Oakland Conference: 1974, The Lord's Table (4:17)
Address—G.H. Hayhoe
2nd Corinthians chapter 5 And just to make the connection, I'd like to read the last two verses of the 4th chapter. 2 Corinthians chapter 4, verse 17 For our light affliction, which is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory. While we look not at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen. For the things which are seen are temporal, but the things which are not seen are eternal. For we know therefore earthly House of this Tabernacle were dissolved. We have a building of God and house not made with hands eternal in the heavens. For in this we groan. Earnestly desiring to be closed upon with our house, which is from heaven, if so be. Being closed, we shall not be found naked. Where we were in this Tabernacle do groan, being burdened, not for that we will be unclothed, but clothed upon that mortality might be swallowed up of life. Now he would have brought us for the self same thing as God, who also hath given unto us the earnest of the Spirit. Therefore we are always confident, knowing that whilst we are at home in the body, we are absent from the Lord. But we walk by faith, not by sight. We are confident, I say, and willing rather to be absent from the body, and to be present with the Lord. Therefore we labor that, whether present or absent, we may be accepted of Him. For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, that everyone may receive the things done in his body, according to that he hath done, whether it be good or bad. Knowing therefore the terror of the Lord, we persuade men, but we are made manifest unto God, and I trust also are made manifest in your consciences. For we commend not ourselves again unto you, but give you occasion to glory on our behalf, that you may have somewhat to answer them, which glory in appearance and not in heart. For whether we be beside ourselves, it is to God. Or whether we be sober, it is for your cause, for the. Christ constraineth us, because we thus judge that if one died for all, then we're all dead, and that He died for all. That they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves, but unto him which died for them, and rose again. Therefore henceforth know we know man after the flesh. Yeah, though we have known Christ after the flesh, yet now henceforth know we him no more. Therefore, if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature. All things are passed away, behold, all things are become new, and all things are of God, who hath reconciled us to himself by Jesus Christ, and have given to us the ministry of reconciliation, to which that God was in Christ, reconciling the world unto himself, not imputing their trespasses unto them, and hath committed unto us the word of reconciliation. Now then, we are ambassadors for Christ. As though God did beseech you by us, we pray you in Christ, that be reconciled to God, for he hath made him to be sin for us, who knew no sin, that we might be made the righteousness of God in him. Tony. In these last two verses of the 4th chapter we see the apostle draws a contrast between those things that are seen and those things that are not seen. No, it's very easy to live for the things that are seen. Of those things that pass away. But in this day and age when God is allowing us to feel the shaking of all those things that are seen, how much more thankful we should be that we have that really abides and we have a portion that doesn't pass away because we don't look at those things that are seen. But if those things which are not seen, those things that are eternal. There's a lovely verse in the 22nd Psalm that says. Your heart shall live forever. A very striking expression, isn't it? It doesn't mean that these physical hearts of ours are going to go on and beat forever. But, you know, if we set our heart on things here, by all those things we set our hearts upon are going to pass away. But isn't it a wonderful thing that if we set our heart on those things that are above, we set our heart upon a portion that is going to be forever? And so whether you're young. Although you're old, if your heart is upon Christ, it's on something that's not going to pass away. If you have found friends among the Lords, people are those friends that you have found are not just friends for your little time here in this world, but they're going to be your companions for all eternity. Isn't it a wonderful thing to be a child of God and to have set your heart on things that don't pass away, things that really abide?
