And again, this is much more
general. We urge you, brethren, that you aspire to lead a quiet
life, to mind your own business, to work with your own hands as
we've commanded you. So we get this was a problem
from the get-go in Thessalonica. And initially, Paul dealt with
them with kid gloves. The people were to live quiet
lives. He wanted them to make a living for themselves, to provide
for their own families. And this is what the missionaries
commanded them. But obviously there were some
in the Thessalonican church who didn't want to put this teaching
in practice. And now in 2 Thessalonians, he's taking off the kid gloves
and he's putting on the brass knuckles. He's gonna give them
a good wrapping. And this immediately teaches
us something important about church discipline. Something
we're gonna see in a few minutes. When it's ignored, the intensity
of the exhortation ought to necessarily increase because the consequences
increase. Paul was always willing to start
with a very gentle tone. But he also wasn't hesitant to
ramp that up, to speak very directly and very pointedly when he was
confronting sin. And so in Thessalonica, the apostle
tells the church, you see those folks who are idle? You see those
folks who are busybodies? You see those folks who are not
taking care of their families? Withdraw from them. Withdraw
from every brother who persists in idleness. Now, I have to tell
you, I would be surprised if there aren't some of you who
are surprised that Paul just said that. withdraw from them. Now that word basically means
to stand aloof. It's a word that comes from the
nautical world and was sometimes used to describe the furling
of sails, that is, taking the sails down and storing them away. I'm sure Don can tell you all
about furling sails if you're interested. The point is, when
you do that, your sails are out of commission. You're not using
them. And that way, Paul is telling
the faithful in Thessalonica, you're out of commission to the
idle and the lazy. I can tell you next week, this
is gonna get uncomfortable. Because this is a truth we're not gonna
lie, but it's one we dare not ignore. That word again, withdraw,
it's the same word Paul used in Galatians 2 when he dresses
down the apostle Peter. You'll remember just prior in
Galatia to the Judaizers showing up, Peter had just a chummy relationship
with all the Gentiles, but after the Judaizers showed up, Peter's
like, no, I'm afraid. I can't really have fellowship
with you Gentiles anymore. And it says in Galatians 2.12,
Peter withdrew from them and separated. And while Peter was
absolutely wrong for withdrawing and separating from the Gentiles,
that is exactly what Paul's telling the faithful in Thessalonica
to do, to withdraw and separate themselves. Now, before we think
about what this actually looks like, again, that's gonna be
mostly next week, we need to consider how this fits into the
broader biblical teaching on church discipline. And so to
do that, I wanna turn to the classical text on church discipline. Most of you probably know what
I'm thinking of. It's found in Matthew 18. So let me ask you
to turn there, Matthew 18, and we're gonna read verses 15 through
17. Matthew 18, beginning in verse
15. Moreover, if your brother sins
against you, go and tell him his fault. Between you and him
alone, if he hears you, you've gained your brother. But if he
will not hear you, take with you one or two more, that by
the mouth of two or three witnesses, every word may be established.
And if he refuses to hear them, tell it to the church. But if
he refuses even to hear the church, let him be to you like a heathen
and a tax collector. As I said, I wanna look at this
passage to help us think more broadly about the application
of church discipline. And the reason I think this is
important is that most of us hear church discipline and our
stomachs churn. We just know that something bad
has happened and the church has to respond to it. And sometimes
that's definitely true. Sometimes formal discipline has
to take place because some gross immorality or some gross doctrinal
error exists. And in those circumstances, church
discipline is almost always painful and almost always messy. But if we think that's where
church discipline begins with something big and messy, We're
actually missing the big picture. So I want to do a mini dive into
these verses. Let's start with this. Church
discipline is commanded. Again, we heard that over in
2 Thessalonians 3. And in the verses we just read
in Matthew 18, there are actually five imperatives. in those three
verses. Verse 15, go and tell, both imperatives. Verse 16, take. Verse 17, tell,
and then let him be. Those are five commands. My point is, whatever our view
of church discipline is, God's Word says it must be done. And when Paul says, I command
this, and I command this on the authority of Christ, he's reflecting
Christ's own disposition. Now, as Reformed and Presbyterian
believers, we rightly acknowledge that formal discipline can only
be initiated when God's law has been violated. That means we
