“Now I praise you brethren that ye keep the ordinances
as I delivered
them unto you [the church].”
- Paul
Editor, “The
Baptist” – Memphis, Tennessee
“There is
sufficient proof to convince any close student of church history of the first
three centuries, that in the very earliest ages the Lord’s Supper was regarded
as strictly a Church Ordinance, as we have defined the phrase.” – Professor
Curtis, “Communion,” page 88.
“When a man
eats of that 'one bread,’ and drinks of that 'one cup,’ he, in this act, professes
himself a member of that one body, in hearty, holy sympathy with its doctrines
and life, and freely and fully subjecting himself to its watchcare and government,
(I Cor. x: I7); hence, in I Cor. v: II, the Church is forbidden to eat (in
the Lord’s Supper, as the context clearly shows) with immoral persons, thus
distinctly making the Ordinance a symbol of church fellowship.”
Professor
Harvey, Hamilton Theological Seminary – “The Church” page
224.
The Supper
demonstrated to be a church ordinance:
1.) Each
church absolutely independent under Christ;
2.) Each
church is made the guardian of the ordinances, and enjoined to prevent the
disqualified from partaking of them;
3.) The symbolism of the Supper determine it beyond question to
be a church ordinance, since it symbolizes church relations with the body
celebrating the rite.
Christ appointed
it as a church ordinance - could not have allowed
His churches the right to contravene it.
The churches
of the first ages observed it as a church ordinance.
It is admitted
that the Supper can only be enjoyed by one:
1.) Who has
been scripturally baptized; and thus,
2.) Has become
a member of a scriptural church; and
3.) Is in
hearty fellowship with its doctrines; and
4.) Is walking
in gospel order.
I wish in
this tract to show: That the Lord’s Supper is a church ordinance, and, as
such, can only be observed by a church, as such, and by a person in the church
of which he is a member.
This statement
indicates an observance of the Supper generally disregarded by our churches,
as are other important matters connected with the sacred feast, as the character
of bread and the kind of wine used, and it will, therefore, demand an investigation
in spirit so unfettered by the prejudices of long usage and uninfluenced
by the opinions of their powerful advocates, that comparatively few will
be able to command; but, these few belong to the class of witnesses who have,
through all ages, been the conservators of “the truth as it is in Jesus,”
and to whom the world is indebted for a pure gospel and scriptural ordinances.
The truth of the proposition, as a whole, depends upon the truth of its first
clause, i.e., that the Supper is a church ordinance. It becomes
me to define a church, from a denominational and social ordinance. There
is no denominational ordinance of divine appointment - because such a thing
as a denomination, in the sense of an organized body, embracing all the churches
of a province or nation, was unknown in the first ages. I have denominated
the Lord’s Supper a denominational ordinance whenever it is opened to the
members of any and all Baptist churches present. We do not allow a brother
not a member, in however good standing, the right to vote in our Conventions,
Associations, Presbyteries, Councils, or church conference, but we do confer
upon him the rights of a member, without the knowledge of his character,
when we observe the Lord’s Supper, the most sacred of all ordinances!
A social
ordinance or act is one that may be enjoyed anywhere by any number of Christians,
as individuals, baptized or unbaptized - as singing, prayer, exhortation
and religious conversation.
But, the
essential qualities of a church ordinance are, -
1.) That it is
a rite, the duty of perpetuating which is committed to the visible churches,
as such.
2.) The qualifications
of its recipients must be decided by the members of the churches as such.
3.) Any rite
which symbolizes church relations can only be participated in by the members
of the church celebrating, and is pre-eminently a church ordinance.
A church
act or privilege is one that can be transacted or enjoyed by the constituent
members of one particular church. Voting upon all questions relating to the
choice of officers, the fellowship and government of the church, is a church
privilege, or act, which, from the very nature and constitution of a gospel
church, belongs to the members of that particular church alone, and cannot
be extended beyond its limits without peril to its very existence.
Baptism and
the Lord’s Supper are universally admitted to be church ordinances, and yet
few seem to apprehend why they are, or why they cannot be administered by
an officer of a local church without the action or presence of the church.
Of the Lord’s
Supper, especially, few seem to understand why it ceases to be a church ordinance
when administered to those without and beyond its jurisdiction, or when those
without and beyond the jurisdiction of a local church are associated in its
celebration. It is my conviction that misapprehension of the true nature and
limitations of a church ordinance has given rise to all the discussions, misunderstandings,
all the misrepresentations, and bitter prejudices excited against us by other
denominations, as well as to all the present disagreement among Baptists.
If all parties could understand clearly why the Lord’s Supper is a church
ordinance, and why it must, from its very nature and in every instance, be
observed by the constituent membership of each local church alone, it must
be that all this unpleasant and harmful misunderstanding, and antagonism
would be settled and pacified: and certainly this would be a consummation
devoutly to be wished by every true child of God in every denomination.
In the not
vain hope, I trust, of contributing something toward this so desirable a result,
I submit this and the following chapters.
My first
argument to show why the Lord’s Supper is a church ordinance, and cannot
be scripturally observed only by the members of one particular church, is,
-
1.) That
each church under Christ is absolutely independent.
The first
church organized by Christ was a complete and perfect church, and yet it existed
for years before other churches were formed. There were no new ecclesiastical
relations originated, nor the slightest modification of the character of
this church made, by the multiplication of churches. During the apostolic
age, nor for ages after, was there the shadow of any confederation or con-association
or constitutional inter-dependence recognized, any more than between the families of children
of a common parentage. Love for the brotherhood and active charity for all
in distress, and the doing of good, especially to the household of faith,
was only enjoined. The idea of a constitutional interdependence, which is
now imperceptibly taking root in the minds of the cultured leaders of our
people, in the fourth century begot confederations and con-associations of
churches, and these soon brought forth the centralized ecclesiastical hierarchism
under the auspices of Constantine - which is known as the “Great Apostasy.”
