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VIEW FROM THE TOWER - THE PASSOVER SUPPER
As per previous appointment, the
Lord's Supper was celebrated on its
anniversary on the evening of March 29.
From letters and cards received before
and since, we judge that the event was
very generally celebrated by the deeply-interested
of our readers in every
quarter, and doubtless by many from
whom we have not heard as yet. In
some places there were about a dozen,
in others two or three, and sometimes
one commemorated alone. To all of
these, so far as we have learned, it was
as with us at Allegheny City, a very
precious season.
Here about one hundred met in our
usual "upper room" and celebrated and
commemorated our ransom, partaking
of the emblems of our Redeemer's
broken body and shed blood. Eight
brethren and sisters from New York,
West Virginia and various parts of
Pennsylvania were present with us, and
preceding the celebration, we had a
pleasant social meeting, in which our
hearts were refreshed by remembrances
of our Father's goodness and care and
love. Among other things, it was noted
that one of the evidences of our relationship
to God, our sonship, was, that he
was more and more revealing to us his
plans. In this connection, and as a proof
of it, the words of Jesus came to mind:
"I have not called you servants but
friends, for the servant knoweth not
what his lord doeth: but I have called
you friends for all things that I have
heard of my Father, I have made known
unto you. John 15:15.
When the hour of 8:30 o'clock arrived,
which we judged would most
closely correspond with the time at
which the Supper was instituted by our
Lord, we partook of the emblems: first
briefly examining their significance. For
the benefit of all we briefly review what
we there saw.
We remembered the Master's words
concerning the bread: This is my body
[representatively] which is broken for
you. This is the bread which came
down from heaven, of which a man may
eat and not die. Except ye eat the flesh
and drink the blood of the Son of Man,
ye have no life in you. Looking from
the symbolic bread to the body of Jesus,
we realized that it was indeed the true
bread. It came down from heaven in
the sense that his being originated not
on earth, but in heaven; in the sense
that his being was not begotten of the
will of the flesh, but that his was a transferred
existence. That he who was rich
became poor--became of a lower nature
--was made flesh, for the special purpose
of suffering death on our behalf,
that we through his poverty [he gave
"all that he had," even life] might be
made rich; that we might have restored
to us all those blessings which Adam,
our representative once possessed and
lost for himself and us.
We considered afresh why it was
needful for him to be broken--to be
slain for us. We saw that it was because
we had no life in us. Death was working
in and devouring the whole race. All
being of the same condemned race, none
could secure his own life, nor was there
one who could by any means redeem
his brother, or give to God a ransom for
him--all were condemned and dying.
But man's extremity was God's opportunity:
he provided the one who, because
of the same kind or nature, could
give a ransom [corresponding price],
and who, because not of the condemned
Adamic stock [but from heaven], was
an acceptable Redeemer. We saw that
whereas the race, because of Adam's
sin, was cut off from, separated from the
trees of life in Eden, and hence could
not live, yet now they had presented to
them through Jesus a bread of life, a
gift from heaven, the acceptance of
which would restore the life and blessings
lost.
We saw that though Jesus was this
bread of life, it was needful that he
should be broken, sacrificed--die for us,
before any of our condemned race could
partake of his merits. He being a perfect
man, gave himself a corresponding
price to cancel the curse of death upon
all through the sin of the first representative.
Now, all that remains is for each
one blighted through Adam to come and
partake [eat] of those perfections and
rights which Jesus secured for us by his
sacrifice on our behalf. We eat or appropriate
Christ's perfections by faith,
i.e., by faith we realize that Jesus was
our ransom, and by faith we appropriate
to ourselves those merits which, as a
perfect man, he possessed, and which he
broke or sacrificed for us.
Here we saw the beauty of God's arrangement
that though the sacrifice was
sufficient for all, none could receive life
through it except by accepting and acknowledging
the sacrificed one as the
Life-giver. Thus seen, not only is an
acknowledgment of the ransom an
essential to life now, but in the next age
also, it will be necessary. Forever it
will be true--"Except ye eat of the
flesh...ye have no life in you." That
the ransom given is the foundation of all
blessing must ever be recognized. "No
man cometh unto the Father"--no man
has "oneness" with him, except by the
broken body and shed blood of the
Lamb of God which taketh away the
sin of the world. Who "put away sin
by the sacrifice of himself."
