Corresponding to the common expressions of the early Christians, the Eucharist is the «breaking of the bread» and the «sharing of the cup,» not simply
the bread and wine by themselves.
In the Eucharist the worshipper does not unite himself with Christ, but he receives the gifts of
bread and wine by which he expects inner nourishment from the sources of spiritual life upon which he depends.
Not exact matches
He also suggests that the eschatological prospect entertained
by Jesus is a later addition,
and notes that it has nothing to do with the gift of
bread and wine.
Now, we should note that the priest confects the Eucharist
by saying over the
bread, «This is My Body,»
and over the
wine, «This is My Blood.»
This is completely reflected in the teaching of the Church that in the Eucharist the
bread and wine are changed
by transubstantiation into Jesus Himself in Person:
Calvinists have thought more in terms of a spiritual presence to the believer effectively signified
by the
bread and wine.
Here the sun, the centre of the universe, its eastern rising, its brilliant light pouring past the great crucifix over the cathedral sanctuary, is mere material
by which the cosmic architect fashions a symbol that speaks of himself, his silent, humble presence in the
bread and wine that is given to be eaten.
If you desire publicly to confirm before the church this pledge of love,
by eating
bread and drinking
wine, the living memorial of the suffering
and death of Jesus our Lord, then let each say: I desire it in the power of God.
So we prepare a limitless table,
and there, surrounded
by a cloud of witnesses, we remember Christ in
bread and wine, Christ present, remembering us
and calling us
by name.
Instead of the twelve cakes, there are twelve disciples, there is the
bread and wine,
and the new
and everlasting covenant offered
by Jesus our Priest,
and eaten not at the golden table, but at Jesus» Table in the Kingdom of His Father (Luke 22:30).
Let us break the
bread and drink the
wine of a savior so subversive he was executed
by the government
There are perhaps parallels with the devotion shown
by some Christians to the consecrated
bread and wine at the Mass..
But as Catholic theology progressed, it was decided that the power of the meal was not in what happened during the meal, or in the gathering of people for the meal, or really in the food itself, but in the
bread and the
wine after it had been blessed
by the priest.
So lets not kid ourselves that Jesus wants us to believe that when the
bread and wine are blessed
by the human priest it is changed literally into Jesus body
and blood.
The tradition of using a tiny bit of
bread and wine (or juice) has continued to be practiced, even though it does not even come close to what was practiced
by Jesus
and His apostles on the night He was betrayed,
and reflects instead some sort of magical ceremony where some people believe that God is giving them special grace
and power through the ritual elements of
bread and wine.
nah — they believe that grocary store
bread and wine becomes the flesh
and blood of a dead Jew from 2,000 years ago because a priest does some hocus - pocus over it in church of a Sunday morning; that a being reads my mind whenever I pray
and intervenes to change what would otherwise be the course of history in small ways to «answer my prayers»;
and that I will survive my own physical deathand live happily ever after if I follow some rules laid down
by goat herders in Bronze Age Palestine.
Both told of a Last Supper linked with the blood sacrifice whose symbolic recreation
by eating
bread and wine provided salvation for all worshippers.
«We must say that the accidents of the
bread and the
wine, which are perceived
by the senses as remaining after consecration, do not have as their subject the substance of the
bread and the
wine, since, as has been said, that does not continue to exist.
He said that the
bread which was broken
and shared was» [His] body»; that the
wine which was drunk
by His friends was «the new covenant in my blood.»
It is associated in an intimate
and direct way with the eucharistic elements of
bread and wine and their reception, but primarily it is in the action itself that the presentness is discovered to those who attend
and receive the sacrament
by faith
and with thanksgiving.
He is,
and He always was the Life of their spiritual being,
and by giving his whole self, Body
and Blood, Soul
and Divinity, under the appearances of
bread and wine, He gave his whole being which is quickened
by his Divinity, to be the nourishment
and growth in wisdom
and goodness of us his people.
By the time Paul writes 1 Corinthians, it appears that the tradition was firmly established that part of the meal of fellowship between believers included remembering the death of Jesus as symbolized by bread and win
By the time Paul writes 1 Corinthians, it appears that the tradition was firmly established that part of the meal of fellowship between believers included remembering the death of Jesus as symbolized
by bread and win
by bread and wine.
offering of Christ to his heavenly Father, as we are nourished
by his risen life in the receiving of
bread and wine and so «make memorial» of him
and of all that he did
and was.