And then you can say, yes, my heart lives forever because my heart's not set on things here. Now, it doesn't mean that we can't enjoy the things that God gives us here. It says in First Timothy chapter 6 that God gives us all things richly to enjoy. But we don't enjoy them as something that we set our hearts upon, something that we live for, not just accept them as a gracious provision that God gives us. We just receive it like an ambassador. He's an ambassador in another country. the United States sends an ambassador to Canada. There's no use in setting his heart upon the house. He's going to live on in Canada because he's just going to live there for a little while. He's thankful for the provision that his country. Makes and providing a fine house for him and a nice car, but there's not much use of selling his heart upon it because he's just there for a term. And when that term is ended, he comes back to live in his own country. And dear friends, if you belong to the Lord, why don't set your heart on things here? Because it's just for a time. The things that are seen are Templar, but the things that are not seen are eternal. And how did you think of? Ambassador being sent to another country and he says, well, I'm willing to go to a country where I can be quite sure that none of my possessions will be disturbed. My car will be never, never will be overturned, the windows will never be broken in the embassy. I will be an ambassador in a place like that. But if there are any hardships connected with it, I don't want to have that kind of opposition. You'd say that would be a very strange attitude for a man who was. Desirous to represent his country. And so the apostle Paul was going through great hardships. He was suffering for Christ's sake. But he says our light affliction, which is but for a moment liveth for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory. He says everything that we have to pass through in this world for Christ's sake. Is not going to be lost time, it's not going to be lost possession. Because our charges are not really here. The Lord Jesus said not to lay up treasures on earth because marathon rust corrupts and thieves breakthrough and steal. And that it tells us to lay up our treasures in heaven, when neither mouth nor rest is corrupt. And thieves don't breakthrough and steal. And so can each one of us who belong to the Lord have that inheritance. Incorruptible and undefiled. And that fate is not fate is not a word. Reserved in heaven for us. But I saw again, and I speak to my own heart too. Are we living for it? Are we living for those things that pass away? The apostle here says we look not at the things that are seen, uh. They look not at the things which are seen. But of the things which are not sane. For the things which are seen are temporal, but the things which are not seen are eternal. And then in the 5th chapter he opens with these words. For we know. For we know that is the reason he could do this was because he had absolutely no doubt in his mind as to the glorious future that was ahead of him. And you and I will never be able to give up the present, if we have any. Certainty as to this future that awaits us. That's why Satan does his best to put a doubt in the minds of believers. He does his best to try and get us doubting God. The very first recorded words of Satan in the Old Testament are these. Yeah, hath God said? Notice He raised the question about the truth of God's Word. And has he ever done that with you? Oh, you say. Of course he has. He always seeks to get us to. Question the truth of God's Word and the first recorded words of Satan in the New Testament. What are they? He said to the Lord Jesus, if thou be the Son of God. His first record words in the Old Testament question the spoken Word of God and His first recorded words in the New Testament questioned the living world of God. He'll always put a question in your mind.
He doesn't want you to have these blessed things as an assurance in yourself. But God wants you to not. He doesn't want you to go on in uncertainty. For we know, May I trust that if there's anyone here who has been entertaining dots, that God will enable you tonight to lift the shield of faith. Because the reason we know it is on the very best authority possible. God has spoken. God has spoken. For you know, our eyes may deceive us, our ears may deceive us. Our friends may deceive us, but when we take God of His word, it tells us it's impossible for God to lie, and it says He has given us a strong consolation who have fled for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before us. So for adults rising in your mind, remember where they come from, and remember that the only way to meet them is to lift the shield of faith. For with we shall be able to crunch all the fiery darts of the wickedness. When the Lord Jesus was here, he gave us the perfect example of how to meet the enemy. For when Satan came to the Lord Jesus, he answered every temptation by saying, it is written. It is written. He answered those temptations by the precious word of God. Now in this 5th chapter, I believe we could say perhaps to put it very simply. That there are three things brought before us as reasons. Why we shouldn't live for the things that pass away? And the first reason that we have in this chapter is that our bodies are a constant reminder that we're not in this world to stay. Aches and pains, and as we get older we have a few more of them, and these are just reminders that we're really not here to stay. Of course we have the hope of the Lord's coming, which is the grand and glorious hope of the Christian. And what is brought before us here is these tabernacles in which we groan but remind us about this scene is not really our home. And then the second thing that's brought before us in this chapter is. About our lives are going to pass and review. Why should we live for things that don't matter, that don't abide if our lives are someday going to a passenger review and only what is according to the will of God is going to abide? It says the world