In the church.
in a convoluted sense yes you do, its not the normal Eucharist though.
first communion, first eucharist, eucharist, body and blood, bread and wine, etc.
Roman Catholic AnswerNothing can make the Holy Eucharist sacred. The Most Holy Eucharist IS already Sacred because It IS the Body and Blood, Soul and Divinity of Jesus Christ, Himself. The Most Holy Eucharist makes things that touch It sacred, not the other way around.
Yes. Catholics receive the entire person of Jesus in the Eucharist: Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity.
In holy communion, we receive the gift of Jesus Christ himself and are joined more deeply to him. All who have received him in the eucharist are strenghtend as the body of christ. The holy spirit unites us in our love for christ
The sacrament of Eucharist is normally given to children for the very first time at the age of 8 - 10 years. People who are not baptised in the Roman Catholic church can only receive the sacrament of the Holy Eucharist after their Baptism.
Holy Thursday celebrates the institution of the Eucharist.
the importance of the Eucharist is indefinite! You need jesus in your life, and the Eucharist is Jesus, so the average Catholic should receive the Eucharist as many time as he can in a week. he should go to daily mass, and pray and think about Jesus, the most Holy Trinity, and Our blessed Mother as often as he or she can, and offer our lives to them.
The only "holy bread" that I know about in the Catholic Church is the bread that is blessed at Easter unless you are referring to the most Holy Eucharist which is NOT bread, it just appears that way, it is the actual Body and Blood, Soul and Divinity of Our Blessed Lord, Jesus Christ. First communicants must first be baptized and then before they receive their first Holy Communion, they must receive Reconciliation.
Holy Communion (Eucharist) refers to the consecrated bread and wine which become the body and blood of Christ. The Holy Eucharist is the most important of the seven sacraments in that Roman Catholics receive the very body; blood; soul and divinity of Jesus Christ which in turn, bring innumerable and precious graces.
You receive the body and blood of Jesus Christ. As Catholics we believe that there is the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist, that it is his body, blood, soul, and divinity.