The Desire of Ages
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 72: "In Remembrance of Me"
This chapter is based on Matt. 26:20-29;
Mark 14:17-25; Luke 22:14-23; John 13:18-30.
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As Jesus ate the Passover with His disciples, He instituted in its place
the service that was to be the memorial of His great sacrifice.
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Pacific Press Publ. Assoc. |
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"The Lord Jesus the same night in which He was betrayed
took bread: and when He had given thanks, He brake it, and said, Take, eat:
this is My body, which is broken for you: this do in remembrance of Me. After
the same manner also He took the cup, when He had supped, saying, This cup is
the new testament in My blood: this do ye, as oft as ye drink it, in
remembrance of Me. For as often as ye eat this bread, and drink this cup, ye do
show the Lord's death till He come." 1 Corinthians 11:23-26. {DA 652.1}
Christ was standing at the point of transition between two
economies and their two great festivals. He, the spotless Lamb of God, was
about to present Himself as a sin offering, that He would thus bring to an end
the system of types and ceremonies that for four thousand years had pointed to
His death. As He ate the Passover with His disciples, He instituted in its
place the service that was to be the memorial of His great sacrifice. The
national festival of the Jews was to pass away forever. The service which
Christ established was to be observed by His followers in all lands and through
all ages. {DA 652.2}
The Passover was ordained as a commemoration of the
deliverance of Israel from Egyptian bondage. God had directed that, year by
year, as the children should ask the meaning of this ordinance, the history
should be repeated. Thus the wonderful deliverance was to be kept fresh in the
minds of all. The ordinance of the Lord's Supper was given [653] to
commemorate the great deliverance wrought out as the result of the death of
Christ. Till He shall come the second time in power and glory, this ordinance
is to be celebrated. It is the means by which His great work for us is to be
kept fresh in our minds. {DA
652.3}
At the time of their deliverance from Egypt, the children of
Israel ate the Passover supper standing, with their loins girded, and with
their staves in their hands, ready for their journey. The manner in which they
celebrated this ordinance harmonized with their condition; for they were about
to be thrust out of the land of Egypt, and were to begin a painful and difficult
journey through the wilderness. But in Christ's time the condition of things
had changed. They were not now about to be thrust out of a strange country, but
were dwellers in their own land. In harmony with the rest that had been given
them, the people then partook of the Passover supper in a reclining position.
Couches were placed about the table, and the guests lay upon them, resting upon
the left arm, and having the right hand free for use in eating. In this
position a guest could lay his head upon the breast of the one who sat next
above him. And the feet, being at the outer edge of the couch, could be washed
by one passing around the outside of the circle. {DA 653.1}
Christ is still at the table on which the paschal supper has
been spread. The unleavened cakes used at the Passover season are before Him.
The Passover wine, untouched by fermentation, is on the table. These emblems
Christ employs to represent His own unblemished sacrifice. Nothing corrupted by
fermentation, the symbol of sin and death, could represent the "Lamb
without blemish and without spot." 1 Peter 1:19. {DA 653.2}
"And as they were eating, Jesus took bread, and blessed
it, and brake it, and gave it to the disciples, and said, Take, eat; this is My
body. And He took the cup, and gave thanks, and gave it to them, saying, Drink
ye all of it; for this is My blood of the new testament, which is shed for many
for the remission of sins. But I say unto you, I will not drink henceforth of
this fruit of the vine, until that day when I drink it new with you in My
Father's kingdom." {DA
653.3}
Judas the betrayer was present at the sacramental service.