don't discipline people because they don't dress the way we do
or because they're different than we are. We don't like the
cologne that they wear. Formal discipline is grounded
in the you shalls and the you shall nots of scripture. However, and please hear me,
this is so important. When the process of discipline
moves forward, it advances from one part of the procedure to
the next part of the procedure, always for the same sin. what our Reformed church orders
call the sin of contumacy. Contumacy. Now, I'm guessing
many of you don't know what that word means, so if you go home
and you Google it, Wikipedia will tell you it means something
like this, a stubborn refusal to submit to appropriate authority. You see, contumacy is just a
fancy way of saying that so-and-so refuses to repent. they refused
to listen to the correction of the church. And that's exactly
what Jesus is describing in Matthew 18, isn't it? I mean, if you
read through those verses, you ought to ask yourself the question,
what particular commandment is this person breaking in Matthew
18? What are they doing in Matthew 18 that moves the process of
church discipline forward from one phase to the next phase to
the next phase? What is it? He refuses to hear. He's not listening. Do you see
that in the text? A brother shows up and he says,
hey, there's a sin issue and we need to address it. If he
hears You've won a brother. If he won't hear, verse 16, it
goes to the next step. And the only reason it progresses
from that point is if he still refuses to hear. And if it goes
all the way to excommunication, it's because they refuse to hear
even the church. You see? At any point in the
administration of discipline, if he hears, and if he submits
to God's word, repents of a sin, the matter's over. That's why
contumacy is the one sin that always moves church discipline
forward. I will not repent. The issue is hearing. Now let me tell you why this
is important and why I'm drawing this out. Matthew 18 is rightly
appealed to as the go-to passage for church discipline. And the
procedures are appointed by Christ. But if our view of church discipline
is limited to these procedures, you know, step one, you go. Step
two, a couple of you go. Step three, bring it to the church.
If we think that exhausts what is biblical discipline, then
our view is way too narrow. You see, we do tend to think
all discipline begins with an offense that has to be dealt
with in regard to another person. And that's because when we think
of disciplines strictly involving things like trials and judgments
and punishments, that's the conclusion we draw. But that's not the primary
biblical usage of discipline in general. Biblical discipline
is more closely related to another well-known biblical word. Can
you think of what that might be? A cognate of discipline?
A disciple. A disciple. And you know what
a disciple is? It's a person who is taught. A disciple is one who hears. I mean, that's the Great Commission,
isn't it? Go into the world and make disciples. And one of the
things we do is to teach them everything that Christ has commanded.
So when you make a disciple, it's because that's one who's
following Jesus and will hear. And so here's what I'm getting at.
It is appropriate to say that the first step in church discipline
isn't when you address someone else or something that takes
place in the public realm, step one of church discipline in the
church is when you sit under God's word, you hear it authoritatively
proclaimed, it brings you to conviction or exhorts you to
action, and you hear it, and you submit it to it. You were
just disciplined by the word of God. Sometimes we miss this,
but listening is the hallmark of a disciple and this starting
point in discipline. One of the reasons, again, I'm
sort of beating this drum is because our default thinking,
right off the bat, is that discipline is something that's negative,
and that's just not often the case, not scripturally. It's
often positive in God's word. You submit to God's authority
as it's revealed to you in his word. You're being disciplined
as a disciple. Hebrews 12, five and six tells
us a very positive way that discipline is applied to us. My son, do not regard lightly
the discipline of the Lord, nor be weary when you're reproved
by him, for the Lord disciplines the one he loves and chastises
every son whom he receives. And of course, in Ephesians 6,
four, the admonition to fathers is do not provoke your children
to anger, but bring them up in the discipline. and instruction
of the Lord. That's possible. And when you
discipline your children, what are you ultimately trying to
do? You're trying to get them to hear the voice of Christ as
it's reflected in His Word. You see, when we hear church
discipline, we immediately think, okay, this is a last straw moment. And Matthew 18 is simply the
way we're going to litigate and prosecute those cotton-picking
evildoers. But church discipline starts
and really ends with hearing or a person choosing not to hear.
