They are the same because they both talk about the blood and how they drank it and the bread on how they ate it but the things that are the same are ........ we talk about the holy communion and how we celebrate his birthday because its so special to people.
Catholics regard the Last Supper as the moment in which Christ instituted the Eucharist, the first mass. As all masses are a participation in the same sacrifice (Jesus Christ's sacrifice at Calvary), they are all in that sense a participation of the Lord's Supper.
The Last Supper of Jesus was a Jewish Passover meal, or Seder.
For purely cultural reasons. Some call it the last meal, for instance. To some, "dinner" and "supper" mean the same meal, for others they have both a dinner and a supper everyday, for instance on a farm: breakfast in the morning, then lunch, then dinner, then after the last work of the day, supper.
Jesus was at the last supper, I think Judas sat next to him, as Jesus said the betrayer is dipping in the same bowl.
In the last supper Judas was sitting near Jesus. then only was it possible for him to dip into the same bowl of food.
The "Last Supper" or "Lord's Evening Meal" was instituted in the Spring, on Nisan 14, the same day Jesus was killed. Matthew 26:26-30
In Christian churches it is called Holy Communion, the Lord's Supper, or the Eucharist. These all refer to the same rite.Another answer:You're thinking of the Jewish feast of Passover. Jesus was observing this feast with His disciples when He instituted the Lord's Supper.
Roman Catholic AnswerThe Last Supper does NOT reoccur in the celebration of the Eucharist. The Eucharist is the re-presentation of the Sacrifice of Our Blessed Savior on Calvary, not done again. The Last Supper was this same re-presentation but done before the event (the Crucifixion), making the graces of it present to the apostles in the upper room, just as the Eucharist now makes those same graces present now.
The Last Supper by Jacopo Robusti Tintoretto was a reimagining of the famous piece of the same name by da Vinci.
The same way as today: washing the hands in the prescribed manner, saying a blessing over the handwashing, and a blessing over the bread.
The same person he is everywhere else in the Bible: Simon, called Peter, son of John (or possibly Jonah) and brother of Andrew.
The Gospels of Mark and John do not explicitly mention the passing of bread and wine during the Last Supper in the same way as Matthew and Luke. In Mark, while the Last Supper is described, the focus is more on the institution of Jesus' body and blood rather than the act of passing them around. John's account instead emphasizes Jesus’ washing of the disciples' feet and his teachings, omitting the bread and wine ritual entirely.