[A. D. 100 - 593]. “All congregations were independent of each
other,” etc. (Gieseler, chapter 3 page 53.)
“All the
churches in those primitive times were independent bodies, and none of them
subject to the jurisdiction of any other. It is as clear as noonday that
all Christian churches had equal rights, and were in all respects on a footing
of equality.” [Mosheim, A. D. 100].
[A. D. 200.] “During a great part of this century all the churches
continued to be, as at first, independent of each other, or were connected
by no con-associations or confederations; each church was a kind of little
independent republic, governed by its own laws.”
[A. D. 300 - 400.] “Although the ancient mode of church government
seemed, in general, to remain unaltered, yet there was a gradual deflection
from its rules, and an approximation toward the form of monarchy. This change
in the form of government was followed by a corrupt state of the clergy.”
This was
the vile offspring begotten by the idea of the inter-dependency of churches,
which is finding strong advocates in our day. They sink the idea of churches
into that of a Denomination.
The learned
Doctor Owen, of England, asserts:
“That, in
no approved writer, for two hundred years after Christ, is mention made of
any organized visible professing church, except a local organization.”
- Crowell’s Church Manual, page 36.
Each church
being absolutely independent, it must, from the very nature of the case, absolutely
control its own acts; and can be responsible to no authority save Christ.
It cannot constitutionally allow the members of other communities to share
its prerogatives, since such license would endanger its own independency and
responsibility.
Should a
church so far forget its trust as to fall into the general practice of inviting,
as an act of courtesy (which implies a discourtesy in refusing to do it),
the members of all sister churches present to vote in the reception and exclusion
of members, discipline, and even choice of pastors, as one prominent Baptist
author advises, how soon the independency of the churches would be subverted!
Usage would soon crystallize into precedent, and custom into law.
The independency
of the churches is of Christ’s special appointment, and it is our sacred
duty to do nothing tending to imperil or contravene it. No one will presume
to claim that Christ invested his churches with the power to contravene,
at their pleasure, any one of his appointments. Their powers are all delegated,
and delegated powers cannot be relegated. A local church cannot confer upon
members of other communities any privilege or franchise that belongs exclusively
to her own members.
But it is
further demonstrable that the Supper, as well as baptism, is a local church
ordinance, because –
2.) To each local
church is committed the sole administration and guardianship of the ordinances.
This will
not be questioned, save by the few who hold that baptism, at least, was committed
to the ministry as such; that they alone are responsible for its proper administration;
and they can, therefore, administer it without the presence and voice of
the church whenever and wherever they please. This must be settled, not by
the will or opinions of men, but by the Scriptures.
Let us see
what one apostle thought concerning this issue between a part of our ministry
and the churches:
TO THE CHURCH
AT CORINTH
“I have received of the Lord Jesus that which I also delivered unto
you.” - (1 Corinthians 11:23)
All the instructions
and directions, both as respects the doctrine and the ordinances, Paul delivered,
not to the ministry, but to the churches.
“Now I praise you, brethren [not you,
ministers of the churches), that ye remember me in all things, and keep the ordinances as I delivered them unto you.” - (1 Corinthians 11:2)
Now note
his command to this church, not to its ministers:
“Be ye followers of me, even as I also am of Christ.”—
(1 Corinthians 11:1)
“I beseech you, be ye followers of me. For this cause
I have sent unto you Timothy, my beloved son, and faithful in the Lord, who
shall bring you into remembrance of my ways, which be in Christ, as
I teach every-where in every church.” (I Corinthians 4:16-17.)
TO THE CHURCH
AT PHILIPPI
“Brethren,
be ye followers of me, and mark them who walk so, as ye have us for an example.”
– (Philippians 3:17)
He
enjoins it upon the church to follow the directions
he had given it, as well as to “mark” those who did not.
TO THE CHURCH
AT COLOSSE.
“Though I be absent in the flesh, yet am I with you in the spirit,
joying and obeying your order, and the steadfastness of your faith in Christ.
As ye have received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk ye in him.
Beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit, after the
traditions of men, after the rudiments of the world, and not after Christ.”
– (Colossians 2:5-8)
“And we have confidence in the Lord touching you [the Church], that ye both do and will do the things we command you.” –
(2 Thessalonians 3:4)
It would
be useless to reason with those who could deny, with these Scriptures before
their eyes, that the ordinances were not delivered in sacred trust to the
churches, as such, and not to their officers; and that they are held responsible
for their right observance.
“Now we command you, brethren, in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ,
that ye withdraw yourselves [as a Church] from every brother
that walketh disorderly, and not after the traditions [instructions] which
he received of us” (1) “And if any man obey not
our word by this epistle, note that man, and have no company with him, that
he may be ashamed.” – (2 Thessalonians 3:6, 14)
(1)And
what ingenuous mind will deny that this command equally excludes all such
from the pulpit as well?
This withdrawing
and having no company with the disobedient and disorderly, certainly involved
exclusion from the Lord’s table.
“But now I have written unto you not to keep company, if any man
that is called a brother be a fornicator, or covetous, or an idolater, or
a railer, or a drunkard, or an extortioner; with such an one no not to eat.”
– (1 Corinthians 5:11)
The apostolic
churches were peremptorily commanded to prohibit the table to all these,
and such like characters - to allow no leaven to be mingled in the feast.
