It was most fitting that the sacrament of the body
of the Lord should have been instituted at the Last Supper.
1. Because of what that sacrament contains. For
that which is contained in it is Christ Himself. When Christ in His natural
appearance was about to depart from His disciples, He left Himself to them in a
sacramental appearance, just as in the absence of the emperor there is
exhibited the emperor's image. Whence St. Eusebius says, "Since the body
he had assumed was about to be taken away from their bodily sight, and was
about to be carried to the stars, it was necessary that, on the day of His last
supper, He should consecrate for us the sacrament of His body and blood, so
that what, as a price, was offered once should, through a mystery, be
worshipped unceasingly."
2. Because without faith in the Passion there can
never be salvation. Therefore, it is necessary that there should be, for ever,
among men something that would represent the Lord s Passion and the chief of
such representative things in the Old Testament was the Paschal Lamb. To this
there succeeded in the New Testament the sacrament of the Eucharist, which is
commemorative of the past Passion of the Lord as the Paschal Lamb was a
foreshadowing of the Passion to come.*
And therefore was it most fitting that, on the
very eve of the Passion, the old sacrament of the Paschal Lamb having been
celebrated, Our Lord should institute
the new sacrament.
3. Because the last words of departing friends
remain longest in the memory, our love being at such moments most tenderly
alert. Nothing can be greater in the realm of sacrifice than that of the body
and blood of Christ, no offering can be more effective. And hence, in order
that the sacrament might be held in all the more veneration, it was in His last
leave-taking of the Apostles that Our Lord instituted it.
Hence St. Augustine says, "Our Savior, to
bring before our minds with all His power the heights and the depths of this
sacrament, willed, ere He left the disciples to go forth to His Passion, to fix
it in their hearts and their memories as His last act."
Let us note that this sacrament has a threefold
meaning:
(i) In regard to the past, it is commemorative of
the Lords Passion, which was a true sacrifice, and because of this the
sacrament is called a sacrifice.
(ii) In regard to a fact of our own time, that is,
to the unity of the church and that through this sacrament mankind should be
gathered together. Because of this the sacrament is called communion.
St. John Damascene says the sacrament is called
communion because by means of it we communicate with Christ, and this because
we hereby share in His body and in His divinity, and because by it we are
communicated to and united with one another.
(iii) In regard to the future, the sacrament
foreshadows that enjoyment of God which shall be ours in our fatherland. On
this account the sacrament is called viaticum, since it provides us with the
means of journeying to that fatherland. And on this account, too, the sacrament
is also called Eucharist, that is to say, the good grace, either "because
the grace of God is life eternal," or because it really contains Christ
who is the fullness of grace. In Greek the sacrament is also called Metalipsis,
that is, Assumption, for through the sacrament we assume the divinity of the
Son of God.
(De Humanitate Christi.)
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