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The Lord's Table
and Who Should Be At It
C. H. Mackintosh
As to the matter of reception at the Lord's table, we must
remember there are two sides to the question, the Divine and the
human. As to the Divine side, there is a place at the table for
every member of the body of Christ. But as to the human side,
we have to bear in mind that we are not in Acts 2, but in 2
Timothy. In Acts 2 the Lord added to the Assembly such as
should be saved. All was clear and unmistakable. But, in 2
Timothy, we have the great house, vessels to dishonor, false
professors, all sorts of errors, evils, and difficulties.
Hence, if we would be "meet for the master's use", we must purge
ourselves from dishonorable vessels; "flee youthful desires",
"turn away from false professors. All this demands constant
exercise of heart and conscience and the greatest vigilance and
care as to the reception at the Lord's table.
I have, of late, been much interested in the study of 1
Corinthians 11. There were schisms in the assembly at Corinth,
and the Apostle says, "There must needs be heresies that they
which are approved may be made manifest" (verse 19). He does
not say, "That they which are Christians may be made manifest".
I believe the "approved" ones were in contrast with the
"heretics", or self-willed ones. The meaning of the word
"heresy" is self-will, which is the root of schism. Hence he
says, "Let a man approve himself, and so let him eat". It is
not "examine" but "approve" — the same word as in verse 19. He
does not say, "Let a man be a Christian and so let him eat".
When "heresy" or self-will is working, and "schisms" are
apparent as the result, we have to "approve" ourselves, as
regards our moral and spiritual conditions, and so take our
place at the table of the Lord, where the most prominent is, not
our rights and privileges or those of others, but the claims of
Christ, as Head of the body.
I can never, by the grace of God, accept any ground of
fellowship, save the glorious truth set forth in Ephesians 4,
"There is one body". The Lord's table is not a place for paying
compliments to people, or for the display of our great
liberality, breadth of mind, or catholicity of spirit. No; it
is a place where the claims of Christ are to be maintained;
where truth, holiness and practical righteousness are to be the
grand characteristics.1
1 Corinthians 9 demands our most careful consideration,
especially what it teaches on the subject of "heresy". The
usual idea attached to the word is false doctrine. In church
history, a heretic is one who teaches something contrary to the
orthodox faith. But the real meaning of the word "heresy" is
self-will; and wherever it works, its direct tendency is to
produce a sect or a schism in the Assembly. It may be as to a
matter of doctrine or a matter of practice; but whatever it is,
self-will is divisive in its effect. Man has no right to
exercise his will in the Assembly of God; if he does he is a
heretic, and the fruit of his work will be a schism in the
Assembly.
Now, we must remember that the epistle to the Corinthians was
addressed not merely to a local assembly, but to "all that in
every place call on the name of the Lord Jesus Christ". Hence
it applies to us, and therefore we are called to consider this
weighty question of self-will, and to see how far we are seeking
to "approve" ourselves in the midst of the sects and schisms of
Christendom.
1 The Table is not ours but the Lord's. This is a weighty fact
demanding our serious consideration. It is His prerogative, not
ours, to set forth the characteristics of those who are to sit
down at His Table.
Extract from a Letter, by C. H. Mackintosh.
The Lord's Table
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