After these words the Evangelist adds,
“And this He said to prove him, for He Himself
knew what He would do.” Thus, you see,
our Lord had secret meanings when He spoke, and did
not bring forth openly all His divine sense at once.
He knew what He was about to do from the first, but
He wished to lead forward His disciples, and to arrest
and open their minds, before He instructed them:
for all cannot receive His words, and on the blind
and deaf the most sacred truths fall without profit.
And thus, throughout the course of
His gracious dispensations from the beginning, it
may be said that the Author and Finisher of our faith
has hid things from us in mercy, and listened to our
questionings, while He Himself knew what He was about
to do. He has hid, in order afterwards to reveal,
that then, on looking back on what He said and did
before, we may see in it what at the time we did not
see, and thereby see it to more profit. Thus
He hid Himself from the disciples as He walked with
them to Emmaus; thus Joseph, too, under different and
yet similar circumstances, hid himself from his brethren.
With this thought in our minds, surely
we seem to see a new and further meaning still, in
the narrative before us. Christ spoke of buying
bread, when He intended to create or make bread; but
did He not, in that bread which He made, intend further
that Heavenly bread which is the salvation of our
souls? for He goes on to say, “Labour
not for the meat” or food “which perisheth,
but for that food which endureth unto everlasting
life, which the Son of man shall give unto you.”
Yes, surely the wilderness is the world, and the
Apostles are His priests, and the multitudes are His
people; and that feast, so suddenly, so unexpectedly
provided, is the Holy Communion. He alone is
the same. He the provider of the loaves then,
of the heavenly manna now. All other things
change, but He remaineth.
And what is that Heavenly Feast which
we now are vouchsafed, but in its own turn the earnest
and pledge of that future feast in His Father’s
kingdom, when “the marriage of the Lamb shall
come, and His wife hath made herself ready,”
and “holy Jerusalem cometh down from God out
of heaven,” and “blessed shall they be
who shall eat bread in the kingdom of God”?
And further, since to that Feast above
we do lift up our eyes, though it will not come till
the end; and as we do not make remembrance of it once
only, but continually, in the sacred rite which foreshadows
it; therefore, in like manner, not in the miracle
of the loaves only, though in that especially, but
in all parts of Scripture, in history, and in precept,
and in promise, and in prophecy, is it given us to
see the Gospel Feast typified and prefigured, and
that immortal and never-failing Supper in the visible
presence of the Lamb which will follow upon it at
the end. And if they are blessed who shall eat
and drink of that table in the kingdom, so too blessed
are they who meditate upon it, and hope for it now, who
read Scripture with it in their thoughts, and endeavour
to look beneath the veil of the literal text, and
to catch a sight of the gleams of heavenly light which
are behind it. “Blessed are your eyes,
for they see; and your ears, for they hear; for verily
I say unto you, that many prophets and righteous men
have desired to see those things which ye see, but
have not seen them; and to hear those things which
ye hear, and have not heard them.” “Blessed
are they which have not seen, and yet have believed.”
Blessed they who see in and by believing, and who
have, because they doubt not. Let us, then, at
this time of year, as is fitting, follow the train
of thought thus opened upon us, and, looking back into
the Sacred Volume, trace the intimations and promises
there given of that sacred and blessed Feast of Christ’s
Body and Blood which it is our privilege now to enjoy
till the end come.
Now the Old Testament, as we know,
is full of figures and types of the Gospel; types
various, and, in their literal wording, contrary to
each other, but all meeting and harmoniously fulfilled
in Christ and His Church. Thus the histories
of the Israelites in the wilderness, and of the Israelites
when settled in Canaan, alike are ours, representing
our present state as Christians. Our Christian
life is a state of faith and trial; it is also a state
of enjoyment. It has the richness of the promised
land; it has the marvellousness of the desert.
It is a “good land, a land of brooks of water,
of fountains and depths that spring out of vallies
and hills; a land of wheat and barley, and vines, and
fig-trees, and pomegranates; a land of oil, olive,
and honey; a land wherein thou shalt eat bread without
scarceness; thou shalt not lack any thing in it; a
land whose stones are iron, and out of whose hills
thou mayest dig brass.” And, on the other
hand, it is still a land which to the natural man
seems a wilderness, a “great and terrible wilderness,
wherein are fiery serpents, and scorpions, and drought,
where there is no water;” where faith is still
necessary, and where, still more forcibly than in
the case of Israel, the maxim holds, that “man
doth not live by bread only, but by every word that
proceedeth out of the mouth of the Lord doth man live.”