He received from Jesus the emblems of His broken body and His spilled blood. He
heard the words, "This do in remembrance of Me." And sitting there in
the very presence of the Lamb of God, the betrayer brooded upon his own dark
purposes, and cherished his sullen, revengeful thoughts. {DA 653.4}
At the feet washing, Christ had given convincing proof that
He understood the character of Judas. "Ye are not all clean" (John
13:11), [654]
He said. These words convinced the false disciple that Christ read his secret
purpose. Now Christ spoke out more plainly. As they were seated at the table He
said, looking upon His disciples, "I speak not of you all: I know whom I
have chosen: but that the scripture may be fulfilled, He that eateth bread with
Me hath lifted up his heel against Me." {DA 653.5}
Even now the disciples did not suspect Judas. But they saw
that Christ appeared greatly troubled. A cloud settled over them all, a
premonition of some dreadful calamity, the nature of which they did not
understand. As they ate in silence, Jesus said, "Verily I say unto you,
that one of you shall betray Me." At these words amazement and
consternation seized them. They could not comprehend how any one of them could
deal treacherously with their divine Teacher. For what cause could they betray
Him? and to whom? Whose heart could give birth to such a design? Surely not one
of the favored twelve, who had been privileged above all others to hear His
teachings, who had shared His wonderful love, and for whom He had shown such
great regard by bringing them into close communion with Himself! {DA 654.1}
As they realized the import of His words, and remembered how
true His sayings were, fear and self-distrust seized them. They began to search
their own hearts to see if one thought against their Master were harbored
there. With the most painful emotion, one after another inquired, "Lord,
is it I?" But Judas sat silent. John in deep distress at last inquired,
"Lord, who is it?" And Jesus answered, "He that dippeth his hand
with Me in the dish, the same shall betray Me. The Son of man goeth as it is
written of Him: but woe unto that man by whom the Son of man is betrayed! it
had been good for that man if he had not been born." The disciples had
searched one another's faces closely as they asked, "Lord, is it I?"
And now the silence of Judas drew all eyes to him. Amid the confusion of
questions and expressions of astonishment, Judas had not heard the words of
Jesus in answer to John's question. But now, to escape the scrutiny of the
disciples, he asked as they had done, "Master, is it I?" Jesus
solemnly replied, "Thou hast said." {DA 654.2}
In surprise and confusion at the exposure of his purpose,
Judas rose hastily to leave the room. "Then said Jesus unto him, That thou
doest, do quickly. . . . He then having received the sop went
immediately out: and it was night." Night it was to the traitor as he
turned away from Christ into the outer darkness. {DA 654.3}
Until this step was taken, Judas had not passed beyond the
possibility of repentance. But when he left the presence of his Lord and his [655]
fellow disciples, the final decision had been made. He had passed the boundary
line. {DA 654.4}
Wonderful had been the long-suffering of Jesus in His
dealing with this tempted soul. Nothing that could be done to save Judas had
been left undone. After he had twice covenanted to betray his Lord, Jesus still
gave him opportunity for repentance. By reading the secret purpose of the
traitor's heart, Christ gave to Judas the final, convincing evidence of His
divinity. This was to the false disciple the last call to repentance. No appeal
that the divine-human heart of Christ could make had been spared. The waves of
mercy, beaten back by stubborn pride, returned in a stronger tide of subduing
love. But although surprised and alarmed at the discovery of his guilt, Judas
became only the more determined. From the sacramental supper he went out to
complete the work of betrayal. {DA 655.1}
In pronouncing the woe upon Judas, Christ also had a purpose
of mercy toward His disciples. He thus gave them the crowning evidence of His
Messiahship. "I tell you before it come," He said, "that, when
it is come to pass, ye may believe that I AM." Had Jesus remained silent,
in apparent ignorance of what was to come upon Him, the disciples might have
thought that their Master had not divine foresight, and had been surprised and
betrayed into the hands of the murderous mob. A year before, Jesus had told the
disciples that He had chosen twelve, and that one was a devil. Now His words to
Judas, showing that his treachery was fully known to his Master, would
strengthen the faith of Christ's true followers during His humiliation. And when
Judas should have come to his dreadful end, they would remember the woe that
Jesus had pronounced upon the betrayer. {DA 655.2}
And the Saviour had still another purpose. He had not
withheld His ministry from him whom He knew to be a traitor. The disciples did
not understand His words when He said at the feet washing, "Ye are not all
clean," nor yet when at the table He declared, "He that eateth bread
with Me hath lifted up his heel against Me." John 13:11, 18. But
afterward, when His meaning was made plain, they had something to consider as
to the patience and mercy of God toward the most grievously erring. {DA 655.3}
Though Jesus knew Judas from the beginning, He washed his
feet. And the betrayer was privileged to unite with Christ in partaking of the
sacrament. A long-suffering Saviour held out every inducement for the sinner to
receive Him, to repent, and to be cleansed from the defilement of sin. This
example is for us. When we suppose one to be in error and sin, we are not to
divorce ourselves from him. By no careless [656]
separation are we to leave him a prey to temptation, or drive him upon Satan's
battleground. This is not Christ's method. It was because the disciples were
erring and faulty that He washed their feet, and all but one of the twelve were
thus brought to repentance. {DA
655.4}
Christ's example forbids exclusiveness at the Lord's Supper.