Now, I want that in our repertoire so we understand next week when
we come back and we're gonna be engaged in the process of
discipline as a congregation, we understand how this got there. You see, by the time you get
to Matthew 18, You're actually dealing with a situation where
the person has purposely determined not to hear, not to respond to
what's taught in the Bible, not to conform his life to the clear
precepts of God's Word. Now, in that case, that's when
these unfold. I'm gonna work through these
very quickly. Verse 15, it says, if your brother sins against
you, go and tell him his fault. Between you and him alone, if
he hears you, you've gained your brother. Now please see this,
we don't approach our brother and sister because they bug us
or because they have a personality trait that we find personally
annoying. It's if they've sinned against you or we could say if
they're engaged in a sin pattern and you know there's no repentance,
they're just sort of wallowing in it. If you know that exists,
it's incumbent upon you to go to them. This is a command from
Christ. Because I know people are thinking,
I could never do that. I'd rather just pretend it didn't. No, you
don't have that option. Sorry, that's not option A. There's only one option. Do what
Christ said. Now what verse 15 is telling
us in that first step is to keep the circle as small as you possibly
can, but go to them. You see, here's our default. Somebody sins against us, or
we see a sin pattern. And instead of going to them,
we go to everyone else. Let me tell you what they're
doing, right? That's the way we want to handle
it. But Christ is telling us we have to be willing to lovingly
confront people. It's what love demands of us.
If we love one another, if we want to care for each other,
if we have admiration and affection for the family of God, the work
of restoration has to be a part of community life. And it isn't only so we can enjoy
some kind of harmony and unity. That's a fruit of it. It's because
we actually care about our brothers and sisters' spiritual lives.
Listen to what William Hendrickson says about verse 15. Jesus means
that the offended brother should, in the spirit of brotherly love,
go and show the sinner his faults, and this not certainly most of
all for the purpose of receiving satisfaction for a personal grievance,
but rather in the interest of the offender, that he may repent. and may seek and find forgiveness. And what Henderson is driving
at is that the goal in that initial situation isn't necessarily conflict
resolution, although that could be a part of it. That's a byproduct.
The goal, when you confront a brother and sister who is in doctrinal
error or in moral error, is first and foremost a concern for their
soul, for his or her spiritual well-being. And if they hear you and they
repent, you've won a brother. It's never, ever, ever an easy
situation to confront someone or question someone about a sin,
but true believers, true believers will never be angry at you if
you confront them with a sin gently and lovingly. If they
do, then they have a bigger problem. Because the Holy Spirit is in
us, telling us when we sin if we're a believer. And so if someone
comes and says, look, I see this sin, dear one, you gotta turn
from it, that's an opportunity to relieve himself from his guilt
and the burden of his sin. You'll win a brother. Of course,
verse 16 says, if he'll not hear, take with you two or more, that
by the mouth of two or three witnesses every word may be established.
Jesus is quoting here from Deuteronomy 17. So you go to the person,
bring a couple people with you. This is significant because this
makes it a valid testimony according to biblical law. And I also think
the purpose of bringing other witnesses is to show the person
the gravity of the situation. The prime concern that Jesus
says he wants you to have in your heart is that your brother
or sister might not be hindered in their spiritual growth, that
your brother or sister might not become hardened in their
sin, that your brother and sister might not drift away from light
and truth. And by bringing a couple others,
it's a way of saying, look, I really, really care about your soul. You matter to me. I love you.
And they're here with me because they love you too, and they care
about your soul too." And if he refuses, then you tell it
to the church. That's when you make it a public
matter for the congregation. And then, if they refuse to even
hear the church, that's when they're excommunicated and they're
treated like a heathen. and a tax collector. Now what
I want to do, and I'm going to do this very quickly, is I want
us to understand where the procedure that Paul's teaching us in 2
Thessalonians fits into this paradigm. Simply, I believe it's
between bringing it to the church and excommunication. It's somewhere
between those two points. Let me tell you why. I don't
believe Paul has excommunication in mind in 2 Thessalonians 3,
because in verse 15, that last verse, listen to what he says.
You do not count him as an enemy, but admonish him as a brother,
right? And that's not what Jesus said.
Excommunication is treating them like a heathen or a tax collector,
which is just another way of saying, treat them like an unbeliever
who needs the gospel. That's not how Paul is ending
this. So it's somewhere in that process. You're dealing with
a person who hasn't heard one person. He hasn't heard the two
or three people. It's come to the church. His
soul is in peril, and it becomes incumbent upon the church to
love that person enough to respond the way Paul says, and that is
to withdraw from them. I want to close this morning
with a a quote from Pastor Paul Murphy in New York. Many of you
know Paul. I love the way he explains church
discipline, and this just gives us a wonderful way to sort of
have a framework in our own minds. He writes, the purpose of church
discipline is not to hurt people, but to benefit them. It's not
to reject them, but to reclaim them. It's not to cast them out,
but to save them. The purpose of church discipline
isn't to remove the sin from the sinner. Excuse me, the purpose
of church discipline is to remove the sin from the sinner, not
the sinner from the church. I want to repeat that last one.