passeth away and the lust throughout, but he that doeth the will of God abias forever. So the judgment seat of Christ is going to be a view of our lives. I know what a serious thing this is about. Our life here is so short that every act in our lives has an eternal consequence. That's something for us to consider, isn't it? Every act in our lives has an eternal consequence. What a what an important thing for us, we might think, only that doesn't matter. Well, it's either gain or loss. It goes on either one side or the other of the Ledger. And what a serious thing. To live a life that will be lost. Now it's quite possible to have a saved soul and a lost life. Said he, that love of his life shall lose it, He that hateth his life in this world shall keep it unto life eternal. That saves your sorrow as the blessed finished work of Christ, as the precious blood of Christ that cleanses from all sin. There's nothing else that will put away sin before God, and when you receive the Lord Jesus as your Savior, and your sins are put away. In his precious blood you have a saved soul. But I say again, it's both. Possible to have a last life, and what is an example of that? A man who had a saved soul. But a last life, All that he lived for went up in the flames of Sodom. He had lived for the things that pass away, and he lived to see all those things that he labored for her perish. And so the second reason then is the judgment seat of Christ. We will speak more of this shortly, but at the judgment seat of Christ. The life of the believer passes into review and how important that we should live our lives for him. And then the third thing that was brought before us is are the greatest of all. Perhaps we could say the love of Christ can spring with us now. That is, we're not living to please the Lord out of a sense of duty. We're not living because, well, we just have to do it. But we're living to please Him because His love is so great that He has captivated our hearts. It's not hard to do things that please a person.
Who loves you and does everything for your good. It's not hard to try to please a person who really makes sacrifices for you constantly. And when we think of what the Lord Jesus did for us and what He's doing for us now is our great High Priest and advocate, surely the thought of His love, how much He loves us, and that He's going to love us right to the end. Isn't this a grand reason why we should not live to ourselves? But unto him and some of these three things are brought before us. And then in the concluding remarks in the chapter, we see that our real position is in the world. We remember that it before the position of being representatives of Christ here in this world. Now, just like his ambassadors here in this world. So and we realize what we're here you you hear many people, especially young people say, well, what do we hear for what's it all about? Well, one great man said he spent all his life trying to get an answer to two questions, where he came from and where he was going to. All their friends. God gives the answer. He tells us where we came from. God breathed into man's nostrils the breath of life, and man became a living soul. He tells us where we're going to the two destinies ahead. And so in this chapter He tells us why we're here and if we're saved, why did He leave us here? Why didn't He take us to heaven the day he saved us? There will never be any more fit than we were today. He saved us the day he saved us. Our sins were gone. We were in Christ, we were accepted in the Beloved. Could we be more? No, we were just as fit then as we'll ever be. Brazil left us here. Oh, he has left us here. At the end of this chapter shows that we might be representatives for him during his absence. What a privilege this is to be epistles of Christ. Known and word of all men say in the beginning of this chapter, then we see that Pearl. Speaks of the body in which he lived as the earthly House of this Tabernacle. But as he just called the body that he lived in a Tabernacle or a tent, it was only a temporary abode. And we find the Apostle Peter Speaking of this in his epistle. He said, Knowing that shortly I must put off this my Tabernacle, even as our Lord Jesus Christ hath showed me. There is, he said. My spirit is clothed with a tent. Around now that the tent is on the temporary abode. And so he spoke of His body in that way, and he said, if our earthly House of this Tabernacle be dissolved, we have a building of God and house not made with hands eternal in the heavens now that is, we have a glorified body. Waiting for us up there and when the Lord Jesus comes and gives the shout. And then it says. We shall be changed. We shall be changed. And that is when the astronauts went up to the moon. Well, they had to take food, they had to take the atmosphere, they had to take the atmosphere, oxygen and so on. They couldn't live as they went through space. About when the Lord Jesus comes and gives the shout. Thousands are going to rise to meet him. Our brother won't have to take the atmosphere, they won't have to take the food from this earth, because there are bodies celestial and there are bodies terrestrial. At present we have a terrestrial body, a body suited to earth, but when the Lord Jesus comes, we will have a body suited to heaven. And so when he gives that choke, that miracle will take place. Won't have to. Have a spaceship. You won't have to have a special kind of a jacket or something like this. No, we shall be changed and we'll go up to meet the Lord in the air. And so shall we ever be with the Lord. Yes. What a glorious thing. And it says this mortal will put on immortality, this corruptible will put on incorruption. And then shall be brought to pass the same that is written death. Is swallowed up in victory. What a glorious thing to have this before us. Yes, we're going to go to our real country, just like the ambassador. The time comes when his period is over in a firm land and he returns to his own country. Well, heaven is our Fatherland, Heaven is our home. So he says we have this before us.
