T
Tim_D
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Jesus said, “I am the bread of life.”By His power. It starts out as bread and wine.
He did not say, “I will turn this bread into me.”
Jesus said, “I am the bread of life.”By His power. It starts out as bread and wine.
The Eucharist IS Jesus.
Actually, I am. The question was, “when was the first Mass?”And Tim is not discussing if the Last Supper was the First Mass…
I actually deleted that part (I mistook “tim” for the first poster…)Actually, I am. The question was, “when was the first Mass?”
I have provided ample teachings from the Church that the Last Supper was, indeed, the first Mass.
Hi BookcatCatechism:
621 Jesus freely offered himself for our salvation. Beforehand, during the Last Supper, he both symbolized this offering and made it really present: “This is my body which is given for you” (Lk 22:19).
scborromeo.org/ccc/p122a4p2.htm#621
Twas not the subject of the thread (see first post)…hence that was not what I was responding to.Hi Bookcat
These threads move along quickly.
We were actually discussing whether or not the Last Supper was the first Mass before you came onboard.
And I thought that the teaching authority of the Church, through her documents and through the catechism “knew what they were taking about.”I kind of thought priests knew what they were talking about but apparently Tim doesn’t.
Every priest and nun I’ve ever known has not believed that the Last Supper was the first Mass.
INSTITUE (verb used with an object)It was Instituted but not Celebrated - which makes perfect sense to me.
I take it that since the sacrifice had not happened yet, it could not be memeorialized.And I thought that the teaching authority of the Church, through her documents and through the catechism “knew what they were taking about.”
You take a webpage from the internet and ascribe more to it than you do the authority of the Church.
INSTITUE (verb used with an object)
to inaugurate; initiate; start:
I take it, then, that you do suppose that the Last Supper was a “dry run” for the apostles, even though Jesus said, “this is my blood…this is my body.” I can assure you that that is NOT the Catholic position.
Catechism:
621 Jesus freely offered himself for our salvation. Beforehand, during the Last Supper, he both symbolized this offering and made it really present: “This is my body which is given for you” (Lk 22:19).
scborromeo.org/ccc/p122a4p2.htm#621
Here’s another option, which is still better than The Last Supper option, it’s a spiritual one. To be a Mass there has to be a liturgy of the word (speaking of something Jesus did) and a liturgy of the eurcharist. Both these happened on the Road to Emmaus when Jesus recounted His entire past re the prophets and also calvary, THEN He and the two disciples broke the bread and celebragted the liturgy of the eucharist:
Just more confusion. I think it’s safe to say that the first Eucharist was at the Last Supper and instituted by Jesus’s divine power.Here’s another option, which is still better than The Last Supper option, it’s a spiritual one. To be a Mass there has to be a liturgy of the word (speaking of something Jesus did) and a liturgy of the eurcharist. Both these happened on the Road to Emmaus when Jesus recounted His entire past re the prophets and also calvary, THEN He and the two disciples broke the bread and celebragted the liturgy of the eucharist:
Fr. Vincent Serpa Fr. Vincent Serpa is offline
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Default Re: Did the first Mass take place on the road to Emmaus?
Dear L & F,
I see your pastor’s point: The Liturgy of the Word is completed by the Eucharist. However, we have to be careful not to generalize or absolutize here regarding our conclusions. It is certainly possible for one to recognize Jesus without both Scripture and the Eucharist. God is not limited in His use of grace. He can use anything or anyone to introduce people to Himself. Faith is always His gift.
The first Mass was offered on Calvary. Both the Liturgy of the Word and the Liturgy of the Eucharist derive from it. Because Calvary transcends time and space, it is present to us in the combination of the Liturgy of the Word and the Liturgy of the Eucharist. To participate in such Liturgy is the pinnacle of human existence. Heaven simply consists in more fully appreciating it.
Fr. Vincent Serpa, O.P.
Was the Eucharist instituted (the bread and wine became Jesus Christ…his body and blood…)? Yes. By his divine Power? Yes.that the first Eucharist was at the Last Supper and instituted by Jesus’s divine power.
Very nice how you reasoned this out. You should read my posts 7 and 8 since it was written by a priest who actually celebrates the Mass and says everything you do. Mass really means The Sending Out or Being Dismissed or Being Sent (Out) but it has come to mean Sacrifice, and rightly so.Perhaps (this is just my speculation) the Last Supper can be seen more properly as a part of a larger “First Mass.” Example: In a Catholic Mass, the priest consecrates the Eucharist, but the Sacrifice is not considered to have been offered until the celebrating priest receives the Sacred Species. If he confects the Body and Blood but does not receive, technically it was not a Mass (which is just shorthand for the Holy Sacrifice) - at least this is my understanding.
So perhaps at the Last Supper, Jesus instituted the memorial and communion, but the Sacrifice (Mass) itself was not completed until His death on Calvary. So maybe asking whether the Last Supper was the “First Mass” is like asking if the Eucharistic Narrative is a “Mass.” It isn’t, but it is a necessary part.
As to whether His Body and Blood in the Eucharist was glorified at the Last Supper as it is now, I don’t know. I think that it is possible because God is not constrained by time (I liked another poster’s timely comparison to the Immaculate Conception). But I could just as well see the Sacred Species not being glorified until Emmaus, or whenever the first post-Resurrection Mass was, due to the Resurrection bring the Liturgy to its conclusion (just like during the Sacred Triduum).
So I suppose the debate in this thread surrounding whether the Last Supper was the First Mass could be seen simply as an issue of semantics?Very nice how you reasoned this out. You should read my posts 7 and 8 since it was written by a priest who actually celebrates the Mass and says everything you do. Mass really means The Sending Out or Being Dismissed or Being Sent (Out) but it has come to mean Sacrifice, and rightly so.
Fran