The Jewish Passover, the Last Supper, and the New Testament Sacrifice How are they connected? Part 6

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Additional considerations (Continued from Part 5)

One last biblical type to consider is this: the totality of the Old Testament Passover was itself a prefigurement of the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass in New Testament times, and the two taken together fulfill the requirements of “an ordinance forever”, which is quoted above. In other words, Christ transferred the fulfillment of the requirements of Exodus 12 from the old Jewish Passover, which He would no longer accept (Malachi 1: 10-11), to the New Covenant Sacrifice – the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. The New Testament counterpart of Exodus 12: 14, 17 & 24, is: “Do this in remembrance of me” (Luke: 22:19). The Catholic Church, through the Mass, continues the perpetual remembrance of Exodus 12:14, 17, 24, but in a more perfect way.

Just as the Jewish Passover was a re-presentation of the original Passover, done in remembrance of the night before the Jews left Egypt, so too the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass is a re-presentation of Christ’s sacrifice on the cross, and is done, as He requested, in remembrance of His redemptive actions on Calvary (Luke 22: 19). But the Mass is also so much more. It is the means by which the merits gained on Calvary are brought to us; it is the method Christ gives us to fulfill the requirements of John 6:53-59.

It should be noted that Paul links this requirement of John 6: 53-54 to the last supper. Again in 1 Corinthians 5:7-8 Paul states: “Christ is the Paschal Lamb who has been sacrificed…” But then notice that Paul adds an additional requirement to Christ’s sacrifice – “Therefore, let us keep the feast, not with the old yeast, the yeast of malice and wickedness, but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth” (As a side note – Communion hosts are made from unleavened bread).

So how do we keep the feast? We must eat the Lamb, the Real Lamb – Christ in the Eucharist. Here, Paul is restating the requirements of Exodus 12:8 (the Paschal lamb had to be eaten) and showing its connection to 1 Corinthians 5:7-8. In other words 1 Corinthians 5:7-8, John 6: 53-54, and the three accounts of the institution of the Holy Eucharist (Matthew 26:26-28; Mark 14:22-24; and Luke 22:19-20), are the New Testament fulfillment of Exodus 12:8

As was stated above in 1 Corinthians 11:23-29, Paul, gives a stern warning against receiving the Eucharist unworthily - reception by a non-believer, or by a person who is in a state of serious sin. His warning is very significant here, because it proves that the Eucharist is truly the Body of Christ. If that were not the case and the Eucharist is just a piece of ordinary bread, just a symbol as Protestants claim, how then could someone be “guilty of the body and blood of the Lord” just for eating a piece of bread, eating a symbol? If the Eucharist is just a symbol, it wouldn’t matter what state a person’s soul was in, or what the person believes. If it is only a symbol, then Paul’s statement here is pointless and has no meaning. Obviously, scripture is not pointless, so the only way his statement has any meaning is if the Eucharist is truly the Body of Christ. Paul’s warning here also ties in with John 20: 19-23.

Continued in part 7
 
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@zeland.―As a potentially interested reader, these posts #6 and #7 are the first I have seen. Would you care to summarize your seven-part series in a single short paragraph? It would help late arrivals, such as myself, to find their way around. Thanks.
 
Dear Bart.

Thanks for your interest. I posted all 7 parts in the hope that they would be listed in order. I have not been able to find parts 2-5. I will try to put this complete post on a website so it can be viewed in its entirety. Making a short summary as you suggested is not possible.

zeland
 
Here’s Parts 1-5:
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The Jewish Passover, the Last Supper, and the New Testament Sacrifice How are they connected? Part 1 Sacred Scripture
The Jewish Passover, the Last Supper, and the New Testament Sacrifice How are they connected? To the casual observer, the following questions may seem trivial. However that is not the case. A proper understanding of the relationship of these questions (and their answers) to each other will bring us to a more profound insight into God’s plan of salvation. 1 - Why did Christ omit the 4th cup of wine (the Cup of Consummation) at the last supper? 2 - On the way to Calvary, Christ was offered a c…
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The Jewish Passover, the Last Supper, and the New Testament Sacrifice How are they connected? Part 2 Sacred Scripture
Elements of the Old Testament Passover: (Continued from Part 1) An unblemished lamb would be slain; The blood would be shed; And the lamb must be consumed (Exodus 12:8) Elements of the New Testament Passover: Christ, the unblemished Lamb of God (John 1:29) would be slain (John 19:30); The blood would be shed; (John 19:34); And the Lamb must be consumed; 1 Corinthians 5:7-8; John 6:53-56; Matthew 26:26, Exodus 29:33. Note – Paul’s statement in 1 Corinthians 5:8 is a direct reference back …
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The Jewish Passover, the Last Supper, and the New Testament Sacrifice How are they connected? Part 3 Sacred Scripture
Continued from Part 2 Questions 1 & 2, have the same answer. Most Protestant commentators will say that Jesus refused the wine, on the way to Calvary, because it contained myrrh, a pain killer, and He wanted to suffer the maximum. While this could be a secondary consideration, it would be very minor one. The main reason Jesus refused to drink the wine o…
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The Jewish Passover, the Last Supper, and the New Testament Sacrifice How are they connected? Part 4 Sacred Scripture
Continued from part 3 The “it” refers to two simultaneous events, it signifies the conclusion of the Last Supper, and the conclusion of the Last Supper signifies the transformation of the Old Testament Passover sacrifice into the New Testament Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. Now in regards to question 7: how did the crucifixion become a sacrifice? It was Christ’s institution of the Eucharistic sacrifice at the last supper which turned the Calvary execution into a sacrifice, because the two sacrifi…
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The Jewish Passover, the Last Supper, and the New Testament Sacrifice How are they connected? Part 5 Sacred Scripture
Continued from Part 4 Now to answer question 8 - What does the word “THIS” refer to. This statement by Christ, was the apostle’s commission, where He gave them, as priests of the New Covenant, the authority to do everything He had done while He was on earth, including, and most important of all, offering this new sacrifice (The Mass), so as to feed His lambs, to feed his sheep (John 21:15-17) – feed them spiritually with the Holy Eucharist. Remember that on the night of the original Passover t…
 
And here’s Part 7:
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The Jewish Passover, the Last Supper, and the New Testament Sacrifice How are they connected? Part 7 and end Sacred Scripture
Continued from part 6 Also, consider this idea. If the apostles only ate a piece of bread at the last supper, then the last supper was invalid. Exodus 12:8 requires that a lamb be eaten, and bread is not Lamb. It should be noted that nowhere in the scriptural description of the Last Supper is there any reference to an animal type lamb being there! Why? Paul shows that none was needed, and he confirms that the apostles ate the Real Lamb when he says: “Christ our pascal lamb has been sacrificed” …
 
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