The purpose of church discipline is to remove the sin from the
sinner, not the sinner from the church. That ought to be the
desire our church has when we think about church discipline,
reclaiming, regathering, being instruments in the hands of the
Holy Spirit to bring erring men and women of God to repentance. May the Lord make us brothers
and sisters who love the family of God in such a way that we
won't shrink back from confronting sin as we should. Amen. Let's pray. Father, we thank
you and I praise you that the king of the church has given
us this information, how his church should function, how it
should be governed, how discipline should be exercised. Indeed,
oh God, we know that a true church, a true church will always proclaim
the pure gospel of Jesus Christ. A true church will rightly administer
the sacraments, and a true church will faithfully exercise church
discipline. We pray, O God, that when that
need arises at any point in the process, that we would do that,
that we would labor in love for the Lord's church. We ask this
in Jesus' name, amen. Well, brothers and sisters, as
we prepare to come to the Lord's table, as you know, the invitation
to come to this table is extended to men and women of God who are
trusting solely in the finished work of Jesus Christ. Those who
sing the old hymn, nothing in my hands, I bring simply to The
cross I cling. Those who know, it's Christ's
finished works, Christ's merit, Christ's righteousness, Christ's
shed blood. It's Christ, it's Christ, it's
Christ, that's your hope. If that describes your understanding
of salvation, and you're a member in good standing of a Bible-believing
church, please do come and feast with the Lord. If that doesn't
describe you, or if you are living in unrepentant sin, when the
elements are distributed, simply let them pass by. Repent of your
sin. and come back next time and join
with us. Well, as you know, we confess
with the Historic Church what we believe using the Apostles'
Creed. You can find this on page 851. Dear Christian, what do you believe?
I believe in God, the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and
earth. I believe in Jesus Christ, his
only begotten Son, our Lord, who was conceived by the Holy
Spirit, born of the Virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate,
was crucified, dead, and buried. He descended into hell. The third
day he rose again from the dead. He ascended into heaven and sits
at the right hand of God the Father Almighty. From there he
shall come to judge the living and the dead. I believe in the
Holy Spirit. the Holy Catholic Church, the
communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of
the body, and the life everlasting. Amen. Let's pray, brothers and
sisters. We're thankful, O God, that we
can come to this holy sacrament. We're thankful, O God, that what
we take in our hands, these tangible signs direct our thoughts and
our hearts to the finished work of Jesus Christ, to his broken
body and his shed blood. Help us to participate in this
sacrament with that faith that apprehends and appropriates Jesus
Christ. We ask these things in his precious
name. Amen. Let me ask you to give your attention
to the reading of God's Word from 1 Corinthians 10. I'm gonna
read verses 16 through 17, and the meditation is actually from
Calvin's Institutes. But 1 Corinthians 10, verses
16 and 17. 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 though many
are one, excuse me, for we though many are one bread and one body,
for we all partake of that one bread. Excuse me. Again, you can follow along or
simply listen to the meditation. Calvin writes, we do not adore
the symbols, the bread and the cup. We adore the one to whom
they point. We adore Jesus. The cup is communion
with his shed blood for our sins. The bread is communion with his
body given for our salvation. As we remember and proclaim his
death, this meal of communion urges us to holiness of life
and also to charity, peace, and unity. In the supper, the Lord
communicates his body so that he becomes altogether one with
us and we with him. Moreover, since he is only one
body of which he makes us all to be partakers, we must necessarily,
by this participation, all become one body. This unity is represented
by the bread which is exhibited in the sacrament. as it's composed
of many grains, so mingled together that one cannot be distinguished
from another, so our minds to be so affectionately united as
not to allow of any dissension or division. This is Paul's point. It must be engraved upon our
minds. If our brethren is hurt, despised,
or injured, Christ's body is hurt, despised, and injured.
We cannot have dissension with our brethren without at the same
time dissenting from Christ's body. Likewise, we cannot love
Christ without loving our brethren. The same care we take of our
own body, we ought to take of our brethren who are members
of our body. Augustine, not inappropriately,
often terms this sacrament the bond of love. What stronger stimulus
could be employed to excite mutual love than when Christ, presenting
Himself to us, not only invites us by His example to give and
devote ourselves mutually to each other, but inasmuch as He
makes Himself common to all, also makes us all to be one in
Him. Receive the Lord's benediction.
The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God the Father and
the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all now and forever
and all of God's people said.