And notice it's eternal in the heavens. This makes it clear that we're not. Not going to. Wayne, on the earth, we're going to reign over the earth because our portion is eternal in the heavens. Isn't this lovely? Otherwise we're going to be forever with the Lord. Now when He comes and sets up, his Kingdom will come with him, but will not come here to stay. It's not our home. When He comes, as the Scripture says, the Lord my God shall come, and all the Saints will be. That there were just to be identified with him in a setting up in the establishing of that Kingdom. But our royal home is in heaven, and so it says in this we groan earnestly, desiring to be clothed upon with our house, which is from heaven. And that is, God hasn't made our bodies without feeling in this Tabernacle. We groan, we feel pain. God has made us so that we feel all these kind of things. The Lord Jesus himself felt everything. Let me feel. Was one exception sent apart? They never had. And upon nature he could not sin, but he felt pain, he felt reproach, he felt wariness, All these things as a perfect man he felt. And so he said, Reproach hath broken my heart. He was thirsty, and he said to the woman, and gave me the drink. He felt it when the. Disciples were silk him, and it says of Judas over to have been an enemy. I could have burned it, but my own familiar friend, in whom my soul trusted, hath lifted up his heel against me. What is? The Lord felt everything perfectly, and now he's a merciful and faithful High Priest for us, and so he knows all that we pass through, because he's trodden the path before. And our desire is to be clothed upon with our house, which is from heaven. I believe is a little warning if so be that being clothed we shall not be found naked. For you know, there's not only a resurrection of believers, there's a resurrection of unbelievers. There's not only a resurrection of the just, but there's a resurrection of the unjust. But it's not a general resurrection. It's over 1000 years apart. It says the rest of the dead lived not again till 1000 years were finished. This is the first resurrection believers. Have part in the first resurrection Now those who have died in their sins will be raised 1000 years later to stand before the great white throne. But there is a resurrection even of unbelievers and I believe this verse is a warning that there will be some who will be clothed upon with a body that is they'll come forth in resurrection about they'll stand before God naked. No love of righteousness. They'll stand there in their sins. What a terrible thing, as it tells us in the 20th chapter of Revelation. The sea gave up the dead which were in it, and they were judged every man according to their works. Doesn't matter where they died or whether they were buried. God will find the best and there will be resurrected. Oh, I hope there won't be anyone here who will be raised and have to stand there in your sins. What a terrible thing to come forth. The spirit reunited to the body and be there naked before God. Well, thank God, this is not true of any believer, but it is true for those who are raised in their sins. And there might be some who have a profession and that possession, because you might deceive your parents, you might deceive your friends, you might deceive your brethren, but you'll never deceive God. The Lord knows them. Our heads he makes no mistakes and he can give you assurance in your heart too, if you'll just accept him as your Savior because it says these things that are written unto you that believe in the name of the Son of God, that you may know that you have eternal life. A believer can know it. But this verse I believe is a little warning to a professor. Now the fourth verse now for we that are in this tavernack will do groan being burdened.
