At "The Last Supper" in The Bible, Jesus knew He would be crucified, so He gave the sacrament of bread and wine to the disciples. He said that bread was symbolic of His body, and wine was symbolic of His blood, so that by participating in this sacrament of eating the bread and drinking the wine, we would create a condition to claim Jesus as our "restored lineage". Since the Bible calls Jesus "the second Adam", this "restored lineage" would connect us with God's original intent for Adam and Eve.
Because He was creating a symbolic connection between the traditional Lamb sacrifice at the Temple of Jerusalem (used to acquire forgiveness for the sins of Israel) and his forthcoming crucifixion and death which He accepted peacefully in order to achieve the forgiveness of sins for future Christian believers. That is why Jesus Christ is known as the 'Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world'.
Bread represents his body
Wine represents his blood
because Jesus said "this wine is my blood and this bread is my body," at the last supper before he was crucified
Mass, which is a memorial of the death and resurrection of Christ, involves the breaking of bread and drinking wine. The first time that this (the breaking of bread and wine) was established was at the 'Last Supper'.
bread and wine
It is Jesus. The bread is His flesh, and the wine is His blood.
it was created by wine and bread
The last supper is the body and blood of Jesus, in bread and wine form.
For the last supper , the cup of wine stands for the blood of Christ shed on the cross.
bread and wine
The last meal Jesus spent with his Apostles is called the Last Supper, consisting of only bread and wine. Jesus said a blessing, saying that the bread was the bread of life, and the wine was Jesus' blood. If you go to a Catholic mass, there will be something called a communion, where you take the blessed bread and wine and drink it.
The bread. We are told that he took the cup "after supper" and blessed it.
Mass, which is a memorial of the death and resurrection of Christ, involves the breaking of bread and drinking wine. The first time that this (the breaking of bread and wine) was established was at the 'Last Supper'.
This is actually a fascinating question. It's hard to say exactly what Jesus may have eaten, but if you look at the typical diet in the 1st century, you can get a pretty good idea. Breakfast would have been a light meal perhaps of bread and cheese.