This is my body. Matt. 26:26
But now I shall ask you a word; answer ye me,
Whether is the body of the Lord made at once or at twice? Is it both the flesh
and the blood in the host of the bread; or else is the flesh made at one time,
and the blood made at another time; that is to say, the wine in the chalice? If
thou wilt say it is full and wholly the manhood of Christ in the host of bread,
both flesh and blood, skin, hair, and bones, then makest thou us to worship a
false god in the chalice, which is unconjured when ye worship the bread; and if
ye say the flesh is in the bread, and the blood in the wine, then thou must
grant, if thy craft be true, as it is not indeed, that the manhood of Christ is
parted, and that He is made at two times. For first thou takest the host of
bread, or a piece of bread, and makest it as ye say, and the innocent people
worship it. And then thou takest to thee the chalice, and likewise marrest,
makest, I would have said, the blood in it, and then they worship it also, and
if it be so as I am sure that the flesh and blood of Christ ascended, then are
ye false harlots to God and to us; for when we shall be houselled ye bring to
us the dry flesh, and let the blood be away; for ye give us after the bread,
wine and water, and sometimes clean water unblest, or rather conjured, by the
virtue of your craft; and yet ye say, under the host of bread is the full manhood
of Christ. Then by your own confession must it needs be that we worship a false
god in the chalice, which is unconjured when we worship the bread, and worship
the one as the other; but where find ye that ever Christ or any of His
disciples taught any man to worship this bread or wine?
Therefore, what shall we say of the apostles
that were so much with Christ, and were called by the Holy Ghost; had they
forgotten to set it in the creed when they made it, which is Christian men's
belief? Or else we might say that they knew no such God, for they believe in no
more gods but in Him that was at the beginning, and made of naught all things
visible and invisible, which Lord took flesh and blood, being in the Virgin,
the same God. But ye have many false ways, to beguile the innocent people with
sleights of the fiend.
For ye say that in every host each piece is the
whole manhood of Christ, or full substance of Him. For ye say as a man may take
a glass, and break the glass into many pieces, and in every piece properly thou
mayest see thy face, and yet thy face is not parted; so ye say the Lord's body
is in each host or piece, and His body is not parted. And this is a full subtle
question to beguile an innocent fool, but will ye take heed of this subtle
question, how a man may take a glass and behold the very likeness of his own
face, and yet it is not his face, but the likeness of his face; for if it were
his very face, then he must needs have two faces, one on his body and another
in the glass. And if the glass were broken in many places, so there should be
many faces more by the glass than by the body, and each man shall make as many
faces to them as they would; but as ye may see the mind or likeness of your
face, which is not the very face; but the figure thereof, so the bread is the figure
or mind of Christ's body in earth, and therefore Christ said, As oft as ye do
this thing do it in mind of me.
Also ye say this, As a man may light many
candles at one candle, and yet the light of that candle is never the more nor
ever the less; so ye say that the manhood of Christ descendeth into each part
of every host, and the manhood of Christ is never the more nor less. Where then
becometh your ministrations? For if a man light many candles at one candle, as
long as they burn there will be many candles lighted, and as well the last
candle as the first; and so by this reason, if ye shall fetch your word at God,
and make God, there must needs be many gods, and that is forbidden in the first commandment,
Exod. xx. And as for making more, either making less, of Christ's manhood, it
lieth not in your power to come there nigh, neither to touch it, for it is
ascended into heaven in a spiritual body, which He suffered not Mary Magdalen
to touch, when her sins were forgiven to her.
Therefore all the sacraments that are left here
in earth are but minds of the body of Christ, for a sacrament is no more to say
but a sign or mind of a thing passed, or a thing to come; for when Jesus spake
of the bread, and said to His disciples, As ye do this thing, do it in mind of me,
it was set for a mind of good things passed of Christ's body; but when the
angel showed to John the sacraments of the woman and of the beast that bare
her, it was set for a mind of evil things to come on the face of the earth, and
great destroying of the people of God. And in the old law there were many
figures or minds of things to come. For before Christ, circumcision was
commanded by a law; and he that kept not the law was slain. And yet St. Paul
saith, "And neither is it circumcision that is openly in the flesh, but he
that is circumcised of heart in spirit, not the letter whose praising is not of
men, but of God." Peter saith in the third chapter of his epistle,
"And so baptism of like form maketh not us safe, but the putting away of
the filthiness of the flesh, and the having of good conscience in God by the
rising again of our Lord Jesus Christ from death, that we should be made heirs of
everlasting life, He went up into heaven, and angels, and powers, and virtues,
are made subjects to Him."
And also the Scripture saith of John Baptist,
that he preached in the wilderness and said, "A stronger than I shall come
after me, and I am not worthy to kneel down and unlace His shoe;" and yet
Christ said that he was more than a prophet. See also Isaiah xl., Matt. xi. How
may ye then say that ye are worthy to make His body, and yet your works bear witness
that ye are less than the prophets? for if ye were not, ye should not teach the
people to worship the sacraments or minds of Christ for Christ himself; which
sacraments or figures are lawful as God taught them and left them unto us, as
the sacrifices or minds of the old law were full good. As it is written,
"They that kept them should live in them." And so the bread that
Christ brake was left to us for mind of things passed for the body of Christ,
that we should believe He was a very man in kind as we are, but as God in
power, and that His manhood was sustained by food as ours. For St. Paul saith
He was very man, and in form he was found as man. And so we must believe that
He was very God and very man together, and that He ascended up very God and
very man to heaven, and that He shall be there till He come to doom the world.
