When Jesus said, “Do this as a remembrance of me,” Luke 22:19, He did not restrict this command to that night or the next day or to the Apostle’s generation. The gospels were written for all future generations.
And not only did Jesus say, “This IS My Body,” 'This IS My Blood," but the Real Presence idea is repeatedly foreshadowed in the Bible: In the story of the Nativity, in Bethlehem, which is Hebrew meaning “The House of Bread,” when Jesus is wrapped in swaddling clothes and laying in a manger, a feeding trough for yoked animals, we are looking at a picture of dead Jesus wrapped in a shroud on a kind of “dinner plate.” So, in the “House of Bread,” what do we see? Instead of bread being served, we see * the body of dead Jesus * being served as food!
In Exodus 12, note that the Hebrews eat the actual Paschal Lamb!
In Judges 19, note that the “priest” from the tribe of Levi, the priestly tribe, offers the concubine (1) from Bethlehem like Jesus (2) who rode an *** into Jerusalem like Jesus, in sacrifice, by shoving her out the door to the mob, to save those in the house, *and then he distributes the concubine’s actual body to the twelve tribes of Israel! *Judges 19:29.
There really is no doubt whatsoever. Jesus was commissioning the Apostles and their successors to replicate His sacrificed body and blood, for the consumption of the people, again and again and again and again.
When our Protestant brothers and sisters cast aside the Eucharistic meal as a feeding of the actual Real Presence of Christ,
they missed the boat.