It is true that open sin excludes the guilty. This the Holy Spirit plainly
teaches. 1 Corinthians 5:11. But beyond this none are to pass judgment. God has
not left it with men to say who shall present themselves on these occasions.
For who can read the heart? Who can distinguish the tares from the wheat?
"Let a man examine himself, and so let him eat of that bread, and drink of
that cup." For "whosoever shall eat this bread, and drink this cup of
the Lord, unworthily, shall be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord."
"He that eateth and drinketh unworthily, eateth and drinketh damnation to
himself, not discerning the Lord's body." 1 Corinthians 11:28, 27, 29. {DA 656.1}
When believers assemble to celebrate the ordinances, there
are present messengers unseen by human eyes. There may be a Judas in the
company, and if so, messengers from the prince of darkness are there, for they
attend all who refuse to be controlled by the Holy Spirit. Heavenly angels also
are present. These unseen visitants are present on every such occasion. There
may come into the company persons who are not in heart servants of truth and
holiness, but who may wish to take part in the service. They should not be
forbidden. There are witnesses present who were present when Jesus washed the
feet of the disciples and of Judas. More than human eyes beheld the scene. {DA 656.2}
Christ by the Holy Spirit is there to set the seal to His
own ordinance. He is there to convict and soften the heart. Not a look, not a
thought of contrition, escapes His notice. For the repentant, brokenhearted one
He is waiting. All things are ready for that soul's reception. He who washed
the feet of Judas longs to wash every heart from the stain of sin. {DA 656.3}
None should exclude themselves from the Communion because
some who are unworthy may be present. Every disciple is called upon to
participate publicly, and thus bear witness that he accepts Christ as a
personal Saviour. It is at these, His own appointments, that Christ meets His
people, and energizes them by His presence. Hearts and hands that are unworthy
may even administer the ordinance, yet Christ is there to minister to His
children. All who come with their faith fixed upon Him will be greatly blessed.
All who neglect these seasons of divine privilege will suffer loss. Of them it
may appropriately be said, "Ye are not all clean." {DA 656.4}
In partaking with His disciples of the bread and wine,
Christ pledged [659] Himself to them as their
Redeemer. He committed to them the new covenant, by which all who receive Him
become children of God, and joint heirs with Christ. By this covenant every
blessing that heaven could bestow for this life and the life to come was
theirs. This covenant deed was to be ratified with the blood of Christ. And the
administration of the Sacrament was to keep before the disciples the infinite
sacrifice made for each of them individually as a part of the great whole of fallen
humanity. {DA 656.5}
But the Communion service was not to be a season of
sorrowing. This was not its purpose. As the Lord's disciples gather about His
table, they are not to remember and lament their shortcomings. They are not to
dwell upon their past religious experience, whether that experience has been
elevating or depressing. They are not to recall the differences between them
and their brethren. The preparatory service has embraced all this. The
self-examination, the confession of sin, the reconciling of differences, has
all been done. Now they come to meet with Christ. They are not to stand in the
shadow of the cross, but in its saving light. They are to open the soul to the
bright beams of the Sun of Righteousness. With hearts cleansed by Christ's most
precious blood, in full consciousness of His presence, although unseen, they
are to hear His words, "Peace I leave with you, My peace I give unto you:
not as the world giveth, give I unto you." John 14:27. {DA 659.1}
Our Lord says, Under conviction of sin, remember that I died
for you. When oppressed and persecuted and afflicted for My sake and the
gospel's, remember My love, so great that for you I gave My life. When your
duties appear stern and severe, and your burdens too heavy to bear, remember that
for your sake I endured the cross, despising the shame. When your heart shrinks
from the trying ordeal, remember that your Redeemer liveth to make intercession
for you. {DA 659.2}
The Communion service points to Christ's second coming. It
was designed to keep this hope vivid in the minds of the disciples. Whenever
they met together to commemorate His death, they recounted how "He took
the cup, and gave thanks, and gave it to them, saying, Drink ye all of it; for
this is My blood of the new testament, which is shed for many for the remission
of sins. But I say unto you, I will not drink henceforth of this fruit of the
vine, until that day when I drink it new with you in My Father's kingdom."