Not for that we would be unclothed, but clothed upon, that mortality might be swallowed up of life. I want you to notice this here. Not for that we will be unclothed, but clothed upon. And he goes on to explain this further. But death is spoken of as the unclothed state. Now that is now. That my spirit is in a body, and this is the earthly House of my Tabernacle. In resurrection, God is going to clothe a body with a new house which is from heaven, a celestial glorified body like Christ. But. It says you're not, that we would be unclothed. And that's what death is. That is, when a person dies, the body is laid in the grave. But as we have in the sixth verse, the person is absent from the body and poisoned with the Lord. Now the reason he says this here is that this is not the proper hope of the Christian. The proper hope of the Christian is not death. The proper hope of the Christian is the Lord's coming. That's why he says not that we would be unclothed. No Christian is taught to look for death, but rather to look for the Lord's coming. And that's why in the Scripture, the hope of the Lord's coming is always held up to the believer as a present hope. It's to be expected in our lifetime if God and His patience waits over this world. There might even be some in this room that will be taken away by the article of death. But it isn't our proper hope. Our proper hope is the Lord's coming. And now by events that we see taking place in the world, we can see that day approaching. The Scripture speaks about seeing the day approaching, and we can certainly see things taking place. Will indicate to us very clearly that the Lord's coming is drawing near and that God intends it to be the hope of the believer at all times. So I can go to a person in the hospital and instead of having to talk about death, I can talk about the Lord's coming. And many a Christian whom I visited in the hospital, it has been my joy to say well. Isn't it lovely The Lord might come today, the Christians, shall I say. Christian slogan is perhaps today, perhaps today we expect him, we look for him, we wait for God's Son from heaven. And so how blessed we have separation and we have submission typified in the woman's place and the covering and then we have sobriety. That is, they were to come together with sober thoughts and actions at the Lord's. And I believe that's important if we have really learned what it is to be gathered according to His word with the Lord and the meds. This is the true ground of separation. It isn't a pharisaical separation, a separation to a person. And so we have separation. And then we have, as I say, submission. And this is typified in the woman's place. And that's brought before us with the. Covering and so on. And then we have sobriety. I think this is something too for us to bear in mind that when we come together, we come to remember his death. Now there is a, there is a, shall I say, a sobriety of thought and action that when we're right in the presence of the Lord himself to remember his death, just as we were going to think of some friend. And there we have what we might. Of his death before us, well, it's not a place where we would have sort of a subdued feeling. Wouldn't we be a little careful as to the way we conducted ourselves in the presence of such an occasion? Though we're gathered brethren around the Lord Jesus to remember him and his death, and there's a sobriety that is suited to this occasion that we should bear in mind. But now we have the instance on which the Lord instituted this feast, and it's intended to touch our hearts. It was on the night of His betrayal. The shadow of the cross was before Him. All that He was about to endure for your sake and mine was pressed upon His holy soul. And yet He was thinking of us and instituting that feast, that we might have the privilege of remembering what He was passing through.
And so in this chapter we have below 1St and then the cup. And the reason we have it in this order is because first, that this was the way in which the Lord himself instituted the supper, and next, that we might see the contrast between the work the Lord Jesus did and all the sacrifices of Judaism. And all the sacrifices of Judaism. The blood of the animal was shed first. And then the animal was taken and put on the altar and offered as a sacrifice. And soon as you looked on the blood of that animal, you couldn't say that that represented a finished work. The blood of that animal, I reminded you constantly that a sacrifice fell, the shedding of that blood. And so as we sang this morning, all a lot of animals could not put away sin. It didn't represent a finished work. It rather reminded them constantly that this was never finished. And so there was a remembrance again made of sins every year. Well, how blessed in connection with the Lord Jesus. Now that he bore all the wrath and judgment of God against sin, he exhausted the judgment, and that precious blood that flowed from his side tells us of the work, how the work is finished. Now we look upon that blood, and we say, that tells me of a finished work. Well, how blessed them it is that what is brought before us in the Lord's Supper. Is what the Lord Jesus passed through for us and. That if we could speak of it in this way, that in the 10th chapter we have our place there, and in the 11TH chapter what it cost him to bring us there. And we think of him first of All in all those ways and billows of divine judgment going over his blessed head. And so in this chapter that a life is not given to us as a symbol of the. Of the one body of Christ. Composed of our believers, but rather it's a symbol of the Lord Jesus own body. For it says in first Peter who his own self there are sins in his own body on the tree. Now that is the most hours of darkness. The Lord Jesus was there bearing the wrath and judgment of God in his own body on the