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Last
Updated on
March 18, 2007
The
Orthodox Church: A Visual Journey
Ancient Faith
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Holy Eucharist is called the "sacrament of
sacraments" in the Orthodox tradition. It is also called the "sacrament
of the Church." The eucharist is the center of the Church's life.
Everything in the Church leads to the eucharist, and all things flow
from it. It is the completion of all of the Church's sacraments -- the
source and the goal of all of the Church's doctrines and institutions.
As with baptism, it must be noted that the eucharistic meal was not
invented by Christ. Such holy ritual meals existed in the Old Testament
and in pagan religions. Generally speaking the "dinner" remains even
today as one of the main ritual and symbolic events in the life of man.
The Christian eucharist is a meal specifically connected with the
Passover meal of the Old Testament.
At the end of his life Christ, the
Jewish Messiah, ate the Passover meal with his
disciples. Originally a ritual supper in commemoration of the liberation
of the Israelites from slavery in Egypt, the Passover meal was
transformed by Christ into an act done in remembrance of him: of his
life, death and resurrection as the new and eternal Passover Lamb who
frees men from the slavery of evil, ignorance and death and transfers
them into the everlasting life of the Kingdom of God.
At the supper Christ took the bread and the wine and ordered his
disciples to eat and drink it as his own Body and Blood. This action
thus became the center of the Christian life, the experience of the
presence of the Risen Christ in the midst of his People (see
Matthew 26; Mark 14; Luke 22; John 6 and 13; Acts 02:41-47; 1 Corinthians 10-11).
As a word, the term eucharist means
thanksgiving. This name is given to the sacred
meal-not only to the elements of bread and wine, but to the whole act of
gathering, praying, reading the Holy Scriptures and proclaiming God's
Word, remembering Christ and eating and drinking his Body and Blood in
communion with him and with God the Father, by the Holy Spirit. The word
eucharist is used because the all-embracing meaning of the Lord's
Banquet is that of thanksgiving to God in Christ and the Holy Spirit for
all that he has done in making, saving and glorifying the world.
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The sacrament of the eucharist is also called
holy communion since it is the mystical
communion of men with God, with each other, and with all men and all
things in him through Christ and the Spirit. The eucharistic liturgy is
celebrated in the Church every Sunday, the Day of the Lord, as well as
on feast days. Except in monasteries, it is rarely celebrated daily.
Holy Communion is forbidden to all Orthodox Christians on the week days
of Great Lent except in the special communion of the Liturgy of the
Pre-sanctified Gifts (see below) because of its joyful and
resurrectional character.
The eucharist is always given to all members
of the Church, including infants who are baptized and confirmed. It is
always given in both forms -- bread and wine. It is strictly understood
as being the real presence of Christ, his true Body and Blood mystically
present in the bread and wine which are offered to the Father in his
name and consecrated by the divine Spirit of God.
In the history of Christian thought, various ways were developed to try
to explain how the bread and the wine become the Body and Blood of
Christ in the eucharistic liturgy. Quite unfortunately, these
explanations often became too rationalistic and too closely connected
with certain human philosophies.
One of the most unfortunate developments took place when men began to
debate the reality of Christ's Body and Blood in the eucharist. While
some said that the eucharistic gifts of bread and wine were the real
Body and Blood of Christ, others said that the gifts were not real, but
merely the symbolic or mystical presence of the Body and Blood. The
tragedy in both of these approaches is that what is
real came to be opposed to what is symbolic
or mystical.
The Orthodox Church denies the doctrine that the Body and the Blood of
the eucharist are merely intellectual or psychological symbols of
Christ's Body and Blood. If this doctrine were true, when the liturgy is
celebrated and holy communion is given, the people would be called
merely to think about Jesus and to commune with him "in their hearts."
In this way, the eucharist would be reduced to a simple memorial meal of
the Lord's last supper, and the union with God through its reception
would come only on the level of thought or psychological recollection.
On the other hand, however, the Orthodox tradition does use the term
"symbols" for the eucharistic gifts. It calls, the service a "mystery"
and the sacrifice of the liturgy a "spiritual and bloodless sacrifice."
These terms are used by the holy fathers and the liturgy itself.
The Orthodox Church uses such expressions because in Orthodoxy what is
real is not opposed to what is symbolical or
mystical or spiritual. On the contrary! In the Orthodox view, all of
reality -- the world and man himself -- is real
to the extent that it is symbolical and
mystical, to the extent that reality itself
must reveal and manifest God to us. Thus, the eucharist in the Orthodox
Church is understood to be the genuine Body and Blood of Christ
precisely because bread and wine are the mysteries and symbols of God's
true and genuine presence and manifestation to us in Christ. Thus, by
eating and drinking the bread and wine which are mystically consecrated
by the Holy Spirit, we have genuine communion with God through Christ
who is himself "the bread of life" (John
06:34, 41).
I am the living bread which came down from
heaven; if anyone 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 06:51).
Thus, the bread of the eucharist is Christ's
flesh, and Christ's flesh is the eucharistic bread. The two are brought
together into one. The word "symbolical" in Orthodox terminology means
exactly this: "to bring together into one."
Thus we read the words of the Apostle Paul:
For I received from the Lord what I also
delivered to you, that the Lord Jesus on the night when he was
betrayed took bread, and when he had given thanks, he broke it, and
said, "This is my body which is broken for you. Do this in
remembrance of me." In the same way also the cup, after supper,
saying, "This cup is the new covenant in my blood. Do this, as you
drink it, in remembrance of me." For as often as you eat this bread
and drink this cup, you proclaim the Lord's death, until he comes.
Whoever, therefore, eats the bread and drinks the cup in an unworthy
manner will be guilty of profaning the body and blood of the Lord.
(1 Corinthians 11:23-26).
The mystery of the holy eucharist defies analysis
and explanation in purely rational and logical terms. For the eucharist
-- and Christ himself -- is indeed a mystery of the Kingdom of Heaven
which, as Jesus has told us, is "not of this world." The eucharist --
because it belongs to God's Kingdom -- is truly free from the earth-born
"logic" of fallen humanity.
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Jesus Christ,
Our Lord and Savior
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