The Passover meal just before His arrest and trial was the event at which Jesus instituted the bread and wine as symbolic of His body and blood.
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Catholic AnswerAt the Last Supper in the Upper Room: St. Matthew 26-26-29; St. Mark 14:22-25; St Luke 22:19-20; the the most sterling account of the Eucharist is the entire sixth chapter of St. John's Gospel.Jesus gave the bread first and then the wine.
Jesus!.
the first nonunion was given at the last supper. Jesus offered his symbolic body and blood in the fiorm of bread and wine to his disciples.
Yes, it was the first mass and Jesus conducted it with his apostles.
It was unleavened bread made of barley or maize.
The bread. We are told that he took the cup "after supper" and blessed it.
The Lutheran Church does not hold to consubstantiation or transubstantiation because it refuses to speak of the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper in philosophical terns. The Lutheran Church takes a literal view of Jesus' words when he said, "This is my Body, and this is my Blood." He did not say, "This represents, symbolizes or means my body and blood, but this "is" my blood and body. Lutherans call this view "Real Presence" meaning that Jesus' true Body and Blood are actually, truly and substantially in, with, and under the bread and the wine. Thus, when one receives the wafer, one is actually and truly receiving Jesus along with the bread. The difference with transubstantiation is that transubstantiation holds that the bread is no longer bread, but wholly Jesus' Body. Lutheran's would say that Jesus is actually present in, with, and under the bread, but there is still bread present in the Sacrament. This view in the Lutheran Church is tied to First Corinthians 10:16 where St. Paul writes, "And is not the bread that we break a participation in the body of Christ?" In addition, Paul writes in First Corinthians 11:26 "For whenever you eat this bread and drink this cup, you proclaim the Lord's death until he comes." Also, First Corinthians 11:27 "Therefore, whoever eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord in an unworthy manner will be guilty of sinning against the body and blood of the Lord." These references speak of the Host being bread as well as the Body of Christ.
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.
At the last supper. That's the narrative recited at communion every mass, the story of Jesus giving bread and wine to his disciples stating that it was his body and blood.
The first celebration of the Eucharist is believed to have taken place during the Last Supper, which was a Passover meal shared by Jesus and his disciples. Jesus instituted the Eucharist by offering his disciples bread and wine, saying, "this is my body" and "this is my blood." The Eucharist has since been celebrated as a central sacrament in Christian worship.
you need to partake in the holy communion, but first you need to be born agian, that is you need to repent of your sins, then you take the consecrated bread and wine that signifies the body and blood of the lord Jesus..
Well first of all you must be born again to do such a thing but its basically praying the blood of JESUS over you or your family.