And we may not see him bodily, being in this life, as it is written, Peter i., for
he saith, "Whom ye have not seen ye love, into whom ye now not seeing
believe." And John saith in the first chapter of his Gospel, "No man
saw God; none but the only begotten Son that is in the bosom of the Father, He
hath told it out." And John saith in his first epistle, the third chapter,
"Every man that sinneth seeth not him, neither knoweth him." By what
reason then say ye that are sinners that ye make God? truly this must needs be
the worst sin, to say that ye make God, and it is the abomination of discomfort
that is said in Daniel the prophet to be standing in the holy place; he that
readeth let him understand.
Also Luke saith that Christ took the cup after
that He had supped, and gave thanks and said, "This cup is the new
testament in my blood that shall be shed unto the remission of sins for
man." Now, what say ye; the cup which He said was the new testament in His
blood, was it a material cup in which the wine was that He gave his disciples
wine of, or was it His most blest body in which the blest blood was kept till
it was shed out for the sins of them that should be made safe by His passion?
Needs must we say that He spake of His holy body, as He did when He called His passion
or suffering in body a cup, when He prayed to His father, before He went to His
passion, and said, "If it be possible that this cup pass from me, but if
thou wilt that I drink it, thy will be done?" He spake not here of the
material cup in which He had given His disciples drink; for it troubled not
Him, but He prayed for His great sufferance and bitter death, the which He
suffered for our sins and not for His own. And if He spake of His holy body and
passion when He said, "This cup is the new testament in my blood," so
He spake of His holy body when He said, "This is my body which shall be
given for you," and not of the material bread which He had in His hand.
Also in another place He called His passion a cup, where the mother of
Zebedee's sons came to Him, and asked of Him that her two sons, when He came to
His kingdom, might sit one on His right, and one at His left side. And He
answered and said, "Woman, thou wottest not what thou asketh; then He said
to them, May ye drink of the cup that I shall drink? and they said, Yea, Lord.
And He said, Ye shall drink of my cup, but to sit on my right hand or left hand
it is not mine to give, but to the Father it is proper." But in that He said,
Ye shall drink of my cup, He promised them to suffer tribulation of this world
as He did, by the which they should enter into life everlasting, and to be both
on his right hand. And thus ye may see that Christ spake not of the material
cup, neither of himself, nor of his apostles, neither of material bread,
neither of material wine. Therefore let every man wisely, with meek prayers,
and great study, and also charity, read the words of God and holy Scriptures;
but many of you are like the mother of Zebedee's sons to whom Christ said,
"Thou knowest not what thou askest." So, many of you know not what ye
ask, nor what you do; for if ye did, ye would not blaspheme God as ye do, to
set an alien God instead of the living God. Also Christ saith, "I am a
very vine; wherefore then worship ye not the vine God, as ye do the bread? Wherein
was Christ a very vine, or wherein was the bread Christ's body, in figurative
speech, which is hidden to the understanding? Then if Christ became not a
material or an earthly vine, neither did a material vine become His body. So
neither the bread, material bread, was changed from its substance to the flesh
and blood of Christ."
Have ye not read in John the second, when Christ
came into the temple, they asked of Him what token He would show, that they
might believe Him. And He answered them, "Cast down this temple, and in
three days I shall raise it again;" which words were fulfilled in His
rising again from death; but when He said, "Undo this temple," in
that that He said this, they were in error, for they understood it fleshly, and
had supposed that He had spoken of the temple of Jerusalem, because He stood in
it. And therefore they accused Him at His passion full falsely. For He spake of
the temple of His blest body, which rose again in the third day. And right so
Christ spake of His holy body when He said, "This is my body which shall
be given for you," which was given to death, and to rising again to bliss,
for all that shall be saved by him. But like as they accused him falsely of the
temple of Jerusalem, so now a days they accuse falsely against Christ, and say
that Christ spake of the bread that He brake among His apostles; for in that
Christ said this, they are deceived, take it fleshly, and turn it to the
material bread, as the Jews did to the temple; and on this false understanding
they make abomination of discomfort, as is said by Daniel the prophet, and in Matthew
xxiv., to be standing in the holy place; he that readeth let him understand.
Now, therefore, pray we
heartily to God, that this evil may be made short for the chosen men, as He hath
promised in His blest Gospel; and the large and broad way that leadeth to
perdition may be stopt, and the straight and narrow way that leadeth to bliss
may be made open by Holy Scriptures, that we may know which is the will of God,
to serve Him in truth and holiness in the dread of God, that we may find by Him
a way of bliss everlasting. So be it.
I ponder the validity of literally the body and blood; yet still wafer and wine(or pure grape juice). Pondering such in contrast with metaphorically the body and blood; yet literally only the wafer and wine. I am not a Lutheran. I am in the Arminius camp.
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