Presiding at the altar of Immaculate Conception on Fourteenth St.
and First Ave., with hundreds
and hundreds of ordinary Americans, I am consistently impressed
by the intensity of the response to the particularity of Bible story, of
bread and wine, of body
and blood, of confession
and absolution, of lively interaction with Mary
and all the saints,
and, yes, of miracles»
and all this concentrated as concentrated can be on Jesus Christ incarnate, present, helping, judging, forgiving,
and coming again.
Nevertheless, to be a Christian is to believe that the truth found in the Bible is the very same truth we enter into
by way of baptism, the same truth we confess in our creeds, the same truth we receive in the
bread and wine of the Eucharist.
But he maintained that through baptism supported
by the prayers of the Church the infant is cleansed
and renewed
and that in the Lord's Supper the
bread and the
wine contain the real flesh
and the real blood of Christ.
He defended the taking of
bread and wine, the body
and the blood,
by the laity, which was in no sense a heretical practice.
He commenced the blessing: «Blessed art thou, O Lord our God, King of the universe...»; Then, with his mind's eye first on the loaf of
bread baked from barley flour, he said, «who brought forth
bread from the earth...; then for the pot of lentils he prayed, «who created different kinds of seeds...,»
and for the plate of onions and radishes, «who created different kinds of herbs...» For the locusts fried in a batter of honey and flour, he continued, «by whose word all things exist...»; for the bowl of figs, «who created the fruit of the tree...»; for the wine, «who created the fruit of the vine...» And for the baked fish, he exclaimed, «Blessed be the One who created this baked fish; how beautiful it is!&raq
and for the plate of onions
and radishes, «who created different kinds of herbs...» For the locusts fried in a batter of honey and flour, he continued, «by whose word all things exist...»; for the bowl of figs, «who created the fruit of the tree...»; for the wine, «who created the fruit of the vine...» And for the baked fish, he exclaimed, «Blessed be the One who created this baked fish; how beautiful it is!&raq
and radishes, «who created different kinds of herbs...» For the locusts fried in a batter of honey
and flour, he continued, «by whose word all things exist...»; for the bowl of figs, «who created the fruit of the tree...»; for the wine, «who created the fruit of the vine...» And for the baked fish, he exclaimed, «Blessed be the One who created this baked fish; how beautiful it is!&raq
and flour, he continued, «
by whose word all things exist...»; for the bowl of figs, «who created the fruit of the tree...»; for the
wine, «who created the fruit of the vine...»
And for the baked fish, he exclaimed, «Blessed be the One who created this baked fish; how beautiful it is!&raq
And for the baked fish, he exclaimed, «Blessed be the One who created this baked fish; how beautiful it is!»
Often the dancers,
by way of candles, banners, tambourines,
and the use of liturgical color
and symbols (
bread,
wine, gifts), can announce the worship themes.
If you took a step back
and looked at what y» all do in an objective way, i.e. followed some book word for word written
by over 100 people over a 900 year period, gather weekly in a building
and sing songs together
and eat
bread and drink
wine as if it were anything but what it is, list goes on.
The symbolism of the
bread as Jesus» body to be eaten
and the
wine as his blood to be drunk
by his disciples in remembrance of his death
and in anticipation of his coming is not crucial to the narrative of the Fourth Gospel as it is to that of the synoptics.
By 1673, across Ireland, military and civil officials were required to swear by oath that bread and wine could not be turned into the Body and Blood of Jesus Chris
By 1673, across Ireland, military
and civil officials were required to swear
by oath that bread and wine could not be turned into the Body and Blood of Jesus Chris
by oath that
bread and wine could not be turned into the Body
and Blood of Jesus Christ.
Whether they fed on him
by faith in their hearts with thanksgiving
by eating the
bread and drinking the
wine with «him at meal, or whether they gratefully permitted him to wash
and dry their feet before the meal in anticipation of being cleansed
by his blood on the cross, the meaning of both symbols was the same: We are saved from sin
and transformed into new creatures in Christ Jesus only as we freely
and gladly receive from him the benefits of his passion
and death on the cross for our redemption.
It is sufficient to know that he is truly there
by the instrumentality of
bread and wine taken, blessed,
and shared.
And... bread is brought, and wine and water, and the president similarly sends up prayers and thanksgiving to the best of his ability, and the congregation assents, saying the Amen; the distribution and reception of the consecrated [elements] by each one takes place and they are sent to the absent by the deacons.