This is the state in which we are, a
state of faith and of possession. In the desert
the Israelites lived by the signs of things, without
the realities: manna was to stand for the corn,
oil, and honey, of the good land promised; water,
for the wine and milk. It was a time for faith
to exercise itself; and when they came into the promised
land, then was the time of possession. That
was the land of milk and honey; they needed not any
divinely provided compensations or expedients.
Manna was not needed, nor the pillar of the cloud,
nor the water from the rock. But we Christians,
on the contrary, are at once in the wilderness and
in the promised land. In the wilderness, because
we live amid wonders; in the promised land, because
we are in a state of enjoyment. That we are
in the state of enjoyment is surely certain, unless
all the prophecies have failed; and that we are in
a state in which faith alone has that enjoyment, is
plain from the fact that God’s great blessings
are not seen, and in that the Apostle says, “We
walk by faith, not by sight.” In a word,
we are in a super-natural state, a word
which implies both its greatness and its secretness:
for what is above nature, is at once not seen, and
is more precious than what is seen; “the things
which are seen are temporal, the things which are not
seen are eternal.”
And if our state altogether is parallel
to that of the Israelites, as an antitype to its type,
it is natural to think that so great a gift as Holy
Communion would not be without its appropriate figures
and symbols in the Old Testament. All that our
Saviour has done is again and again shadowed out in
the Old Testament; and this, therefore, it is natural
to think, as well as other things: His miraculous
birth, His life, His teaching, His death, His priesthood,
His sacrifice, His resurrection, His glorification,
His kingdom, are again and again prefigured: it
is not reasonable to suppose that if this so great
gift is really given us, it should be omitted.
He who died for us, is He who feeds us; and as His
death is mentioned, so we may beforehand expect will
be mentioned the feast He gives us. Not openly
indeed, for neither is His death nor His priesthood
taught openly, but covertly, under the types of David
or Aaron, or other favoured servants of God; and in
like manner we might expect, and we shall find, the
like reverent allusions to His most gracious Feast, allusions
which we should not know to be allusions but
for the event; just as we should not know that Solomon,
Aaron, or Samuel, stood for Christ at all, except that
the event explains the figure. When Abraham
said to Isaac, “God will provide Himself a lamb
for a burnt offering,” who can doubt this is
a prophecy concerning Christ? yet we are
nowhere told it in Scripture. The case is the
same as regards the Sacrament of Baptism. Now
that it is given, we cannot doubt that the purifications
of the Jews, Naaman’s bathing, and the prophecy
of a fountain being opened for sin and all uncleanness,
have reference to it, as being the visible fulfilment
of the great spiritual cleansing: and St. Peter
expressly affirms this of the Deluge, and St. Paul
of the passage of the Red Sea. And in like manner
passages in the Bible, which speak prophetically of
the Gospel Feast, cannot but refer (if I may so speak)
to the Holy Sacrament of the Lord’s Supper,
as being, in fact, the Feast given us under the Gospel.
And let it be observed, directly we
know that we have this great gift, and that the Old
Testament history prefigures it, we have a light thrown
upon what otherwise is a difficulty; for, it may be
asked with some speciousness, whether the Jews were
not in a higher state of privilege than we Christians,
until we take this gift into account. It may
be objected that our blessings are all future or distant, the
hope of eternal life, which is to be fulfilled hereafter,
God’s forgiveness, who is in heaven: what
do we gain now and here above the Jews? God
loved the Jews, and He gave them something;
He gave them present gifts; the Old Testament is full
of the description of them; He gave them “the
precious things of heaven, and the dew, and the deep
that coucheth beneath, and precious things brought
forth by the sun, and by the moon, and the chief things
of the ancient mountains, and the precious things
of the lasting hills, and the precious things of the
earth, and the fulness thereof,” “honey
out of the rock, and oil out of the flinty rock, butter
of kine, and milk of sheep, with fat of lambs, and
rams of the breed of Bashan, and goats, with the fat
of kidneys of wheat, and the pure blood of the grape.”
These were present real blessings. What has
He given us? nothing in possession?
all in promise? This, I say, is in itself
not likely, it is not likely that He should so reverse
His system, and make the Gospel inferior to the Law.