tree. And as we partake of that bread, we think of what it cost him. Our hearts are bowed in His presence, that it was our sins that caused Him all suffering, our sins that caused Him all that agony. And so there is the time when we broke the bread and pass it from unto another, and then we are thinking of what it cost Him. As I say, we come into the meeting, we see the cup there, and it tells us that we have Title Iii's blood. We see the loaf and we. That were there as members of His body. But the time comes that the love is broken. And then we think of the suffering that He endured. We think of the agony of when He was forsaken of God. He'll never be able to measure the awful, awful judgment that rolled over His blessed head. But we know it's finished. We know He is exhausted. Nothing is left. What a blessed thing for us to enter into and lay hold of those wonderful words. It is finished when is sometimes said. A Sinner in hell will never be able to say those 3 words. He'll never be able to exhaust the judgment. He'll never be able to say the judgments over for me because the Bible says that it's a place of eternal punishment. But there was a person who could say it is finished, and he said it for us. We bring the judgment, and isn't it blessed that every believer can say it's finished? There is no judgment left for me. And the blessed sign of it is that precious blood. That tells us that as the little hymn says, the atoning work is done, the victims blood is shed, and Jesus now is gone, His peoples cause to plead. And so we look upon our blood and we rejoice in all that. The judgment has been exhausted, the Lord Jesus has given up his own life, and we can rejoice now as we think of the place that is ours through His finished work. And we do this.
In remembrance of him we think of his sufferings, his death. And I think this shows us in a very simple way why we have it in this order when it's the remembrance of his death. Of our love 1St and then drink of the cup. But now, how long do we have this privilege? It says as often as you eat this bread and drink this cup, he do show the Lord's death till he comes. You know, there are some who perhaps do it every month, some who perhaps do it every three months, or something of this nature. But here it says as often. And we know from Acts chapter 20 that it was on the first day of the week the disciples came together to break bread. But we want to do it any less often. I believe it's our privilege. And as each Lord's day rolls around. Privilege it is that we can gather in this way and remember the Lord Jesus in his death, and each time thinking of it as though it might be the last time. To me it's an encouragement that the Lord will preserve this privilege to us until He comes, because what He asked us to remember him and not preserve us the privilege. What do you ask us to remember him and not provide a scriptural way that we could do it? To His glory, some say. Well, everything's in ruins, yes, and we're part of the ruin. But I do believe that if the Lord has asked us to remember Him in His day, there must be a testimony even amid the ruins. I know this. I'll be precious to our souls now that we can be. And may we ask Him to, to preserve and keep us in that path that is pleasing to Him, that which is marked out in His precious word. Now, perhaps these closing verses have been a cause of concern to some, and I'd like to say a little about these. Verses The 27th verse. Before whosoever shall eat this bread, and drink this cup of the Lord unworthily, shall be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord. Let me say that these verses here, from the 27th verse to the end, do not really refer to unbelievers, but to Christians. And this is very clear from the 32nd verse. But when we are judged, we are chastened of the Lord that we should not. Be condemned with the world. Of course it would be wrong for an unbeliever to partake of the Lord's Supper, but what is really being brought before us is not really that side of things. How could an unbeliever remember the Lord when he has never appropriated his death for himself? But is it possible for a believer to eat and drink unworthily? Yes, I believe the force of the expression is. An unworthy manner. Now that is, now there is a way that is suited to him, and there is a way that is unsuited. Perhaps I could use a little illustration that would help to make this point clear. Supposing that I had a great many bills that I was unable to pay, and you kindly took these bills and you sold your house and had great personal cost, you paid these. Debts for me. And. Then I thank you very much for what you've done. But we'll say that a month afterwards. I say, well, I think I'll go and thank you again. But in this intervening month I've been very, very careless about my actions. I'm going on just as carelessly as I was before while he's debts were mounting up and I come over to your house to thank you for watching. Done for me and you look at me and say. Gordon, it's nice that you should come to thank me, but I just can't quite understand. How you are so unconcerned about the way you're living now. Do you realize what it cost me to pay those debts? And yet you're living in the very things that caused me all that extra expense to pay those debts for you now? I asked you in a very simple way, would you call that very worthy? Thanks. Would you say that that was a very worthy way to express my thanks to you? I'm sure you'd say. Oh, no. I can't hardly understand the person. Being so ungrateful for what had been done for Him. Well, if you and I are going carelessly on in the same things that caused the Lord Jesus all that suffering uncalvary, why it's not a worthy way to give thanks to Him. And it says here that we should be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord. Those were guilty of doing the very things.