For this purpose, each church is made the sole guardian of the Supper. It
cannot alienate the responsibility. It cannot, under any plea, contravene
the law. To execute it with fidelity, it must keep the feast within its jurisdiction;
its permission to partake cannot be extended beyond the limits of the Supper,
since all who can be entitled to the Supper must be subject to its discipline.
It is conceded
by all that members of other communities have no scriptural or any other right
to eat the Supper in any church save their own. No one claims that it is the
duty of any local church to offer the supper to any but its own members.
What, then,
do I conclude? –
1.) That
Christ has not given me the right to commune in any church save the one which
has the watch and care over me, and that my privileges are limited to my
church.
2.) That
Christ has not made it the duty of any church to open the doors to this ordinance
to any not subject to its discipline; but, by making it a church ordinance
He has manifestly forbidden the practice, since, by the act, the participant
declares he is a member of the church with which he communes – “we are one
loaf,” i.e., one church.
3.) And it
may be safely affirmed that those churches that statedly offer and invite
to their tables all the members of sister churches who may chance to be present
in the congregation, openly violate the command of Paul - to allow no disqualified
persons to participate in this ordinance - since it is morally certain that
such are often, if not ever, present, and are the most certain to accept.
But the Lord’s
Supper is unquestionably a church ordinance, because –
4.) It symbolizes
church relations, i.e., that all who jointly partake are
members of the one and self - same church.
I only assert
this fact here, and submit an eminent authority, that of Professor Curtis,
who has treated this subject with unsurpassed ability, and reserve the discussion
and proof of it when I treat of the symbolism of the elements in the next
Tract. That the Supper is a church ordinance in the sense that it can be worthily
celebrated by only one church and participated in by the members of only
one church, Professor Curtis argues most conclusively from the symbolism
of the Supper, as well as from the fact that it is under the sole guardianship
of the churches.
He says,
in “Communion,” page 85:
“We desire
to show that this is the true view of the Lord’s Supper, [i.e.,
that it is a church ordinance, and a symbol of church relationship]. ‘When ye come together therefore into one place,’ says the apostle,
‘this is not to eat the Lord’s Supper. For in
eating every one taketh before other, etc. . . Wherefore, my brethren, when ye come together to eat, tarry one
for another.’ (1 Corinthians 11:20-21,
33.) The apostle here clearly alludes to it as the
universally current opinion that the Lord’s Supper was a church ordinance,
so far as this, that it was completely celebrated in one place, by one church.
… When he bids them ‘tarry one for another’ he clearly intimates
that the regulation of the Supper, as far as time and place are concerned,
is lodged in each particular church; that it expresses the relations of the
members of the church to each other, as such.”
“That the
Lord’s Supper is a symbol of church relationship, subsisting between those
who unite together in tho participation of it, can be shown in various ways.”
“Admission
to the Lord’s table, therefore, implies admission to it by a particular church,
and this in fact settles the question that the Lord’s Supper is a church ordinance.”
The Lord’s Supper, then, being a church ordinance,
indicates church relations as subsisting between the parties who unite together
in its celebration.
“It must
be conceded that the Lord’s Supper is ever the symbol of particular, visible
church relations.” - Page 138.
“It expresses
the relations of the members of that church to each other, as such.”
“A fellowship
in church relations, professed with those Christians with whom we visibly
celebrate.”
If the Lord’s
Supper is a Church ordinance, as must be admitted, and a symbol, among other
things, of our visible church relations in the same particular church with
which we celebrate it, then it is a violation of the truth symbolized to
invite members of other Baptist churches to participate in it.
When Baptists,
in reasoning with affusionists, urge the symbolism of Baptism, i.e., that it represents a burial - as conclusive that the
act must be an immersion - they think candid Pedobaptists should see and
admit so evident an argument. Will not all candid Baptists admit this?
4.) It was
instituted by Christ to be observed as a church ordinance.
I claim it
as an AXIOM -
That a church
ordinance must be instituted by Christ.
AND
That the
symbolism of the ordinances was instituted by Christ.
Should we
observe ordinances originated by man, our worship would be unacceptable to
Christ, and as vain as it would be sinful. Christ has said –
“In vain do they worship me who teach
for doctrines the commandments of men.”
Should we
change the symbol of an ordinance by the slightest modification, we would
vitiate it; and to vitiate the symbolism of an ordinance in the least, is
to vitiate the ordinance.
“Ye do make the commandment of God of none effect through your traditions.”
- Christ.
That Christ
did institute the Supper to be rigidly observed as a church ordinance, Professor
Curtis declares:
“So when
our blessed Savior instituted the Supper, as He did, upon one of those Paschal
occasions, it was, we say, as a church ordinance that He ordained it.”
And he justly
says, to claim the right to change it in the least, is to claim the right
to legislate. If it is ever a symbol of particular church relations professed
with those Christians with whom we visibly celebrate, as he declares, then
to celebrate it with those not members of the same church, is to vitiate the
symbol and change what Christ hath appointed.
5.) The Lord’s
Supper was observed by the apostolic churches (A. D. 100) as a Church ordinance;
i.e., as a symbol of church relations.
Paul, we
have seen, could not have delivered this ordinance unto the churches as he
had received it from Christ, unless he had delivered it unto them as a church
ordinance; for it is admitted that Christ ordained it as a church ordinance.
(Curtis and others).
But the churches
did observe this, as well as the other ordinances, as Paul delivered them,
because he praised them for so doing.
To the church
at Corinth he wrote, -
“I praise you, brethren, because you keep the ordinances
as I delivered them unto you.” (1 Corinthians
11:2)
To the Church
at Colosse he could say, -
“I rejoice, beholding your order and the stability of your faith.”
The churches
at Thessalonica he only exhorts:
The church
at Corinth for a season perverted the design of the Supper, and Paul promptly
rebuked it [not its pastor or elders], and again set it in order, and we
must believe that he corrected every departure from his instructions.