But the knowledge of the great gift under consideration
clears up this perplexity; for every passage in the
Old Testament which speaks of the temporal blessings
given by God to His ancient people, instead of conveying
to us a painful sense of destitution, and exciting
our jealousy, reminds us of our greater blessedness;
for every passage which belongs to them is fulfilled
now in a higher sense to us. We have no need
to envy them. God did not take away their blessings,
without giving us greater. The Law was not so
much taken away, as the Gospel given. The Gospel
supplanted the Law. The Law went out by the
Gospel’s coming in. Only our blessings
are not seen; therefore they are higher, because
they are unseen. Higher blessings could not be
visible. How could spiritual blessings be visible
ones? If Christ now feeds us, not with milk
and honey, but “with the spiritual food of His
most precious Body and Blood;” if “our
sinful bodies are made clean by His Body, and our
souls washed through His most precious Blood,”
truly we are not without our precious things, any
more than Israel was: but they are unseen, because
so much greater, so spiritual; they are given only
under the veil of what is seen: and thus we Christians
are both with the Church in the wilderness as regards
faith, and in the Church in Canaan as regards enjoyment;
having the fulfilment of the words spoken by Moses,
repeated by our Lord, to which I just now referred,
“Man shall not live by bread only, but by every
word which proceedeth out of the mouth of God.”
Now, then, I will refer to some passages
of both the Old Testament and the New, which both
illustrate and are illustrated by this great doctrine
of the Gospel.
1. And, first, let it be observed,
from the beginning, the greatest rite of religion
has been a feast; the partaking of God’s bounties,
in the way of nature, has been consecrated to a more
immediate communion with God Himself. For instance,
when Isaac was weaned, Abraham “made a great
feast,” and then it was that Sarah prophesied;
“Cast out this bondwoman and her son,”
she said, prophesying the introduction of the spirit,
grace, and truth, which the Gospel contains, instead
of the bondage of the outward forms of the Law.
Again, it was at a feast of savoury meat that the
spirit of prophecy came upon Isaac, and he blessed
Jacob. In like manner the first beginning of
our Lord’s miracles was at a marriage feast,
when He changed water into wine; and when St. Matthew
was converted he entertained our Lord at a feast.
At a feast, too, our Lord allowed the penitent woman
to wash with tears and anoint His feet, and pronounced
her forgiveness; and at a feast, before His passion,
He allowed Mary to anoint them with costly ointment,
and to wipe them with her hair. Thus with our
Lord, and with the Patriarchs, a feast was a time
of grace; so much so, that He was said by the Pharisees
to come eating and drinking, to be “a winebibber
and gluttonous, a friend of publicans and sinners.”
2. And next, in order to make
this feasting still more solemn, it had been usual
at all times to precede it by a direct act of religion, by
a prayer, or blessing, or sacrifice, or by the presence
of a priest, which implied it. Thus, when Melchizedek
came out to meet Abraham, and bless him, “he
brought forth bread and wine,” to which it
is added, “and he was the priest of the Most
High God.” Such, too, was the lamb of
the Passover, which was eaten roast with fire, and
with unleavened bread, and bitter herbs, with girded
loins and shoes on, and staff in hand; as the Lord’s
Passover, being a solemn religious feast, even if
not a sacrifice. And such seems to have been
the common notion of communion with God all the world
over, however it was gained; viz. that we arrived
at the possession of His invisible gifts by participation
in His visible, that there was some mysterious connexion
between the seen and the unseen; and that, by setting
aside the choicest of His earthly bounties, as a specimen
and representative of the whole, presenting it to
Him for His blessing, and then taking, eating, and
appropriating it, we had the best hope of gaining those
unknown and indefinite gifts which human nature needs.
This the heathen practised towards their idols also;
and St. Paul seems to acknowledge that in that way
they did communicate, though most miserably and fearfully,
with those idols, and with the evil spirits which
they represented. “The things which the
Gentiles sacrifice, they sacrifice to devils, and
not to God; and I would not that ye should hold communion
with devils.” Here, as before, a feast
is spoken of as the means of communicating with the
unseen world, though, when the feast was idolatrous,
it was the fellowship of evil spirits.
3. And next let this be observed,
that the descriptions in the Old Testament of the
perfect state of religious privilege, viz. that
under the Gospel which was then to come, are continually
made under the image of a feast, a feast of some special
and choice goods of this world, corn, wine, and the
like; goods of this world chosen from the mass as a
specimen of all, as types and means of seeking, and
means of obtaining, the unknown spiritual blessings,
which “eye hath not seen nor ear heard.”
