J
javelin
Guest
I think there is a good reason for this. One of the most poignant things I learned about the Mass and the Eucharist came when I learned about how the Jews practiced the Passover meal.
There are other posts about this that explain it more completely than I can, but here is the gist of connecting the Last Supper with the cross: the Last Supper was not finished until Christ died upon the cross.
The key to understanding this is in the practice of the Passover meal. The meal consisted of four instances of communal drinking from a cup that was passed. In reading accounts of the Last Supper, the cup that Jesus offered with “This is my blood” is the third cup. After that, He says that he shall not drink of the fruit of the vine with them again, and so the fourth cup is never shared, signifying that the Passover meal (participation in the Passover sacrifice) is not finished.
The next part we know–Gethsemane, trial, crucifixion. Then, Jesus, recognizing the time has come, asks for wine from the soldiers. After drinking, He states “It is finished”. That partaking of wine was Jesus offering up the last cup and completing the Passover meal that ushered in the new meal and *new *covenant.
So there really is no distinction between what happened at the Last Supper and what happened on the cross; Christ’s death on the cross was the culmination of what He started the night before, completing the new sacrifice and replacing the old covenant forged in the blood of the Passover lamb with the new Covenant forged in His Holy Blood.
Our participation in Mass is partaking of the totality of that paschal mystery
Hope this helps!
Peace,
javelin
There are other posts about this that explain it more completely than I can, but here is the gist of connecting the Last Supper with the cross: the Last Supper was not finished until Christ died upon the cross.
The key to understanding this is in the practice of the Passover meal. The meal consisted of four instances of communal drinking from a cup that was passed. In reading accounts of the Last Supper, the cup that Jesus offered with “This is my blood” is the third cup. After that, He says that he shall not drink of the fruit of the vine with them again, and so the fourth cup is never shared, signifying that the Passover meal (participation in the Passover sacrifice) is not finished.
The next part we know–Gethsemane, trial, crucifixion. Then, Jesus, recognizing the time has come, asks for wine from the soldiers. After drinking, He states “It is finished”. That partaking of wine was Jesus offering up the last cup and completing the Passover meal that ushered in the new meal and *new *covenant.
So there really is no distinction between what happened at the Last Supper and what happened on the cross; Christ’s death on the cross was the culmination of what He started the night before, completing the new sacrifice and replacing the old covenant forged in the blood of the Passover lamb with the new Covenant forged in His Holy Blood.
Our participation in Mass is partaking of the totality of that paschal mystery
Hope this helps!
Peace,
javelin