The Scriptural Basis of the Eucharist
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The Catholic Church traces the origins of the
Eucharist to the very actions and words of Jesus
Christ Himself as recorded in the three synoptic
Gospels, the gospel of Saint John and as described by
Saint Paul in the New Testament. The use of bread and
wine as an offering begins under the Old Covenant as
described in the Book of Genesis:
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"And Melchizedek king of Salem brought out bread and
wine; he was priest of God Most High."

Genesis 14:18
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As they began their exodus from Egypt, the Jews ate
unleavened bread (Exodus 12:15), made necessary
because of their haste to flee, and they continue to
this day to honor this occasion with unleavened bread
when they celebrate Passover; the last "cup of
blessing" at the end of the Passover meal was a cup of
wine used to celebrate the fact that God had blessed
His chosen people and would bless them again someday
in Jerusalem. They ate manna - bread sent from Heaven
- as they wandered the desert in search of the
Promised Land, finally settling there as God had
promised them. After they lost their land because of
their continued failure to keep the Commandments of
God, they were sent prophets who predicted that a
Messiah would be sent by God, a saviour who would
bring them back to their original place of honor
before God. He arrived about 2,000 years ago.

Jesus' life began in Beth-Lechem...the House of Bread
(Matthew 2:1). His first public miracle was at a
wedding party in Cana (John 2:2-5), where He turned
water into wine in response to a request by His
mother. With the miracle of the multiplication of the
loaves (Matthew 14:14-20), as Jesus blessed the loaves
of bread and distributed them, He prefigured the
superabundance of the unique bread that was to be His
Eucharist. After teaching and healing the sick and
working other wonders in the hills of the Galilee,
Jesus had developed a wide following with many
disciples. It was at the synagogue of Capernaum, at
the time of the feast of Passover, that Jesus began to
unfold the nature of His Eucharist to those who were
following Him:
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"Do not labor for the food which perishes, but for the
food which endures to eternal life, which the Son of
man will give to you; for on Him has God the Father
set His seal."

John 6:27
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When His followers asked about the nature of this
eternal food, Jesus replied:

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"I am the bread of life; he who comes to me shall not
hunger, and he who believes in me shall never thirst."

John 6:35

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When they heard this remark, some of His followers
began to murmur among themselves since they knew He
was just a carpenter, the son of Joseph. How could
this man be the bread of life? Yet Jesus persisted as
He explained Himself to them:

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"I am the living bread which came down from heaven; if
any one eats of this bread, he will live forever; and
the bread which I shall give for the life of the world
is my flesh." 

John 6:51

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This comment brought outright consternation to a
number of those who had followed Him. He was actually
telling them that they had to eat His flesh, an
unthinkable act. If His words were confusing or
misleading them in any way, then He would have
corrected their misunderstanding...but He didn't.
Instead, He emphasized yet again His meaning when He
said:
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"Truly, truly, I say to you, unless you eat the flesh
of the Son of man and drink His blood, you have no
life in you; he who eats my flesh and drinks my blood
has eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last
day. For my flesh is food indeed, and my blood is
drink indeed. He who eats my flesh and drinks my blood
abides in me, and I in him."

John 6:53-56
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Many of those who heard Jesus say this couldn't accept
it despite the fact that He explained and further
clarified His statements three times in attempting to
address their lack of understanding and their
unwillingness to accept His words. He tried again a
fourth time to help them comprehend what He was
saying:
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"It is the spirit that gives life, the flesh is of no
avail; the words that I have spoken to you are spirit
and life."
John 6:63

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After saying this, many of those who had been
following Him chose to stay away. He tried four times
to teach them and in the end only a few accepted His
teachings. Why didn't they comprehend Jesus, as many
still don't comprehend Him after 2,000 years? Probably
because they didn't understand that Jesus was the
completion of the Passover begun in Egypt over a
thousand years earlier. He was the New Covenant, the
Promised One - the Messiah - but He didn't fit into
the contemporary concept of what the Messiah should
be. Passover was commemorated by a meal - a sharing of
unleavened bread, lamb and wine - and Jesus had come
to give them Himself as the ultimate Bread and Lamb, a
meal to be consumed by all who wished to escape from
the angel of Death.