And these special goods of nature, so set apart, are
more frequently than any thing else, corn or bread,
and wine, as the figures of what was greater, though
others are mentioned also. Now the first of
these of which we read is the fruit of the tree of
life, the leaves of which are also mentioned in the
prophets. The tree of life was that tree in
the garden of Eden, the eating of which would have
made Adam immortal; a divine gift lay hid in an outward
form. The prophet Ezekiel speaks of it afterwards
in the following words, showing that a similar blessing
was in store for the redeemed; “By
the river, upon the bank thereof, on this side, and
on that side, shall grow all trees for meat, whose
leaf shall not fade, neither shall the fruit thereof
be consumed. It shall bring forth new fruits
according to his months, because their waters they
issued out of the sanctuary; and the fruit thereof
shall be for meat, and the leaf thereof for medicine.”
Like to which is St. John’s account of the
tree of life, “which bare twelve manner of fruits,
and yielded her fruit every month; and the leaves of
the tree were for the healing of the nations.”
And hence we read in the Canticles of the apple-tree,
and of sitting down under its shadow, and its fruit
being sweet to the taste. Here then in type is
signified the sacred gift of which I am speaking;
and yet it has not seemed good to the gracious Giver
literally to select fruit or leaves as the means of
His invisible blessings. He might have spiritually
fed us with such, had He pleased for man
liveth not by bread only, but by the word of His mouth.
His Word might have made the fruit of the tree His
Sacrament, but He has willed otherwise.
The next selection of gifts of the
earth which we find in Scripture, is the very one
which He at length fixed on, bread and wine, as in
the history of Melchizedek; and there the record stands
as a prophecy of what was to be: for who is Melchizedek
but our Lord and Saviour, and what is the Bread and
Wine but the very feast which He has ordained?
Next the great gift was shadowed out
in the description of the promised land, which was
said to flow with milk and honey, and in all those
other precious things of nature which I have already
recounted as belonging to the promised land, oil,
butter, corn, wine, and the like. These all may
be considered to refer to the Gospel feast typically,
because they were the rarest and most exquisite of
the blessings given to the Jews, as the Gospel Feast
is the most choice and most sacred of all the blessings
given to us Christians; and what is most precious
under the one Dispensation is signified by what is
most precious under the other.
Now let us proceed to the Prophets,
and we shall find the like anticipation of the Gospel
Feast.
For instance, you recollect, the prophet
Hosea says: “It shall come to pass in that
day, I will hear, saith the Lord, I will hear the heavens,
and they shall hear the earth, and the earth shall
hear the corn, and the wine, and the oil, and they
shall hear Jezreel. And I will sow her unto
Me in the earth.” By Jezreel is meant
the Christian Church; and the Prophet declares in
God’s name, that the time was to come when the
Church would call upon the corn, wine, and oil, and
they would call on the earth, and the earth on the
heavens, and the heavens on God; and God should answer
the heavens, and the heavens should answer the earth,
and the earth should answer the corn, wine, and oil,
and they should answer to the wants of the Church.
Now, doubtless, this may be fulfilled only in a general
way; but considering Almighty God has appointed corn
or bread, and wine, to be the special instruments of
His ineffable grace, He, who sees the end
from the beginning, and who views all things in all
their relations at once, He, when He spoke
of corn and wine, knew that the word would be fulfilled,
not generally only, but even literally in the Gospel.
Again: the prophet Joel says,
“It shall come to pass in that day that the
mountains shall drop down new wine, and the hills shall
flow with milk, and all the rivers of Judah shall
flow with waters, and a fountain shall come forth
of the house of the Lord, and shall water the valley
of Shittim.” How strikingly is this
fulfilled, if we take it to apply to what God has
given us in the Gospel, in the feast of the Holy Communion!
Again: the prophet Amos says:
“Behold, the days come, saith the Lord, when
the plowman shall overtake the reaper, and the treader
of grapes him that soweth seed; and the mountains
shall drop sweet wine, and all the hills shall melt;”
that is, with God’s marvellous grace, whereby
He gives us gifts new and wonderful.
And the prophet Isaiah: “In
this mountain shall the Lord of Hosts make unto all
people a feast of fat things, a feast of wines on the
lees; of fat things full of marrow, of wines on the
lees well refined.” And again: “Surely
I will no more give thy corn to be meat for thine
enemies, and the sons of the stranger shall not drink
thy wine, for the which thou hast laboured; but they
that have gathered it shall eat it, and praise the
Lord, and they that have brought it together shall
drink it in the courts of My holiness.”
And again: “Behold My servants shall eat,
but ye shall be hungry; behold My servants shall drink,
but ye shall be thirsty.”
Again: the prophet Jeremiah says:
“They shall come and sing in the height of Zion,
and shall flow together to the goodness of the Lord,
for wheat, and for wine, and for oil, and for the young
of the flock and of the herd; and their soul shall
be as a watered garden, and they shall not sorrow
any more at all. . . And I will satiate the soul
of the priests with fatness, and My people shall be
satisfied with My goodness, saith the Lord.”
