CHAPTER XXIX.
Of the Lord's Supper.
I. Our Lord
Jesus, in the night wherein he was betrayed, instituted the sacrament of his
body and blood, called the Lord's Supper, to be observed in his Church unto
the end of the world; for the perpetual remembrance of the sacrifice of himself
in his death, the sealing all benefits thereof unto true believers, their
spiritual nourishment and growth in him, their further engagement in and to
all duties which they owe unto him; and to be a bond and pledge of their communion
with him, and with each other, as members of his mystical body.
II. In this
sacrament Christ is not offered up to his Father, nor any real sacrifice made
at all for remission of sins of the quick or dead, but a commemoration of
that one offering up of himself, by himself, upon the cross, once for all,
and a spiritual oblation of all possible praise unto God for the same; so
that the Popish sacrifice of the mass, as they call it, is most abominably
injurious to Christ's one only sacrifice, the alone propitiation for all the
sins of the elect.
III. The
Lord Jesus hath, in this ordinance, appointed his ministers to declare his
word of institution to the people, to pray, and bless the elements of bread
and wine, and thereby to set them apart from a common to an holy use; and
to take and break the bread, to take the cup, and (they communicating also
themselves) to give both to the communicants; but to none who are not then
present in the congregation.
IV. Private
masses, or receiving this sacrament by a priest, or any other, alone; as likewise
the denial of the cup to the people; worshipping the elements, the lifting
them up, or carrying them about for adoration, and the reserving them for
any pretended religious use, are all contrary to the nature of this sacrament,
and to the institution of Christ.
V. The outward
elements in this sacrament, duly set apart to the uses ordained by Christ,
have such relation to him crucified, as that truly, yet sacramentally only,
they are sometimes called by the name of the thigns they represent, to wit,
the body and blood of Christ; albeit, in substance and nature, they still
remain truly, and only, bread and wine, as they were before.
VI. That
doctrine which maintains a change of the substance of bread and wine, into
the substance of Christ's body and blood (commonly called transubstantiation)
by consecration of a priest, or by any other way, is repugnant, not to Scripture
alone, but even to common-sense and reason; overthroweth the nature of the
sacrament; and hath been, and is, the cause of manifold superstitions, yea,
of gross idolatries.
VII. Worthy
receivers, outwardly partaking of the visible elements in this sacrament,
do then also inwardly by faith, really and indeed, yet not carnally and corporally,
but spiritually, receive and feed upon Christ crucified, and all benefits
of his death: the body and blood of Christ being then not corporally or carnally
in, with, or under the bread and wine; yet as really, but spiritually, present
to the faith of believers in that ordinance, as the elements themselves are
to their outward senses.
VIII. Although
ignorant and wicked men receive the outward elements in this sacrament, yet
they receive not the thing signified thereby; but by their unworthy coming
thereunto are guilty of the body and blood of the Lord, to their own damnation.
Wherefore all ignorant and ungodly persons, as they are unfit to enjoy communion
with him, so are they unworthy of the Lord's table, and can not, without great
sin against Christ, while they remain such, partake of these holy mysteries,
or be admitted thereunto.
|