But suppose
I grant that he did not deliver it to the churches as symbolizing the relations
of all the participants to one and the same church, still I claim that the
positive instructions Paul gave to the churches forbade them from inviting
to their tables the members of all existing churches, without personal knowledge
of their faith or character, as is the practice of this age. He placed the
Supper under the sole custody of each church, and commanded it to purge away
from its table all leaven of malice or wickedness. He taught them that false
doctrine of all description, and all ungodly conduct (1 Corinthians
5), and all works of the flesh (Galatians 5), was leaven
that must not be allowed to defile the feast.
“Now we charge you, brethren, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ,
to withdraw from every brother who walks disorderly, and not according to
the instruction which you have received from us.” (2 Thessalonians
3:6)
If it is
said “that this was spoken to the church with reference to her own members,”
I will grant it, and demand if it does not equally teach that it should equally
withdraw from those not members walking disorderly? That there might be no
doubt, read the fourteenth verse: “But if any one obey not our
word, signify that man by an epistle [the most approved rendering], and have no company with him, that he may be ashamed.” All
will admit that this command forbade them to invite all false teachers, as
well as unsound and disorderly brethren, to the Lord’s Supper.
I care little
for the argument from post-apostolic history. It is enough for my purpose
- and it must be quite enough for every conscientious Bible Christian - to
learn that Christ appointed the Supper to be observed as a church ordinance,
and that the apostles so delivered it to the churches, and the churches all
observed it as such while they had the personal instructions of the apostles.
Suppose, from the day the last apostle died, every church ceased to observe
it as a church ordinance; how should that fact affect our present practice?
Would it warrant a church to observe it, even once, in some other way, that
would vitiate its symbolism? The fact granted would in no way vitiate the
claim that there have been Baptist churches from the day of the defection.
The church at Corinth had for years utterly perverted the Supper, and yet
Paul addressed it as a church of Christ. It was disorderly in this respect,
but a perversion of the Supper did not forfeit its existence.
“The records
of church history plainly show that originally the Lord’s Supper was everywhere
regarded as a church ordinance.” - Communion, page 137.
I will add
the remarks of Doctor D. Spencer, in his treatise on “Invitations
to the Supper,” after showing that no invitations were given by the first
churches, nor yet in the days of Justin Martyr, in the second century:
I have not
granted, in this discussion, that the unapostate churches, whom we account
our ancestors, deflected at an early day into denominational Communion. It
is my impression that this laxity is a late practice.
CONCLUSIONS
FROM THIS ARGUMENT.
I think I
have conclusively shown, -
1.) That
Christ appointed His Supper to be a church ordinance.
2.) That
any rational definition of church ordinance or privilege limits the enjoyment
of it to the membership of, or to those approved for membership by a local
church.
3.) That
when an ordinance or act symbolizes or implies church relations, it is pre-eminently
a church ordinance, and must be confined to the members of a particular church
only.
4.) That
the Lord’s Supper, among other things, specially symbolizes church relations,
as all standard writers admit, and, therefore, it can be scripturally observed
by the members of one church only.
5.) That
for the members of various churches to participate in its joint observance,
even though upon the invitation of a local church, as Associations and Conventions
are wont in some places to do, would be to vitiate the symbolism, and consequently
to render the ordinance, null.
The only
issue now before Baptists is fairly stated by Doctor A. P. Williams:
“If he [a
member of one church] ever has a right anywhere else, it must be either by
a transfer of membership or by courtesy,” etc. - Lord’s Supper,
page 94.
In his “Tract on Communion,” as though he would correct, in part, at
least, the admission made in his book on Communion, he says:
“But this
courtesy cannot be exercised in violation of church discipline or of divine
authority.”
It is demonstrable
that it is in palpable violation of both:
2.) Such
a courtesy can never be extended and accepted, except in violation of divine
authority, since Christ appointed the Supper to symbolize the organic unity
of the body partaking – i.e., particular church relations
of all the participants withthat one church.
It is claimed
that the churches have the right to extend such invitations through courtesy.
I answer that such a claim is not even supposable; for –
1.) It cannot
be supposed that Christ would allow His churches to adopt any practice that
would contravene any one of His own appointments - even if we can suppose
He sometimes allows it to exercise legislative powers - by adding to, or modifying,
the form of one of His ordinances.
2.) But invitations
to all Baptists present to partake of the Supper with the local church celebrating
it, does manifestly contravene Christ’s appointment of the Supper as a church
ordinance.
From the considerations
submitted in this Tract, the reader will see that I have done what I have
been called upon to do - proved that all those brethren who admit that the
Supper is a church ordinance, do yield the question at issue between us,
and, to be consistent, they must admit that Intercommunion of Baptists of
different churches is unscriptural and inconsistent.
CHAPTER II
THE PRACTICE
OF THE APOSTOLIC CHURCHES.
They observed
the ordinances as they were delivered to them.
The Supper
was delivered to be observed as a church ordinance.
They had
no authority to change any rite in the least respect.
They were
commanded to judge all whom they allowed to eat with them, and they cannot
judge the members of sister churches.
Intercommunion
was unknown among the apostolic churches in the earliest ages of Christianity.
The invariable
practice of the apostolic churches, and the specific instructions delivered
them by the apostles, will have a conclusive bearing upon the right settlement of the question before us. If we find that these
are in accord with the nature and symbolism of the ordinance as developed
in the previous chapter, it will certainly be the part of Christian candor
to admit that the practice of Intercommunion was unknown among the apostolic
churches, and is, therefore, unscriptural. Baplists indorse this as logical
reasoning when opposing infant baptism and feet washing; the practices were
unknown to the apostolic churches, and, therefore, must be unscriptural.
