Friday after Trinity VIII - Devotion in semi-Exile
Lection for Friday after Trinity VIII
1 Samuel 20:24-42 1 Corinthians 1:1-25
The Lord’s Supper is the 5th part of the Catechism. We have considered the first two points Luther suggests we consider: "what is the sacrament?" and, "what are its benefits?" What remains is considering the second part of "who is to receive it?"
Let us hear what Luther says.
Large Catechism —— Fifth Part: Of Sacrament of the Altar
Of the Sacrament of the Altar.
53] Now, this is to be the first point, especially for those who
are cold and indifferent, that they may reflect upon and rouse themselves. For
this is certainly true, as I have found in my own experience, and as every one
will find in his own case, that if a person thus withdraw from this Sacrament,
he will daily become more and more callous and cold, and will at last disregard
it altogether. 54] To avoid this, we must, indeed, examine heart and
conscience, and act like a person who desires to be right with God. Now, the
more this is done, the more will the heart be warmed and enkindled, that it may
not become entirely cold.
55] But if you say: How if I feel that I am not prepared? Answer:
That is also my scruple, especially from the old way under the Pope, in which a
person tortured himself to be so perfectly pure that God could not find the
least blemish in us. On this account we became so timid that every one was
instantly thrown into consternation and said to himself: Alas! you are
unworthy! 56] For then nature and reason begin to reckon our unworthiness in
comparison with the great and precious good; and then it appears like a dark
lantern in contrast with the bright sun, or as filth in comparison with
precious stones. Because nature and reason see this, they refuse to approach
and tarry until they are prepared, so long that one week trails another, and
one half year the other. 57] But if you are to regard how good and pure you
are, and labor to have no compunctions, you must never approach.
58] We must, therefore, make a distinction here among men. For
those who are wanton and dissolute must be told to stay away; for they are not
prepared to receive forgiveness of sin, since they do not desire it and do not
wish to be godly. 59] But the others, who are not such callous and wicked
people, and desire to be godly, must not absent themselves, even though
otherwise they be feeble and full of infirmities, as St. Hilary also has said:
If any one have not committed sin for which he can rightly be put out of the
congregation and esteemed as no Christian, he ought not stay away from the
Sacrament, lest he may deprive himself of life. 60] For no one will make such
progress that he will not retain many daily infirmities in flesh and blood.
61] Therefore such people must learn that it is the highest art to
know that our Sacrament does not depend upon our worthiness. For we are not
baptized because we are worthy and holy, nor do we go to confession because we
are pure and without sin, but the contrary, because we are poor miserable men,
and just because we are unworthy; unless it be some one who desires no grace
and absolution nor intends to reform.
62] But whoever would gladly obtain grace and consolation should
impel himself, and allow no one to frighten him away, but say: I, indeed, would
like to be worthy; but I come, not upon any worthiness, but upon Thy Word,
because Thou hast commanded it, as one who would gladly be Thy disciple, no
matter what becomes of my worthiness. 63] But this is difficult; for we always
have this obstacle and hindrance to encounter, that we look more upon ourselves
than upon the Word and lips of Christ. For nature desires so to act that it can
stand and rest firmly on itself, otherwise it refuses to make the approach. Let
this suffice concerning the first point.
64] In the second place, there is besides this command also a
promise, as we heard above, which ought most strongly to incite and encourage
us. For here stand the kind and precious words: This is My body, given for you.
This is My blood, shed for you, for the remission of sins. 65] These words, I
have said, are not preached to wood and stone, but to me and you; else He might
just as well be silent and not institute a Sacrament. Therefore consider, and
put yourself into this You, that He may not speak to you in vain.
66] For here He offers to us the entire treasure which He has
brought for us from heaven, and to which He invites us also in other places
with the greatest kindness, as when He says in St. Matthew 11, 28: Come unto
Me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. 67] Now it
is surely a sin and a shame that He so cordially and faithfully summons and
exhorts us to our highest and greatest good, and we act so distantly with
regard to it, and permit so long a time to pass [without partaking of the
Sacrament] that we grow quite cold and hardened, so that we have no inclination
or love for it. 68] We must never regard the Sacrament as something injurious
from which we had better flee, but as a pure, wholesome, comforting remedy
imparting salvation and comfort, which will cure you and give you life both in
soul and body. For where the soul has recovered, the body also is relieved.
Why, then, is it that we act as if it were a poison, the eating of which would
bring death?
69] To be sure, it is true that those who despise it and live in
an unchristian manner receive it to their hurt and damnation; for nothing shall
be good or wholesome to them, just as with a sick person who from caprice eats
and drinks what is forbidden him by the physician. 70] But those who are
sensible of their weakness, desire to be rid of it and long for help, should
regard and use it only as a precious antidote against the poison which they
have in them. For here in the Sacrament you are to receive from the lips of
Christ forgiveness of sin, which contains and brings with it the grace of God
and the Spirit with all His gifts, protection, shelter, and power against death
and the devil and all misfortune.
