The earliest title of the main Sunday service of the
Christian Church is “the Eucharist”, from the Greek word eucharisteo, meaning, “to give
thanks.” As early as about the middle of the second century, Justin the
Philosopher (later known as “Justin Martyr”) wrote that the bread and wine
which the Christians received sacramentally was “called among us ‘the
Eucharist’, of which no one is allowed to partake but the ones who believe that
the things which we teach are true” (Apology, chapter 66). The ritual
service would also later be called “the Divine Liturgy,” and “the Mass.”
The Lord Jesus commanded His disciples to perform this
ritual on the night on which He was betrayed. Before noon the next day, He
would be crucified and hanging on a Roman cross, offering Himself as a
voluntary sacrifice to take away the sins of the world, and by supper-time, He
would be dead. He therefore instituted this ritual as the way of insuring that
His sacrifice would be powerfully present and effective among His disciples. By
doing so, He transformed what was a simple judicial execution into an enduring
sacrifice. The recurring ritual of the Eucharist was the means whereby His
disciples could benefit from that sacrifice.
The Lord instituted the Eucharist during His final
meal with them. It seems clear enough that the meal was a Passover meal: Luke reports
that prior to this, Christ said to His disciples, “When you have entered the
city [of Jerusalem], a man will meet you carrying a pitcher of water; follow
him into the house that he enters. And you shall say to the owner of house,
‘The Teacher says to you, Where is the guest room in which I may eat the
Passover with My disciples?’ And he will show you a large, furnished, upper
room; prepare it there” (Luke 22:10-12). The disciples obeyed the Lord, and
found the pre-arranged upper room. As Luke further reports, there “they
prepared the Passover” (Luke 22:13). At that meal, Christ said to them, “I have
earnestly desired to eat this Passover with you before I suffer” (Luke 22:15).
Some have suggested that this chronology is difficult to square with the information
in John’s Gospel, but Luke’s account seems clear enough.
At the beginning of this meal, the Lord took bread and
broke it. This was not unusual; every meal began with the breaking of bread.
But what happened next was unusual—as He gave them the bread, He said, “Take
it; this is My Body.” The apostles’ reaction is not recorded, but one can
imagine their alarm. The meal then continued as usual, with everyone eating
bitter herbs and the Passover Lamb and talking as people do at table. At the
conclusion of the meal, a final cup of wine was blessed and drunk. Again, this
was not unusual; every meal would be accompanied by wine, and every Passover
meal concluded with this third cup. But as Christ gave them the wine, He said,
“This is My blood of the covenant, which is shed on behalf of many.” As St.
Paul recounted it to the Corinthians (in a letter which predated the writing of
the Gospels), Christ added that they should do this “for My memorial”
(sometimes translated “in remembrance of Me”; the Greek is eis ten emenanamnesin). It is
doubtful that the apostles understood what our Lord was talking about, for they
had refused to believe that He was about to die. But His words sounded ominous
enough. It was only later that they would understand.
The surprising thing, given that the Passover meal
consisted of wine and the Passover Lamb, is that Jesus chose bread to represent
His body, and not the Passover lamb. After all, He had spoken once of His flesh
and blood being food and drink (John 6:54), so what could be more natural than
the flesh of the Passover lamb representing His own Flesh? Why choose bread for
the ritual rather than the lamb?
The Lord chose to use bread and wine for this ritual
rather than lamb and wine because He did not model the recurring sacramental
meal on the Passover meal (which was held only once a year), but on all the
meals which He had taken with His disciples. Lamb was not eaten at every
supper, but bread was, as was wine, and the Eucharist was not to be held only
once a year, but as often as the disciples would gather together. Thus the Lord
chose bread and wine, which they would eat at every meal.
And they did gather together regularly for a meal, for
following Christ was not like holding to a philosophy, but joining a family;
they gathered regularly to eat because that is what families do. And these
meals culminated in the Eucharist.
Christ met with His disciples on Sundays after His
Resurrection, and by this He was telling them that the first day of the week
was the day when they should gather together. Accordingly, though the apostles
would continue as good Jews to worship with their fellow Jews in the synagogues
on the Sabbath, they would also meet with their fellow Christians on the next
day. This day they soon began to call “the Lord’s day,” because it was on this
first day of the week that the risen Lord manifested Himself to them when they
gathered together. They would meet every Sunday evening for a meal—a full meal,
a supper (Greek deipnon),
during which there would be prayers, Scripture readings, hymns, and of course
stories about Jesus. The culmination of the meal would be the Eucharist, when
the one presiding over the meal would take bread and wine, pray over them,
break the bread, and all would eat and drink.
Some suggest that instead of having the sacramental
Bread at the beginning of the meal and the sacramental Wine at the end that the
Bread and Wine were taken together, probably at the meal’s end. It is difficult
to be certain about those early Eucharistic meals. What is certain is that by
the end of the first century or the beginning of the second, the taking of the
sacramental Bread and Wine had become separated from the meal itself. The
Christians would meet together before dawn on Sunday morning (which, of course,
before Constantine’s time was just another work day) and have the Eucharist.