To place the subject fully before the reader, I will submit this:
AXIOM - Any
practice or theory which vitiates or contravenes what Christ has appointed
must be unscriptural, and fraught with evil.
Now there
are two principles fundamental to the New Testament and Baptist church polity,
viz.:
1.) That
each church of Christ is an absolutely independent organization, complete
in itself, and clothed with executive functions only.
2.) That
to the churches, as such, Christ delivered the ordinances, and constituted
each one responsible for the purity of its administrations.
I mean by
fundamental, that a scriptural church cannot be constituted without them.
An organization may possess every other feature; but not possessing these
two, it is not a Christian or evangelical church, and should not be so called.
I refer the reader back to Bishop Doggett’s position (page 21). Any theory
or practice, therefore, that antagonizes or contravenes either of these principles,
must be unscriptural, and of evil tendency.
1. The theory of some that the rights, ordinances, and privileges
of one church belong incommon to the members of all churches, is both unscriptural
and pernicious. For,
(1.) It is
destructive of the polity Christ appointed for His churches, abrogating as
it does the principle of Church independency.
Once establish
this theory, and no church could discipline its own members, administer its
own government: for the members of surrounding churches could command majorities,
and control the business meetings of a local church; dismiss its pastor and
elect another; determine his salary; arraign, try, and exclude members; receive
and administer her ordinances. The reader who cannot see how utterly this
theory annihilates the last vestige of church independency is simply unreasonable.
The theory must, therefore, be unscriptural and pernicious.
(2.) It is
equally manifest that the above theory as utterly ignores and abrogates the
second fundamental principle, viz.; the guardianship of the ordinances by
the local churches. If the members of one church have equal privileges in
all churches, it follows, of course, that no church has the right to refuse
them the exercise of any church privileges - as of voting and coming to its
table - and consequently can have no control of the Supper any more than
of baptism or of its discipline. The most obnoxious characters, retained
as they are in the fellowship of so many sister churches, - drunkards, fornicators,
adulterers, revelers, and even those unbaptized, and those excluded from
her own fellowship, - can come to the table of any church without let or
hinderance on its part. This is the monstrous theory set forth by some who
propose to teach Baptists the right observance of the ordinances. It utterly
annihilates both the independency of the churches and their control of, and
responsibility for the right observance of the ordinances, and is therefore
unscriptural and pernicious, and fraught with evil only.
We are therefore
compelled to conclude that no member has a scriptural right to any church
act, privilege, or the Supper, in a church of which he is not a member. All
standard Baptist authors are agreed in this.
Dr. A. P.
Williams, D. D., says:
“He [a regular
Baptist] has a right to the Communion in the church of which he has been
added; but nowhere else. As he had no general right when running at large,
so he has no general right now.” - Lord’s Supper page 93.
Dr. Arnold,
of Madison University, N. Y., says:
“Such a principle
is in our judgment incompatible, alike with the independence and the responsibility
of churches - with their independence, because it takes from them the right
to judge of the qualifications of those whom they receive to their highest
privileges; and with their responsibility, because it deprives them of the
power to guard the table of the Lord against the approach of the unworthy.”
- Prerequisites to Communion., page 62.
Dr. Gardner
says:
“A member
of one Baptist church has no more right to claim the privilege of voting
in another Baptist church, than has a Campbellite, Methodist, or Presbyterian.
The same is equally true of Communion at the Lord’s Table, which is a church
act, and the appointed token, not of Christian or denominational, but of
the church fellowship subsisting between communicants at the same table.
Hence it follows that a member of one Baptist church has no more right, as
a right, to claim Communion in another Baptist church, than he has to claim
the right of voting, for both are equally church acts and church privileges.
The Lord’s Supper being a church ordinance, as all admit,(2) and
every church being required to exercise discipline over all its communicants,
it necessarily follows that no church can scripturally, [and it is certain
that it cannot unscripturally!] extend its communion beyond the limits of
its discipline. And this, in fact, settles the question of church Communion,
and restricts the Lord’s Supper to the members of each particular church
as such.” - Communion, pages 18, 19.
(2) That Christ
has not given the members of one church a right to the table spread in another
church, see Curtis, Paxton, Adkins, Harvey, Pendleton, and Hovey.
Now if this
be true - and who will presume to doubt it ? - can we for a moment suppose
that the apostolic churches habitually contravened those fundamental principles,
and the express instructions of the apostles without their remonstrance or
reproof? If not, we cannot believe that the apostolic churches practiced Intercommunion.
THE APOSTOLIC
CHURCHES DID NOT PRACTICE INTERCOMMUNION.
My first
argument is:
1.) There
is not a precept for, nor an example of, Interconimunion in the New Testament.
If Baptists
really believe that this is a valid argument against infant baptism and feet-washing
being church ordinances, or even Christian duties, they must admit its equal
force against Intercommunion. It is inferred to have taken place at Troas,
but no one ever has, or can prove, that there was any church at Troas in the
first century at the period of Paul’s last visit; and, therefore, the expression
“when we come together to break bread,” refers to a common
repast, and not to the Lord’s Supper.
My second
argument is:
That the
apostolic churches did observe this ordinance, as well as baptism, as the
apostles delivered them unto them.
The churches
were especially praised for this (1 Corinthians 11:2, Colossians 2:5).
In whatever
respect any church departed from the traditions of the apostles, for this
they were reproved (1 Corinthians 11:17, 22;
Revelation 2:3). But we have no intimation throughout
the New Testament that any church had transgressed in this respect. (See letters
to the seven churches.) But I have shown, what is generally admitted, that
Christ did appoint the Supper to be observed as a church ordinance, and among
other things, to symbolize “church relations” - i.e., that
all who unite in partaking of it are fellow-members of the same church.