That caused him that suffering. Numerous doesn't raise the question here at all as to it all being settled once for all at Calvary. Thank God it has been settled. It says Hebrews 10 by 1 offering He hath perfected forever for them that are sanctified. As to the believers standing, it is unchanged. Once you have received the Lord Jesus as your Savior, God puts you in a perfect standing before Him and He sees you. The righteousness of God in Christ. But there is such a thing as that practical side of things in our Iraq and ways that is spoken of as rocking worthy of the Lord. There is such a thing as breaking bread unworthily in such a way that it shows that we have no realization in our souls of what we're doing. Perhaps we've just done it to please some friend or some relative. Perhaps we thought it would please father or mother, so we just did it. But we weren't concerned about whether we were doing it in a way that pleased the Lord. Now I don't want these verses here to call someone here to say, well, I'm certainly not worthy because none of us have any worthiness in ourselves, and that's not the point. We never had and never will have any personal worthiness. But the next verse shows us, it says, let a man examine himself. And Saul Adam eat of that bread, and drinketh and drink of that cup. For he that eateth and drinketh unworthily eateth and drinketh Damnation, or the margin word is the correct word, eateth and drinketh judgment to himself, not discerning the Lord's body. What does it mean to examine ourselves and so to eat while supposing that I had become careless in connection with my debts? And I realize it and I and I say to you, well, I know what it costs you. And I'm ashamed that I've become careless and I'm very sorry. Well, then I have acknowledged this to you. And when a believer. Signs things slipping into his life that are not pleasing to his Lord. He should acknowledge it at once. Keep short accounts with God, as another has said. And so if something has crept into your life that is not pleasing to the Lord, get before him and own it to Him at once. Don't go on, because if we go on in it, it may bring down the Lord's dealing hand upon us. But I think it's very lovely the way it's brought in in the end of this chapter. In fact, I have sometimes said that it's in these verses that we learn in the simplest way what self judgment is. And I think this is very beautiful because self judgment, if properly carried out, is always in connection with what it costs the Lord to put away our sins. Now, that is if you just say, well, I know it's wrong, but I don't think. Is bad. I know other Christians have done the same. By then you've never really judged it in his presence. But if you have done something displeasing to him, then you get down and own to him now that it cost him that suffering on Calvary to put those sins away, and you really acknowledge it in his presence for them. You have judged the thing in the light of His presence and as to what it cost him. To put a race in, and I'm quite sure of this too. And I think this is another reason that it's brought in, in this connection now that when we think of coming to remember the Lord Jesus in his death, it brings to our minds fresh thoughts of his sufferings and death. And so it makes us realize that what it caused him to put away our sins. And so I say that that self judgment is connected. With what the Lord had to suffer for our sins. That's connected with the remembrance of him and his death. And to examine yourself is not to examine whether you're a Christian or not, but to take notice of those things in our lives that have been unjudged. Because I'm quite sure that if we judge the little things in our lives, they would never grow into the great things. If if you visited my home.