In their tribulation they found comfort in the hope of their Lord's return.
Unspeakably precious to them was the thought, "As often as ye eat this
bread, and drink this cup, ye do show the Lord's death till He come." 1
Corinthians 11:26. [660] {DA 659.3}
These are the things we are never to forget. The love of
Jesus, with its constraining power, is to be kept fresh in our memory. Christ
has instituted this service that it may speak to our senses of the love of God
that has been expressed in our behalf. There can be no union between our souls
and God except through Christ. The union and love between brother and brother
must be cemented and rendered eternal by the love of Jesus. And nothing less
than the death of Christ could make His love efficacious for us. It is only
because of His death that we can look with joy to His second coming. His
sacrifice is the center of our hope. Upon this we must fix our faith. {DA 660.1}
The ordinances that point to our Lord's humiliation and
suffering are regarded too much as a form. They were instituted for a purpose.
Our senses need to be quickened to lay hold of the mystery of godliness. It is
the privilege of all to comprehend, far more than we do, the expiatory
sufferings of Christ. "As Moses lifted up the serpent in the
wilderness," even so has the Son of man been lifted up, "that whosoever
believeth in Him should not perish, but have eternal life." John 3:14, 15.
To the cross of Calvary, bearing a dying Saviour, we must look. Our eternal
interests demand that we show faith in Christ. {DA 660.2}
Our Lord has said, "Except ye eat the flesh of the Son
of man, and drink His blood, ye have no life in you. . . . For My
flesh is meat indeed, and My blood is drink indeed." John 6:53-55. This is
true of our physical nature. To the death of Christ we owe even this earthly
life. The bread we eat is the purchase of His broken body. The water we drink
is bought by His spilled blood. Never one, saint or sinner, eats his daily
food, but he is nourished by the body and the blood of Christ. The cross of
Calvary is stamped on every loaf. It is reflected in every water spring. All
this Christ has taught in appointing the emblems of His great sacrifice. The
light shining from that Communion service in the upper chamber makes sacred the
provisions for our daily life. The family board becomes as the table of the
Lord, and every meal a sacrament. {DA 660.3}
And how much more are Christ's words true of our spiritual
nature. He declares, "Whoso eateth My flesh, and drinketh My blood, hath
eternal life." It is by receiving the life for us poured out on Calvary's
cross, that we can live the life of holiness. And this life we receive by
receiving His word, by doing those things which He has commanded. Thus we
become one with Him. "He that eateth My flesh," He says, "and
drinketh My blood, dwelleth in Me, and I in him. As the living [661]
Father hath sent Me, and I live by the Father: so he that eateth Me, even he
shall live by Me." John 6:54, 56, 57. To the holy Communion this scripture
in a special sense applies. As faith contemplates our Lord's great sacrifice,
the soul assimilates the spiritual life of Christ. That soul will receive
spiritual strength from every Communion. The service forms a living connection
by which the believer is bound up with Christ, and thus bound up with the
Father. In a special sense it forms a connection between dependent human beings
and God. {DA 660.4}
As we receive the bread and wine symbolizing Christ's broken
body and spilled blood, we in imagination join in the scene of Communion in the
upper chamber. We seem to be passing through the garden consecrated by the
agony of Him who bore the sins of the world. We witness the struggle by which
our reconciliation with God was obtained. Christ is set forth crucified among
us. {DA 661.1}
Looking upon the crucified Redeemer, we more fully comprehend
the magnitude and meaning of the sacrifice made by the Majesty of heaven. The
plan of salvation is glorified before us, and the thought of Calvary awakens
living and sacred emotions in our hearts. Praise to God and the Lamb will be in
our hearts and on our lips; for pride and self-worship cannot flourish in the
soul that keeps fresh in memory the scenes of Calvary. {DA 661.2}
He who beholds the Saviour's matchless love will be elevated
in thought, purified in heart, transformed in character. He will go forth to be
a light to the world, to reflect in some degree this mysterious love. The more
we contemplate the cross of Christ, the more fully shall we adopt the language
of the apostle when he said, "God forbid that I should glory, save in the
cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom the world is crucified unto me, and I
unto the world." Galatians 6:14. {DA 661.3}
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"Let Not Your Heart Be Troubled"
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