So Professor
Curtis:
“So when
our blessed Savior instituted the Supper, as He did upon one of these Paschal
occasions, it was, we say, as a church ordinance that He ordained it.” –
Communion, page 87.
He therefore
committed it to His churches to be so observed to the end of time. Therefore,
the apostolic churches did observe the Lord’s Supper as a church ordinance,
and Inter-communion was unknown among them. But, strange to say, there are
good Baptists who believe that in virtue of the independence of Baptist churches,
they can invite members of other churches to participate in their church
acts.(3)
(3)Is it in
violation of the Scriptures for a member in good standing in a church of
Christ, to partake of the Lord’s Supper, with another church of the same
faith and order?
“Answer. -
The Lord’s Supper is strictly a church ordinance; yet, by virtue of the independence
of a church, she may, or may not, invite to her Communion, members of sister
churches of the same faith and order, who she knows to be in good standing,
and we advise the brethren to moderation and forbearance.” - Answer
of The Suwanee Baptist Association, Florida., 1881.
Now, it is
evident that, if Christ did appoint the Supper to be observed as a church
ordinance, as these brethren all admit, and as a symbol of church relations,
then it is certain that He forbade the Intercommunion of members of different
churches. This must be as evident to a Baptist as that Christ forbade the
sprinkling of water on the head for Christian baptism, by appointing the
act to symbolize his death, burial, and resurrection.(4) Let not
Baptists use the arguments they do to disprove sprinkling, unless willing
to admit their force with reference to the Lord’s Supper. For a Baptist Church,
then, to grant a right which Christ has withheld, it must be authorized by
Christ to modify his appointments - in a word, to legislate. But scriptural
churches are executive bodies only, and therefore have no authority to enact
or abolish rites or ceremonies, or modify, in the least, any ordinance or
appointment of Christ. For a church to presume to do this, would be to forfeit
its claims to be considered a Church of Christ.
(4)It would
not be strange for Protestants and Catholics to believe that a church may
change Christ’s appointments, for the right is incorporated in the very creeds
of those sects.
“Each particular
church may ordain, change, or abolish rites and ceremonies, so that all things
may be done to edification.” - Acts xxii; Methodist Discipline.
And they
have changed both the subjects and the acts which Christ commanded, for their
convenience; but this doctrine has always been, and should be, peculiarly
repugnant to all Baptists.
This fact
should be indelibly impressed upon the mind and heart of every Baptist -
a church of Christ has no authority to enact laws or to change, in the slightest
respect, what Christ has appointed. It cannot be true, therefore, that a
church may grant a privilege which Christ has withheld, and much less to
so modify an ordinance of His Church as to change its entire character. This
would be equivalent to enacting a new law. If a church can enact one law,
she can a thousand; if she can change one law or ordinance of Christ, she
can abolish all His laws, and enact those suited to her tastes, feelings,
and convenience. By granting a church the authority to modify the least appointment
of Christ in the least, is to concede all the powers claimed by the Papacy.
A principle cannot be divided.
2.) But suppose
it is conceded that Christ did authorize His churches to legislate, in some
things, in some peculiar circumstances, can we for a moment suppose that
He authorized them to make changes, or do that which would contravene His
own appointments, or vitiate the very symbolism of His ordinances, and thus
render them null? But it has been shown that it inheres in the very nature
of a church act or privilege, that its participation is limited to the members
of the one church; that it cannot be extended beyond the jurisdiction of
the church celebrating it; that Christ appointed the Supper to be such an
ordinance, as to symbolize church relations, and therefore we cannot suppose
that He has authorized His churches to change His appointment at their pleasure;
and therefore we cannot suppose that the apostolic churches ever changed this
ordinance, or extended the right to eat, any more than the right to vote,
beyond the limits of their discipline.
3.) My second
argument is:
(1) If Christ
appointed the eating of the “one loaf” to symbolize church relations subsisting
between all those who jointly partake of it, then we must conclude that all
the apostolic churches, which observed the ordinances as delivered, did symbolize
the fact that all who ate together were members of the one self-same church,
and they did not therefore extend the Supper to the members of sister churches.
(2) But it
is admitted by all our authors, who have thoroughly examined the subject,
that the symbolism of the “one loaf” is the organic unity of all the participants
i.e., that they are members of the same local church
(See Symbolism of the “One Loaf,” Tract III).
(3) We are
thus forced to the conclusion that the apostolic churches observed it, among
other things, as a symbol of church relations, and therefore did not practice
Intercommunion.
My third
argument is:
From the
fact that the guardianship of the Supper is strictly enjoined upon the local
churches, she is to judge all with whom she is authorized to commune.
The apostolic
churches were required to allow no one, whose faith or practice was “leavened,”
to come to their table. They were not only authorized, but commanded, to
judge all with whom they ate. They were strictly required to know, so far
as they were able to judge by their observation, or reliable information,
that they were “unleavened” as respects their Christian faith and conduct.
“But now I have written unto you not to keep company, if any man
that is called a brother be a fornicator, or covetous, or an idolater, or
a railer, or a drunkard, or an extortioner; with such a one, no, not to eat.
For what have I to do to judge them also that are without? do not ye judge
them that are within ?” (1 Corinthians 5:11-12).
Each church,
then, has not only the right, but is commanded, to judge all she permits
to eat with her - judge of their baptism, and be assured that they have indeed
received Christian baptism; judge of their faith, and decide if they are heretical;
judge of their Christian conduct, and decide and declare openly by the act
whether they are qualified or disqualified to partake of the Lord’s Supper.