And...
bread is brought,
and wine and water, and the president similarly sends up prayers and thanksgiving to the best of his ability, and the congregation assents, saying the Amen; the distribution and reception of the consecrated [elements] by each one takes place and they are sent to the absent by the deacons.
and wine and water, and the president similarly sends up prayers and thanksgiving to the best of his ability, and the congregation assents, saying the Amen; the distribution and reception of the consecrated [elements] by each one takes place and they are sent to the absent by the deacons.
and water,
and the president similarly sends up prayers and thanksgiving to the best of his ability, and the congregation assents, saying the Amen; the distribution and reception of the consecrated [elements] by each one takes place and they are sent to the absent by the deacons.
and the president similarly sends up prayers
and thanksgiving to the best of his ability, and the congregation assents, saying the Amen; the distribution and reception of the consecrated [elements] by each one takes place and they are sent to the absent by the deacons.
and thanksgiving to the best of his ability,
and the congregation assents, saying the Amen; the distribution and reception of the consecrated [elements] by each one takes place and they are sent to the absent by the deacons.
and the congregation assents, saying the Amen; the distribution
and reception of the consecrated [elements] by each one takes place and they are sent to the absent by the deacons.
and reception of the consecrated [elements]
by each one takes place
and they are sent to the absent by the deacons.
and they are sent to the absent
by the deacons....
The fact that Melchizedek, l6 the priest - king of Jerusalem (already identified with Christ in Hebrews), offered
bread and wine (Gen. 14:18) made it natural for the royal priestly people to think of their cultural celebrant
and spokesman,
by assimilation, as their high priest.
By turning together toward the Lord - who - comes — now, under the forms of
bread and wine; later, as the Risen Lord who will hand everything over to the Father so that «God may be all in all» (1 Corinthians 15.28)-- the praying Church would be regularly reminded that Christians are the people who know how the world's story is going to turn out.
Wine and fresh
bread, cheese, meats, fruits, vegetables,
and pastries from the open - air market down the block were enjoyed
by everyone.
Every Grain of Rice — authentic Chinese home - cooking Breakfast for Dinner — sweet
and savory breakfast combinations re-purposed for dinnertime The Little Paris Kitchen — classic French cooking made simple enough for every day
by TV star Rachel Khoo Sicilia in Cucina — gorgeous, dual - language cookbook focused on the regional flavors of Sicily Venezia in Cucina — sister book to Sicilia in Cucina, but focused on Venice Vegetable Literacy — highly informative vegetable cookbook / encyclopedia, a great resource for enthusiastic kitchen gardeners The Chef's Collaborative — creative recipes from a number of chefs celebrating local, seasonal produce Home Made Summer — a sequel to Home Made
and Home Made Winter, packed with simple, summery recipes that make the most of the season's bounty Try This At Home — a fun introduction to molecular gastronomy techniques through the ever creative eyes of Top - Chef Winner Richard Blais Cooking with Flowers — full of sweet recipes that can be made from the flowers in your neighborhood, like lilacs, marigolds,
and daylilies Vegetarian Everyday — healthy, creative recipes from the couple behind Green Kitchen Stories The Southern Vegetarian — favorite Southern comfort food classics turned vegetarian
by the folks at The Chubby Vegetarian Le Pain Quotidien — simple soups, salads,
breads,
and desserts from the well - loved Belgian chain Live Fire — ambitious live - fire cooking projects that range from roasting an entire lamb on an iron cross to stuffing burgers with blue cheese to throw on your grill True Brews — a great, accessible introduction to brewing your own soda, kombucha, kefir, cider, beer, mead, sake,
and fruit
wine Le Petit Paris — a cute little book of classic sweet
and savory French dishes, miniaturized for your next cocktail party Wild Rosemary & Lemon Cake — regional Italian cookbook focused on the flavors of the Amalfi coast Vedge — creative, playful vegan recipes from Philadelphia's popular restaurant of the same Full of Flavor — a whimsical cookbook that builds intense flavor around 18 key ingredients Le Pigeon — ambitious but amazing recipes for cooking meat of all sorts, from lamb tongue to eel to bison Pickles, Pigs,
and Whiskey — a journey through Southern food in many forms, from home pickling
and meat curing to making a perfect gumbo Jenny McCoy's Desserts for Every Season — gorgeous, unique desserts that make the most of each season's best fruits, nuts,
and vegetables Winter Cocktails — warm toddies, creamy eggnogs, festive punches,
and everything else you need to get you through the colder months Bountiful — produce - heavy, garden - inspired recipe from Diane
and Todd of White on Rice Couple Melt — macaroni
and cheese taken to extremes you would never have thought of, in the best way possible The Craft Beer Cookbook — all your favorite comfort food recipes infused with the flavors of craft beers, from beer expert Jackie of The Beeroness
after a huge dump of snow in nyc i'm recalling some wonderful times when we used to start early in the day with big pots of soup, homemade
bread and by dinner all our straggler friends bringing the
wine.