We looked also at the blood shed for
many for the remission OF SINS--not
for ours [the Church's] only, but also
for the sins of the whole world, and we
saw in the wine its symbol: "This is
my blood of the new covenant, which is
shed for many for the remission of sins."
Matt. 26:28. We glanced at the three
great covenants [see "FOOD," page 148]:
we saw how the Law covenant under
Moses had failed to prove a real blessing
and to give life to the dying race,
but how the New Covenant would be
superior and would accomplish the
blessing [restitution] of all the families of
the earth, by reason of the Ransom.
Thus we saw that his blood--his sacrificed
life or human existence--was the
ransom which redeemed all, and made
their restitution possible, was most emphatically
the Blood of the Covenant--
the sealing, the ratifying, which makes
the New Covenant operative. We rejoiced
in the blood so freely shed which
gave us access to the Father, and resolved
that we should never be of those
who lightly esteem the blood and count
"the blood of the covenant" a common
(ordinary) thing, and do despite to the
spirit of God's favor manifest in that
precious sacrifice. (See Heb. 10:16-21 and 26:31.)
Having seen this, in the bread and
wine as representative of Jesus, we looked
further and saw through the Apostle's
words (1 Cor. 10:16,17) still another
significance in the ordinance. He says:
"The cup of blessing which we bless, is
it not the communion [sharing] of the
blood of Christ? The bread which we
break, is it not the communion [or
sharing in the breaking or sacrifice] of
the body of Christ"? His suggestion is:
As the Lord blessed and broke and
passed the emblems, and thus represented
his sacrifice, do not we, while
recognizing that, also represent the same
thing? namely, that we as members of
the body of Christ are consecrated and
being broken in sacrifice with our head?
"For we being many are ONE LOAF and
ONE BODY; for we are all partakers of
that one loaf."
Regarded thus in its fullness, the eating
of the emblems had a two-fold significance
--representing to us Jesus' sacrifice
which redeemed us, and our sacrifice
with him. We saw that it was by
reason of our now sharing with Jesus
in the sealing of the New Covenant,
[R741 : page 1] that we shall in due time be permitted
to share with him in bringing upon the
world all the blessed provisions of that
New Covenant in the "Times of Restitution
of all things." The revival of
memory on this subject seemed to
strengthen in us all, the resolution to
"fill up that which is behind of the
afflictions of Christ," that when his glory
shall be revealed we may be glad also
with exceeding joy. We remembered
the two Apostles whose request was to
sit in the throne with Jesus, and we recalled
Jesus' words in reply: "Are ye
able to drink of the cup?" We realized
our own weakness and the many besetments
and allurements of the flesh, the
world and the devil, which would conspire
to keep us back from sharing the
cup of suffering and death symbolized
before us in the wine, yet realizing that
we could do all things through the
strength of our Head we said, Yea,
Lord, we will drink it, "we are able" in
thy strength; and then we heard from
His Word the Lord's answer to each of
us, "Ye shall indeed drink of the cup"
"My strength is made perfect in weakness."
"Whatsoever ye shall ask in my
name I will do it."
When we had partaken of the emblems,
we sang a hymn, and went to our
homes meditating meanwhile upon the
scenes of eighteen hundred and fifty-two
years ago: The garden, the betrayal,
Herod's soldiers, the crown of
thorns, the scarlet kingly robe, Pilate's
endeavor to secure his release from the
chief priests and great religionists of his
day, how they hated him without a
cause, because he exposed their false
theories and hypocrisies; we saw and
remembered him on the cross saying,
"It is finished," and dying. The eye of
faith grasped the situation, and our
hearts, while full of grateful love, cried
in faith, "It is finished," we are redeemed,
our ransom price has been
paid. We have life, we feed upon him,
we apply and appropriate to ourselves
the life and rights which he surrendered
on our behalf. Thank God, "The Lord
hath laid upon him the iniquity of us
[R741 : page 2] all; he bore [the penalty of] our sins in
his own body on the tree. By his stripes
has healing come to us. (Isa. 53:5.) We
sang in conclusion our thanks to him as
our Saviour as well as Lord:
"All hail the power of Jesus' name;
Let angels prostrate fall:
Bring forth the royal diadem,
And crown Him Lord of all."
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