And the prophet Zechariah: “How
great is His goodness, and how great is His beauty!
corn shall make the young men cheerful, and new wine
the maids.”
And under a different image, but with
the same general sense, the prophet Malachi:
“From the rising of the sun even unto the going
down of the same, My Name shall be great among the
Gentiles; and in every place incense shall be offered
unto My Name, and a pure offering, for My Name shall
be great among the heathen, saith the Lord of Hosts.”
Further, if the Psalms are intended
for Christian worship, as surely they are, the Prophetic
Spirit, who inspired them, saw that they too would
in various places describe that sacred Christian feast,
which we feel they do describe; and surely we may
rightly call this coincidence between the ordinance
in the Christian Church and the form of words in the
Psalms, a mark of design. For instance:
“Thou shalt prepare a Table before me against
them that trouble me. Thou hast anointed my
head with oil, and my Cup shall be full.”
“I will wash my hands in innocency, O Lord,
and so will I go to Thine Altar.” “O
send out Thy light and Thy truth, that they may lead
me, and bring me unto Thy holy hill, and to Thy dwelling;
and that I may go unto the Altar of God, even unto
the God of my joy and gladness.” “The
children of men shall put their trust under the shadow
of Thy wings. They shall be satisfied with the
plenteousness of Thy house, and Thou shalt give them
drink of Thy pleasures as out of the river.
For with Thee is the well of life, and in Thy light
shall we see light.” “Blessed is
the man whom Thou choosest and receivest unto Thee;
he shall dwell in Thy court, and shall be satisfied
with the pleasures of Thy house, even of Thy Holy
Temple.” “My soul shall be satisfied,
even as it were with marrow and fatness, when my mouth
praiseth Thee with joyful lips . . . because Thou
hast been my helper, therefore under the shadow of
Thy wings will I rejoice.”
The same wonderful feast is put before
us in the book of Proverbs, where Wisdom stands for
Christ. “Wisdom hath builded her house,”
that is, Christ has built His Church, “she hath
hewn out her seven pillars, she hath killed her beasts,
she hath mingled her wine (that is, Christ has prepared
His Supper), she hath also furnished her table (that
is, the Lord’s Table), she hath sent forth her
maidens (that is, the priests of the Lord), she crieth
upon the highest places of the city. Whoso is
simple, let him turn in hither; as for him that wanteth
understanding, she saith to him. Come, eat of
My Bread and drink of the Wine which I have mingled,” which
is like saying, “Come unto Me all ye that labour
and are heavy laden and I will refresh you.”
Like which are the prophet Isaiah’s words; “Ho,
every one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters, and
he that hath no money, come ye buy and eat, yea, come,
buy wine and milk without money and without price.”
And such too is the description in the book of Canticles:
“The fig tree putteth forth her green figs, and
the vines with the tender grapes give a good smell”
. . . . “Until the day break and the shadows
flee away, I will get me to the mountain of myrrh,
and to the hill of frankincense” . . .
“I have gathered My myrrh with My spice, I
have eaten My honeycomb with My honey, I have drunk
My wine with My milk; eat, O friends, drink, yea drink
abundantly, O beloved!” In connexion with
such passages as these should be observed St. Paul’s
words, which seem from the antithesis to be an allusion
to the same most sacred Ordinance: “Be
not drunk with wine, wherein is excess, but be filled
with the Spirit,” with that new wine which God
the Holy Spirit ministers in the Supper of the Great
King.
God grant that we may be able ever
to come to this Blessed Sacrament with feelings suitable
to the passages which I have read concerning it!
May we not regard it in a cold, heartless way, and
keep at a distance from fear, when we should rejoice!
May the spirit of the unprofitable servant never
be ours, who looked at his lord as a hard master instead
of a gracious benefactor! May we not be in the
number of those who go on year after year, and never
approach Him at all! May we not be of those
who went, one to his farm, another to his merchandise,
when they were called to the wedding! Nor let
us be of those, who come in a formal, mechanical way,
as a mere matter of obligation, without reverence,
without awe, without wonder, without love. Nor
let us fall into the sin of those who complained that
they have nothing to gather but the manna, wearying
of God’s gifts.
But let us come in faith and hope,
and let us say to ourselves, May this be the beginning
to us of everlasting bliss! May these be the
first-fruits of that banquet which is to last for ever
and ever; ever new, ever transporting, inexhaustible,
in the city of our God!