They would then gather again later on that day for the meal itself, which they
called an “agape,” or “love-feast.” We know this from a letter that Pliny wrote
to his emperor, Trajan, in about 112 A.D. He reported that the Christians’
“custom had been to gather before dawn on a fixed day and to sing a hymn to
Christ as if to a god…With this complete, it had been their custom to separate,
and to meet again to take food—but quite ordinary, harmless food.”
What was this bit in Pliny’s letter about “ordinary,
harmless food”? Here we arrive at the heart of our faith and the central
mystery of the Eucharist. Pagans at that time believed that we Christians met
together to practice cannibalism, that we killed and ate a baby at our
services. Believers called Christ the pais theou,
“servant of God” or “child of God” (see Acts 4:27, “[God’s] holy Servant Jesus;
rendered “[God’s] holy Child Jesus” in the King James Version). It was easy
enough to confuse paisas
“servant” with pais as “child.” And, of course, Christians
whispered about “receiving the Body and the Blood.” What else could it mean
except ritual child-killing and cannibalism? That was why Pliny made a point of
reporting that at our meals the food was “ordinary and harmless”—no
cannibalism, so far as he could tell.
But if not cannibalism, what does this talk about
eating flesh mean? It is a stunning image, and one that goes back to Christ
Himself: “He who eats My Flesh (Greek sarx)
and drinks My Blood has eternal life…he who eats Me, he also shall live because
of Me” (John 6:54, 57). The Lord’s words on the night of His last supper should
be understood as a sacramental application of this earlier teaching—when the
disciples ate the bread at the Eucharist in the church, they also ate His Body,
His Flesh. When they drank the wine, they also drank His Blood. St. Paul taught
precisely this: “Is not the cup of blessing which we bless a sharing [Greek koinonia, participation] in the
Blood of Christ? Is not the bread which we break a sharing [Greek koinonia] in the Body of Christ?”
(1 Cor. 10:16). In some sense, then, the Eucharistic bread was His body, and
the wine in the cup was His blood. It was not a simple metaphor (like Christ
saying, “I am the vine” in John 15:1). Paul said that what was shared and eaten
actually was His body and His blood. And he said that some of those who ate it
improperly had sickened and died as a result (1 Cor. 11:30). No one dies from a
mere metaphor.
How then could Christ’s Body and Blood be present for
us? Because in the Eucharist the Church obeys Christ in making a memorial
[Greek anamnesis,
Hebrew zikkaron]
of His Passion. Most people today do not understand memory or memorial as the
ancient Hebrews did. For us, memory is something in our heads, a merely mental
activity, like day-dreaming. But in the Biblical understanding, a memorial is
something done so that God will remember and take action. Take for example the
blowing of the silver trumpets which Moses was commanded to make in Numbers
10:1f. The Hebrews were to blow the trumpets over their sacrifices “that you
may be remembered before the Lord your God and be saved” (Numbers 10:9). The
memorial was the act of blowing the trumpets; God remembered and took action.
Or take the example of Cornelius the centurion in Acts 10:31. The angel told
him that his “alms have been remembered before God.” That is, his alms
functioned as a memorial, and God remembered and took action—in this case, the
action of sending Peter to him with the Gospel.
It is in this Biblical sense that Christ made the
eating and drinking His memorial. By eating and drinking at the Eucharist, the
Church makes His memorial, and by the power of the Holy Spirit God remembers
Christ’s Passion and saves us. In this way, Christ’s Passion is present among
us. His death is not merely a past historical event, but a present Sacrifice,
effective and powerful in our midst. The Sacrifice is present on the Holy
Table, and by partaking of the Bread and Cup, we partake of His Body and Blood,
His Sacrifice.
The Eucharist is therefore our participation in the
saving self-offering of Christ. When we eat His Body and drink His Blood, we
receive His divine life and abide in His salvation, receiving forgiveness,
healing, transformation, and the power of the Holy Spirit. The Eucharist is
thus the fiery center of our Christian life. It is also what binds us together
one with another as the Church. Indeed, the Eucharist makes us into the Church,
renewing us and reconstituting us week by week as the Body of Christ. As St.
Paul said, “We who are many are one body, for we all partake of the one bread”
(1 Cor. 10:17). The Eucharist is thus the source of our common unity in Christ;
it is the ecclesial sacrament par excellence. It is not surprising if the
Eucharist was the liturgical context for all the other sacraments of the
Church. Even now in Orthodoxy, all ordinations are performed at the Eucharist.
Given the Eucharist’s central place in our salvation,
we should prepare ourselves carefully to receive it. We do this by fasting from
midnight the night before, so that we come to the Chalice with hungry stomachs
and hungry hearts. We do this by praying beforehand that we may receive
worthily, forgiving all who have sinned against us and hurt us, and repenting
of our own sins. We do this by living all our days in fervent faith, receiving
the sacrament of Confession regularly, being faithful in daily prayer and in
Scripture-reading, always striving to please the Lord in all things. In other
words, we come to the Chalice as Christians, as those who live for the Lord.
Thus every Sunday and every feast-day finds us at the Chalice, partaking of
salvation. We come every week because we need to. We come every week because we
are unworthy and sick, and need to be healed. We come every week because He
told us to. We come in the fear of God and with faith and love because without
this feast, we have no life.
Source:
http://myocn.net/eucharist-meaning-place-salvation/
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