«Whether it's a Catholic child seeing the communion
bread and wine, a Jewish child hearing the Hebrew prayers, or a Hindu child smelling the incense in the temple,
by experiencing rituals kids come to appreciate the predictability of a religious service, if not the deeper meaning.»
Tip: this recipe is great with flax seed crackers, Ezenkiel
bread or the rosemary crackers sold
by Pure Food &
Wine (
by brand name one lucky duck, in health stores
and whole foods).
The Valle Callde is a blend of Northern Italian
wines chosen
by Prosecco's expert oenologists,
and features intense fruity accents, with slight crust of
bread notes.
A bistro - style salad that's hard to improve on — although you can't go wrong
by adding a bit of crusty
bread and a glass of chilled white
wine, too.
Frequented
by guests
and locals, our chic Lisbon restaurant, AdLib, blends Portuguese flavors with French cuisine
and the rituals of
bread,
wine and cheese.
Surrounded
by native Casuarina trees 2 Queen rooms with ensuites (each with bath & separate shower) Small kitchen (cook top, microwave, appliances, pots & pans) TV, DVD, CD, VCR Wood fire, ceiling fans, reverse cycle air conditioning Outdoor furniture & gas barbecue Linen
and towels provided Breakfast provisions (Bacon, eggs, mushrooms, tomatoes, juice, milk, selection of cereals,
bread, jams, spreads, teas / coffees)
Wine, cheese plate & surprises
The Paella was indisputably the best I've ever had, but since William truly aims to please — his cooking lesson luncheon also comes with delicious appetizers including a marvelous ceviche that tantalizes the taste buds, a beautifully fresh salad, freshly baked
bread,
and a magnificent profiterole for dessert, all accompanied
by fine
wines.
in all rooms
and common areas - Free Open WiFi (100Mb) in all rooms
and common areas / Free use of laptops / Free prints for your next boarding pass or tickets - Free flow Breakfast anytime you wake up (including cereals, muesli, fresh fruits, eggs, yoghurt, fruit jams, choco cream,
bread, juices, milk, butter, honey etc.)- Free Welcome Drink (pint of beer, glass of
wine, coffee, cappuccino, juices, softdrinks...)- Free Dinner at our typical Italian Aperitivo (7pm - 9 pm)- 24 hours Reception
and Bar - 24 hours Free flow Coffee, Tea
and Mate - 24 hours guests» Kitchen with free food - 3 open air Terraces with hammocks, vegetable gardens
and BBQ - Lounge with TVsat (with DVD, Wii PS3), boardgames, pingpong, fussball, arcade games etc. etc. - Musical instruments (piano, 6/12 string guitars)- Free Tours
and Infos / Free city maps -
By request: Free shampoos & soaps / Free earplugs / Free Hairdryer / Free Iron board - Free locks / Free lockers / Free safe deposit box at the reception / Free luggage storage - Free linen / Free towels (by request)- Pets are more than welcome (in private rooms)- all taxes included (10 % VAT and 2.00 $ p / night Milan Tourist Tax) Atmosphere: If you want a quiet and relaxed environment, our kitchen and our beautiful 6th floor rooftop are always open only for our guests; to the ones who want to meet people and have some drinks, our bar is the right place to b
By request: Free shampoos & soaps / Free earplugs / Free Hairdryer / Free Iron board - Free locks / Free lockers / Free safe deposit box at the reception / Free luggage storage - Free linen / Free towels (
by request)- Pets are more than welcome (in private rooms)- all taxes included (10 % VAT and 2.00 $ p / night Milan Tourist Tax) Atmosphere: If you want a quiet and relaxed environment, our kitchen and our beautiful 6th floor rooftop are always open only for our guests; to the ones who want to meet people and have some drinks, our bar is the right place to b
by request)- Pets are more than welcome (in private rooms)- all taxes included (10 % VAT
and 2.00 $ p / night Milan Tourist Tax) Atmosphere: If you want a quiet
and relaxed environment, our kitchen
and our beautiful 6th floor rooftop are always open only for our guests; to the ones who want to meet people
and have some drinks, our bar is the right place to be!
After a brief tour
and history of the church
and grounds, we sat down to gorgeous views
and a delicious meal of local meats, cheeses,
bread, olives, fruit,
and of course
wine, all prepared
by the lady of the castle.
Watch as the sun sets over the beautiful MacDonnell Ranges then dismount at the Frontier Camel Farm to enjoy a dinner of native foods, baked fillet of fish or prime beef
and homemade wattle seed
bread accompanied
by beer or
wine, freshly brewed tea or coffee,
and delicious desserts.