During the ritual of the Passover meal, there were
four different cups of blessing consumed along with
unleavened bread and lamb. The lamb was chosen after
it was slain without breaking any of its bones and
then cooked and eaten to renew the bond of communion
between God and His chosen people. The blood of this
lamb, spread across the lintel of each household, was
placed there as a sign to the angel of Death to pass
over the house so marked and protect each of the
first-born who were members of the household. Jesus
came to complete the Passover so that all could pass
over from death into eternal life. And just as the
Jews at the time of Moses had to eat the unleavened
bread and the sacrificial lamb to renew their
communion with God, so all were being asked to eat the
body and drink the blood of God's new lamb (Jesus) to
renew their communion with Him and be marked with the
sign of eternal life.

Jesus instituted His Eucharist at the Passover meal
that was to mark His passing through death into
Resurrection and everlasting life. It was in these
words that Jesus inaugurated His Eucharist:
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Now as they were eating, Jesus took bread, and
blessed, and broke it, and gave it to the disciples
and said, "Take, eat; this is my body." And He took
the cup, and when He had given thanks He gave it to
them, saying, "Drink of it, all of you; for this is my
blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many
for the forgiveness of sins."\
Matthew 26:26-28
Clearly Jesus said that He was giving His followers
His body and blood. It wasn't meant as a symbol as
many of His followers at Capernaum would have liked to
believe - it was totally Him. But did His disciples
really believe that it was Jesus' body and blood?
Saint Paul clearly states the beliefs of Jesus' first
disciples:

"Whoever, therefore, eats the bread or drinks the cup
of the Lord in an unworthy manner will be guilty of
profaning the body and blood of the Lord. Let a man
examine himself, and so eat of
 the bread and drink of the cup. For any one who eats
and drinks without discerning the body eats and drinks
judgement upon himself."
1 Corinthians 11:27-29

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Saint Paul was not the only early follower of Jesus
who wrote of this belief and practice. Dozens wrote
about it in the first few hundred years of the
Church's existence. This belief in the Real Presence
of Jesus in the Eucharist continues to this day in
Catholic worship and mainstream theology. Catholic
understanding of Jesus' presence in the Eucharist is
different than most other Christian denominations
which tend to see the eucharistic meal as a symbolic
rememberance rather than a real and substantial
transformation.

Perhaps the best way for the modern mind to attempt to
come to grips with the mystery of the Eucharist is by
analogy. Here's one analogy that might help in opening
us up to the unfathomable grace that Jesus gives each
of us in the Eucharist:

Let's suppose you had a wafer of bread and you exposed
it to a source of non-visible, sub-atomic radiation
for one minute. Would the bread be the same as it was
before this exposure? Remember, nothing that was
obvious to your senses took place when the bread was
exposed to the radiation...yet we now know that the
bread is not the same as it was before. It has changed
at the atomic level and there are now some radioactive
atoms that make up part of this substance. However,
the change that took place can only be perceived with
special instrumentation that extends the range of our
senses. If you lived two hundred years ago for
example, you would not be able to ascertain any change
in the bread and would likely think that anyone who
told you that the bread was really different was
slightly deranged!! Yet it REALLY has been changed. If
you ate it you might even get radiation sickness!!

In the Eucharist that Jesus gave us we have a more
profound change that takes place. The bread and wine
is REALLY changed into Jesus' body and blood. Can we
ordinarily tell this with our senses? No. We need
something that extends beyond our senses to determine
the actual state that exists. That extender of our
senses is Faith, a faith and trust in Jesus that
believes that if He says it, then even ordinary bread
and wine can be changed into His body and blood...and
by His words recorded in the Gospels, He clearly says
it four different times!! 

Taken From http://members.aol.com/bjw1106/euchmir.htm

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