Your word, O Lord, is truth: consecrate us in the truth. John 17:17

When Jesus instituted the Eucharist at the Last Supper, he held up bread and wine as two elements within which to make himself especially present to us. Since that time, now more than 2000 years ago, Christians celebrating the Eucharist have used the same two things, bread and wine, to ask Christ to bless this world and to bring God’s special presence to our world. Why two elements? Why both bread and wine? What reality does each represent?

I have always found this insight from Pierre Teilhard de Chardin particularly meaningful. Commenting on why both bread and wine are offered at each Eucharist, his says this: “In a sense the true substance to be consecrated each day is the world’s development during that day – the bread symbolizing appropriately what creation succeeds in producing, the wine (blood) what creation causes to be lost in exhaustion and suffering in the course of that effort.”

As a Roman Catholic priest, I have the privilege of presiding at the Eucharist, and whenever I do,  I try always to remain conscious of the separate realities which the bread and wine symbolize. When I lift up the bread, I try to be conscious of the fact that I am holding up for God’s blessing all that is healthy, growing in life, and is being celebrated in our world today. When I lift up the wine, I try to be conscious that I am holding up for God’s blessing all that is being crushed, is suffering, and is dying today, as life on this earth moves forwards.

Our world is a big place and at every moment somewhere on this planet new life is being born, young life is taking root, some people are celebrating life, some are finding love, some are making love, and some are celebrating success and triumph. And, while all of this is happening, others are losing their health, others are dying, others are being raped and violated, and others are being crushed by hunger, defeat, hopelessness, and a broken spirit. At the Eucharist, the bread speaks for the former, the wine for the latter. [Excerpt from Ron Rolheiser’s “Praying for Both – The Weak and the Strong” July 2023]

Author: DV Dan

A lifelong seeker of truth and oneness with God, Daniel has journeyed through the rich and varied landscape of Christian denominations in search of a deeper understanding of what it truly means to be one with Christ. This search has been one of both heart and intellect—guided by a desire to know Christ more deeply and to live in communion with Him. Through a transformative study of the Gospel of John, particularly Chapter Six, which illuminated the mystery of the Paschal Sacrifice of Christ and revealed its living expression in the Catholic Church’s liturgical celebration of the Holy Eucharist, led to his movement from decades of Evangelical Christianity to full communion with the Catholic Church, where faith and worship converge in the sacrament of the altar. Daniel holds a Master’s Degree in Theological Studies from the University of Dallas.

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