Is there a church in all this broad land that will grant that a sister church
has the right to sit in judgment upon the faith and conduct of her members?
Is there a Baptist who will acknowledge the right of a church, of which he
is not a member, to sit in judgment upon his faith and Christian walk, and
discipline him according to her judgment? Not one, who has any regard for
the appointments of Christ, or self-respect. But by partaking of the Supper
with another church, he does symbolically declare that he subjects himself
fully to its government and discipline.
Dr. Harvey,
of Hamilton Theological Seminary, in his late work, “The Church,” says:
“When a man
eats of that ‘one bread,’ and drinks of that ‘one cup,’ he,
in this act, professes himself a member of that ‘one body,’
in hearty, holy sympathy with its doctrines and life, and freely and fully
subjecting himself to its watch-care and government. (1 Corinthians
10:17.)
“Hence, in
1 Corinthians 5:11, the
church is forbidden to eat (in the Lord’s Supper, as the context clearly
shows) with immoral persons, thus distinctly making the ordinance a symbol
of church fellowship.” – page 221.
There is
not a Baptist in the whole land who could be influenced to go to the table
of a sister church if he was required to acknowledge himself a member for
the time being, and subjected to its discipline. The church could arraign
him before the Conference closed try and expel him for conduct not fellowshiped
by her.
Reverand G.
M. Savage, President of the Masonic College, Henderson, Tennessee, in a treatise
lately put forth on “Communion,” thus comments upon 1 Corinthians
5:11 showing that Paul, in this letter, was establishing the doctrine
that the Supper was a church ordinance, and symbolized church relations between
those communicating:
“Again, there
is a man in the Corinth church who was living with his father’s wife, whether
married to her or not, cannot be determined. Paul, in giving orders to the
church to exclude him, added: ‘But now I have written unto you
not to keep company, if any brother be a fornicator, or covetous, or an idolater,
or a railer, or a drunkard, or an extortioner, with such an one, no, not
to eat.’ - (1 Corinthians 5:11)”
“The first
deduction I make from this passage is, that the celebration of the Lord’s
Supper cannot extend beyond the limits of church discipline. Suppose it does.
Then the offender, without a satisfactory reformation, may go and join some
organization, claiming to be a follower of Christ; and, at the very next communion
season, when the usual general invitation is given, present himself, and
the church thus having to eat with him would violate the command of Christ.
The only way to avoid such guilt, such trouble (for cases of this kind sometimes
occur), is carefully to restrict the communicants to those within the limits
of church discipline. From this deduction it follows, that communion is a
sign of church fellowship; and, consequently, intercommunion is unscriptural.”
Dr. Gardner
says:
“If another
Baptist church thinks proper to invite him to its communion, then he may partake
as an invited guest and as a temporary member. Such intercommunion [i. e. without membership] among Baptists is not only without
Scripture warrant, but does much harm, and no real good. The practice, therefore,
is unscriptural and of evil tendency; and, doubtless, will be abandoned by
all our churches as soon as they reflect properly upon the subject, and can
overcome the force of habit and prejudice.” – page 204.
If the above
positions, indorsed by such authorities, are conceded, then it follows –
That the
apostolic churches did not practice intercommunion, for it cannot be conceded
that they, unreproved by the apostles, habitually practiced what was unscriptural
and of evil tendency.
My fourth
argument is:
Let it be
granted that the character and symbolism of the rite itself does not necessarily
forbid the church extending it beyond her jurisdiction, nevertheless the special
directions of the apostles to the churches, to refuse the Supper to the factious
and heretical of that age, made it impossible for intercommunion to be practiced
by them.
Now it is
a fact that all these heretical ministers and false teachers were members,
in good standing, of sister churches, which means not under discipline, many
of whom belonged to the church at Jerusalem; and there were “many
thousands” of the members of that church who held this doctrine of the
‘‘Concision.’’
“And certain men, who came down from Judea, taught the brethren,
and said, Except ye be circumcised, after the manner of Moses, ye cannot
be saved.” - (Acts 15:1.)
These were
members of the church at Jerusalem, as we learn from the letter of that church
to that at Antioch, to which it sent up messengers to learn from the apostles
of this church, it being their mother church, if the doctrine taught by these
teachers was true.
During the
discussion in the church at Jerusalem we read (verse 5):
“But there rose up certain of the sects of the Pharisees which believed,
[i. e., were members of that church] saying, That
it was needful to circumcise them, and to command them to
keep the law of Moses.” (Acts 15:5).
“And because of false brethren, unawares brought in, who came privily
to spy out our liberty, which we have in Christ Jesus, that they might bring
us into bondage: to whom we gave place by subjection, no, not for an hour;
that the truth of the gospel might continue with you. But of these, who seemed
to be somewhat [of influence in the church], (whatsoever
they were, it maketh no matter to me: God accepteth no man’s person), for
they who seemed to be somewhat in conference added nothing
to me: But contrariwise,” etc. (Galatians 2:4-7).
In the letter
sent to the church at Antioch, the pastor, James the apostle, and the church,
write thus:
“Forasmuch
as we have heard, that certain who went out from us have troubled you with
words, subverting your souls, …” – (Acts 15:24.)
When Paul
visited Jerusalem, eight years after, and had recounted his missionary labors
and successes to James and the elders, we hear them warning Paul of his imminent
personal danger from these zealots of the law in that church:
“Thou seest, brother, how many thousands of Jews there are who believe;
and they are all zealous of the law.” - (Acts 21:20.)
How did Paul
regard these ministers, church members though they were?
