The Belgic Confession, 1561
ARTICLE 35—THE SACRAMENT OF THE LORD’S SUPPER
We believe and confess that our Saviour Jesus Christ has
instituted the sacrament of the holy supper to nourish and sustain those whom He
has already regenerated and incorporated into His family, which is His Church.
Those who are born anew have a twofold life. One is physical and temporal, which
they received in their first birth and it is common to all men. The other is
spiritual and heavenly, which is given them in their second birth and is
effected by the word of the gospel in the communion of the body of Christ. This
life is not common to all but only to the elect of God. For the support of the
physical and earthly life God has ordained earthly and material bread. This
bread is common to all just as life is common to all. For the support of the
spiritual and heavenly life, which believers have, He has sent them a living
bread which came down from heaven, namely, Jesus Christ, who nourishes and
sustains the spiritual life of the believers when He is eaten by them, that is,
spiritually appropriated and received by faith. To represent to us the spiritual
and heavenly bread, Christ has instituted earthly and visible bread as a
sacrament of His body and wine as a sacrament of His blood. He testifies to us
that as certainly as we take and hold the sacrament in our hands and eat and
drink it with our mouths, by which our physical life is then sustained, so
certainly do we receive by faith, as the hand and mouth of our soul, the true
body and true blood of Christ, our only Saviour, in our souls for our spiritual
life. It is beyond any doubt that Jesus Christ did not commend His sacraments to
us in vain. Therefore He works in us all that He represents to us by these holy
signs. We do not understand the manner in which this is done, just as we do not
comprehend the hidden activity of the Spirit of God. Yet we do not go wrong when
we say that what we eat and drink is the true, natural body and the true blood
of Christ. However, the manner in which we eat it is not by mouth but in the
spirit by faith. In that way Jesus Christ always remains seated at the right
hand of God His Father in heaven; yet He does not cease to communicate Himself
to us by faith. This banquet is a spiritual table at which Christ makes us
partakers of Himself with all His benefits and gives us the grace to enjoy both
Himself and the merit of His suffering and death. He nourishes, strengthens, and
comforts our poor, desolate souls by the eating of His flesh, and refreshes and
renews them by the drinking of His blood. Although the sacrament is joined
together with that which is signified, the latter is not always received by all.
The wicked certainly takes the sacrament to his condemnation, but he does not
receive the truth of the sacrament. Thus Judas and Simon the sorcerer both
received the sacrament, but they did not receive Christ, who is signified by it.
He is communicated exclusively to the believers. Finally, we receive this holy
sacrament in the congregation of the people of God with humility and reverence
as we together commemorate the death of Christ our Saviour with thanksgiving and
we confess our faith and Christian religion. Therefore no one should come to
this table without careful self-examination, lest by eating this bread and
drinking from this cup, he eat and drink judgment upon himself. In short, we are
moved by the use of this holy sacrament to a fervent love of God and our
neighbours. Therefore we reject as desecrations all additions and damnable
inventions which men have mixed with the sacraments. We declare that we should
be content with the ordinance taught by Christ and His apostles and should speak
about it as they have spoken.
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