71] Thus you have, on the part of God, both the command and the
promise of the Lord Jesus Christ. Besides this, on your part, your own distress
which is about your neck, and because of which this command, invitation, and
promise are given, ought to impel you. For He Himself says: They that be whole,
need not a physician, but they that be sick; that is, those who are weary and
heavy-laden with their sins, with the fear of death, temptations of the flesh
and of the devil. 72] If, therefore, you are heavy-laden and feel your
weakness, then go joyfully to this Sacrament and obtain refreshment,
consolation, and strength. 73] For if you would wait until you are rid of such
burdens, that you might come to the Sacrament pure and worthy, you must forever
stay away. For in that case He pronounces sentence and says: 74] If you are
pure and godly, you have no need of Me, and I, in turn, none of thee. Therefore
those alone are called unworthy who neither feel their infirmities nor wish to
be considered sinners.
75] But if you say: What, then, shall I do if I cannot feel such
distress or experience hunger and thirst for the Sacrament? Answer: For those
who are so minded that they do not realize their condition I know no better
counsel than that they put their hand into their bosom to ascertain whether
they also have flesh and blood. And if you find that to be the case, then go,
for your good, to St. Paul's Epistle to the Galatians, and hear what sort of a
fruit your flesh is: Now the works of the flesh (he says [Gal. 5, 19ff ]) are
manifest, which are these: Adultery, fornication, uncleanness, lasciviousness,
idolatry, witchcraft, hatred, variance, emulations, wrath, strife, seditions,
heresies, envyings, murders, drunkenness, revelings, and such like.
76] Therefore, if you cannot feel it, at least believe the
Scriptures; they will not lie to you, and they know your flesh better than you
yourself. Yea, St. Paul further concludes in Rom. 7, 18: I know that in me,
that is, in my flesh, dwelleth no good thing. If St. Paul may speak thus of his
flesh, we do not propose to be better nor more holy. 77] But that we do not
feel it is so much the worse; for it is a sign that there is a leprous flesh
which feels nothing, and yet [the leprosy] rages and keeps spreading. 78] Yet,
as we have said, if you are quite dead to all sensibility, still believe the
Scriptures, which pronounce sentence upon you. And, in short, the less you feel
your sins and infirmities, the more reason have you to go to the Sacrament to
seek help and a remedy.
79] In the second place, look about you and see whether you are
also in the world, or if you do not know it, ask your neighbors about it. If
you are in the world, do not think that there will be lack of sins and misery.
For only begin to act as though you would be godly and adhere to the Gospel,
and see whether no one will become your enemy, and, moreover, do you harm,
wrong, and violence, and likewise give you cause for sin and vice. If you have
not experienced it, then let the Scriptures tell you, which everywhere give
this praise and testimony to the world.
80] Besides this, you will also have the devil about you, whom you
will not entirely tread under foot, because our Lord Christ Himself could not
entirely avoid him. Now, what is the devil? 81] Nothing else than what the
Scriptures call him, a liar and murderer. A liar, to lead the heart astray from
the Word of God, and to blind it, that you cannot feel your distress or come to
Christ. A murderer, who cannot bear to see you live one single hour. 82] If you
could see how many knives, darts, and arrows are every moment aimed at you, you
would be glad to come to the Sacrament as often as possible. But there is no
reason why we walk so securely and heedlessly, except that we neither think nor
believe that we are in the flesh, and in this wicked world or in the kingdom of
the devil.
83] Therefore, try this and practise it well, and do but examine
yourself, or look about you a little, and only keep to the Scriptures. If even
then you still feel nothing, you have so much the more misery to lament both to
God and to your brother. Then take advice and have others pray for you, and do
not desist until the stone be removed from your heart. 84] Then, indeed, the
distress will not fail to become manifest, and you will find that you have sunk
twice as deep as any other poor sinner, and are much more in need of the
Sacrament against the misery which unfortunately you do not see, so that, with
the grace of God, you may feel it more and become the more hungry for the Sacrament,
especially since the devil plies his force against you, and lies in wait for
you without ceasing to seize and destroy you, soul and body, so that you are
not safe from him one hour. How soon can he have brought you suddenly into
misery and distress when you least expect it!
85] Let this, then, be said for exhortation, not only for those of
us who are old and grown, but also for the young people, who ought to be
brought up in the Christian doctrine and understanding. For thereby the Ten
Commandments, the Creed, and the Lord's Prayer might be the more easily
inculcated to our youth, so that they would receive them with pleasure and
earnestness, and thus would practise them from their youth and accustom
themselves to them. 86] For the old are now well-nigh done for, so that these
and other things cannot be attained, unless we train the people who are to come
after us and succeed us in our office and work, in order that they also may
bring up their children successfully, that the Word of God and the Christian
Church may be preserved. 87] Therefore let every father of a family know that
it is his duty, by the injunction and command of God, to teach these things to
his children, or have them learn what they ought to know. For since they are
baptized and received into the Christian Church, they should also enjoy this
communion of the Sacrament, in order that they may serve us and be useful to
us; for they must all indeed help us to believe, love, pray, and fight against
the devil.
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