“As many as desire to make a fair show in the flesh, they constrain
you to be circumcised; only lest they should suffer persecution for the cross
of Christ.” – (Galatians 6:12)
“And I, brethren, if I yet preach circumcision, why do I yet suffer
persecution? Then is the offense of the cross ceased.” – (Galatians 5:11)
“For many
walk, of whom I told you before, and now tell you, even weaping, that they are the enemies of the cross of Christ, whose end
is destruction.” - (Philippians 3:18-19)
What does
Paul say of their doctrine?
“I marvel that you are so soon removed from Him who called you into
another gospel: Which is not another; but there be some who trouble you,
and would pervert the gospel of Christ. But though we, or an angel from heaven,
preach another gospel unto you than that we have preacbed unto you, let him
be accursed … I would they were cut off who trouble you”
(4) – [i. e. excluded from the church of which they were
members, which it was not in Paul’s power to accomplish, and, I suppose,
not in the power of the pastor at Jerusalem; but he could advise it]. Galatians 1:6-8;
Galatians 5:12)
(4)Paul’s wish
that the false teachers of his day “were cut off” – excluded
- should satisfy those brethren who call for proof that these false teachers,
false apostles, and false brethren were church members. If church members,
then Baptists, since all the apostolic churches were Baptist churches.
“Behold, I Paul, say unto you, that if ye be circumcised Christ
shall profit you nothing … Christ is become of none effect
unto you … Ye did run well; who did hinder, that ye should
not obey the truth? This persuasion cometh not of him who calleth you. A
little leaven leaveneth the whole lump.”
How did Paul
instruct the churches to treat these Judaizing brethren?
“Beware of dogs, beware of evil-workers, beware of the concision.”
- (Philippians 3:2)
“Now, I entreat you, brethren, to watch those who are making factions
and laying snares contrary to the teachings which you have learned, and turn
away from them; for such like ones as they are not in subjection to our Anointed
Lord, but to their own appetites; and by kind and complimentary words they
deceive the hearts of the unsuspecting.” - (Romans 16:17)
To the Thessalonians
he wrote this;
“Now, we charge you, brethren, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ,
to withdraw from every brother who walks disorderly, and not according to
the instructions which you received from us. ... . But if
any one obey not our word by this letter, point him out, and do not associate
with him, so that he may be put to shame.”
These brethren,
whom Paul called “false brethren,” “false apostles,”
“false teachers,” “dogs,” “ministers
of Satan,” and the multitudes of brethren, in many of the churches, corrupted
by their teaching, with the many thousands in the church at Jerusalem, were
all members of sister churches in good standing - i. e., in
their own churches. The question I ask is, “Could the church at Corinth,
or any other, give the usual intercommunion invitation to all members of sister
churches, in good standing in their churches, to come and eat, without openly
violating the above instructions of Paul?” I have no further argument with
any one who will say that it could.
But such
like characters, leavened with the ungodliness Paul specifies (in 1 Corinthians 5, and Galatians 5), abound in
all our churches, and our general invitations are therefore unscriptural,
and most inconsistent; and, since they are in violation of the apostle’s injunctions,
and vitiate the ordinance of the Supper, they are of evil tendency.
I will take
it for granted that all Christians will admit that such characters ought
not to paricipate in the Supper. But the question arises, How are all such
to be debarred the Supper, and the orderly of other churches admitted? Certainly
not by “considering” (?) them all members for the time being, for these are
leaven, and must be rejected as members; and no church has the right to receive
applicants without a rigid examination both as to their faith and practice,
for those received must be “unleavened,” and no one can be received to membership
without the unanimous consent of a church expressed in some way. This is universal
Baptist practice, and founded on correct principles. To ascertain who, of
a company of brethren present, are leaven as to faith or practice, it is
evident that an examination before the church must be had, that all the members
may be able to judge
of their soundness, so as to receive the fellowship of all the church. But
we have seen that no church has the authority to “judge” others, save its
own members. It is quite as evident that no church would allow a sister church
to sit in judgment upon her members, and decide by public vote which ones
ought to be excluded from the Lord’s Supper and the Church, and which ones
retained, for those unfit for the Supper are unfit for the Church. Everyone
can see, that to invite the members of all sister churches, would have been
to invite all the above characters to the Supper; but to have singled out
these characters, and rejected them, would have been passing a sentence of
judgment, by the church, upon members of those without its
jurisdiction, which is strictly forbidden. Now it seems that every candid
Baptist, who wants no shadow of practice not warranted from the Word of God,
must perceive that, by observing the Supper as a church ordinance, as it
was delivered, all the above difficulties are solved, and all the Scriptures
harmonized, and the admitted symbolism of the Supper preserved. I therefore
claim, with the utmost confidence, that I have established it as a fact-
That both
the teachings of the apostles, and the practice of the apostolic churches,
were opposed to the practice of intercommunion.
THE PRACTICE
OF THE EARLIEST AGES.
Touching the
practice of the churches in the earliest centuries, I will only add the statement
of so careful a scholar as Professor Curtis:
THE LORD’S
SUPPER
“The records
of church history plainly show that originally the Lord’s Supper was every-where
regarded as a church ordinance [observed by the members of one church only];
for, after centuries of gradual corruption had altered the forms of church
government in many other respects, and many separate congregations were united
under the care of one bishop, and were considered as only one church, there
was ever one, and but one, altar to each bishoprick, at which alone the elements
of the eucharist were consecrated. To set up another altar, or communion
table, was considered a violation of unity, or a declaration of church independence.
Each bishoprick had the absolute power of receiving to, or excommunicating
from, the Lord’s table. The whole of this shows how contrary to all the centralizing
tendencies, and amid many corruptions on all sides, this truth remained,
embalmed and preserved, that –
“THE LORD’S SUPPER WAS A CHURCH ORDINANCE”