And I told you that I pulled out the weeds out of my garden and everywhere. And you came out with me to look at the garden and you saw a weed up this high and another one up this high and another one up high still. And you pulled him out and said, look here Gordon, I'd have to say, well I guess I missed those for two or three weeks. They would never have got that big in one week. And brethren, if we learn to practice self judgment in little things, they will never grow into the big things now that have to. Before our brethren sometimes for discipline, or perhaps bring us under this special dealing hand of God. And so isn't it gracious of the Lord? And I like to think of it in this way, as though he said I wanted the thoughts of my love and what I suffered for you to produce self judgment in your heart. But if it doesn't, then I'll have to put my hand upon you to produce it. And so it says. For this cause, many are weak and sickly among you. And many sleep so when it talks about. Eateth and drinketh judgment to himself. Now this is God's discipline that is talking about. For if you notice this 31St and 32nd verse, you'll see this very clearly. For if we would judge ourselves, we should not be judged. But when we are judged, we are chastened of the Lord that we should not be condemned. With the world, nothing can be more clear. Then the fact that the believer will never have to deal with God as a judge. Now, that is, we'll never come into condemnation for our sins, but God does deal with us as his children, and his discipline is a very serious thing. And sometimes this explains why it is that Christians may have more trouble in their lives than unbelievers. Because it says the time has come, the judgment must begin at the house. Abraham And if it first begin at us, where shall we ungodly and the Sinner appear? The unsaved man may go on, and perhaps God won't interfere too openly in his life, but after death the judgment. But as believers, He deals with us in this life, in this life. And So what he is telling us here is that very often because we have become careless and then he has to. His hand upon us, perhaps in sickness, but He judges us that we should not be condemned with the world. We're never going to have part in the world's condemnation. The question of that judgment was all settled at the cross, and it will never, never be poured out upon the heads of true believers. But oh, the the chastening hand of God is a serious thing. And so here we find in these verses that follow. What brings before us the truth of the Lord's government with us? And as I say, I think it's very beautiful that it's brought in in connection with the Lord's Supper, because the Lord instituted this supper for us, and He wants us to remember Him from week to week. And I'm quite sure, brethren, that if we really enjoy this privilege, as we should, if we really entered into in our souls what it cost the Lord. Jesus to save us. It will deepen in our hearts the desire to please Him. I've often thought what a wonderful thing it is that we have this because. We're so forgetful and we need to have our hearts recalled to the sufferings and death, and the Lord's Supper is the means by which He recalls our hearts to himself. We won't need it when we get home to glory. We'll gaze into his face. We'll never forget his love up there. We'll never have any tendency to sin up there, but down here we need something to remind us. He has given us his supper for this. And here I might just also mention that it says. Many are weak and sickly among you, and many sleep. This refers to the sleep of death. And first John chapter 5 speaks of the sin unto death. And some have said, well what is the sin unto death in a believer's life? Well, I believe it's just this, that if we go on in self will in our lives and we refuse to listen to all his pleadings of love. He may have to put his hand upon one of his arm and take him away in death. And isn't it better that he should take us away than leave us here to dishonor Him? He left us in this world. I've often said the sin unto death is the recalling of an ambassador. God has put His people in this world to be ambassadors for Him, but if we don't represent him like we should, He might have to take us away.
When an ambassador is recalled, he doesn't lose his citizenship. But he loses A privilege and it's a privilege, brethren, to be in this world for Christ. It's a privilege to be a testimony for him. And remember, we're not only a testimony for him individually, but at the Lord's table, where a testimony for him collectively. And the the Spirit of God would have us to realize this. There's no greater shame and dishonor in this world than the world looks on and sees that those who are true children of God. Scattered and divided so there is a testimony collectively. As well as a testimony individually, may the Lord grant that the real meaning of His supper and He pressed upon us now, that we may value the place and privilege that He has given to us, seek to walk in the good of it in the little time that's left to us. And notice here the way the chapter closes, the very last words of the 34th verse and the rest will I set in order when I come. No, there's some. There's some Christian. They were looking for a perfect group. And you'll never find it. And if you do, it's best not to get with them. Because if I found a perfect group, I wouldn't get with them because I'm not perfect. I'd spoil the group if I got among them. And so there is no perfect group on Earth. There was only one who was perfect. There were important things that Pearl had to set right. There were important things he had to bring before them. The assembly is the pillar and ground of the truth. That is responsible in connection with discipline, but there will never be perfection. And so says the rest. Well, I said in order when I come.