{"id":978,"date":"2019-11-04T16:49:26","date_gmt":"2019-11-04T22:49:26","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/?p=978"},"modified":"2019-11-04T16:49:26","modified_gmt":"2019-11-04T22:49:26","slug":"the-bread-of-heaven-and-the-blood-of-the-covenant","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/2019\/11\/04\/the-bread-of-heaven-and-the-blood-of-the-covenant\/","title":{"rendered":"The Bread of Heaven and the Blood of the Covenant"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft size-full wp-image-979\" src=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/37\/2019\/10\/communion-of-the-apostles.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"512\" height=\"341\" \/>The Eucharist has always stood at the center of the life and worship of the Christian Church.\u00a0 The <a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/2018\/04\/04\/sacrifice-end-sacrifices\/\">sacrifice<\/a> of the Eucharist is the preeminent act of Christian worship, the central focus of Christian life, and the constituent element of the church as community.\u00a0 Sacrifices are meals, meals shared together by the community with the community&#8217;s God.\u00a0 Several past posts have focused on the sacrificial nature of the Eucharist and its nature as a meal.\u00a0 There is also much to be said about the elements themselves, the food which constitutes this meal.\u00a0 Beginning by at least the seventh century and especially in the West, there has been considerable discussion and debate as to how the body, blood, and indeed the whole person of Christ relate to the elements of bread and wine before and after the consecration of the gifts.\u00a0 This discussion of the mechanics of the mystery is ultimately unfruitful in that it detracts from the more vital understanding of what the Eucharist, as ritual, does.\u00a0 The significance of bread as body and wine as blood in the ancient world generally and the Biblical world, in particular, is central to the institution of the Eucharist and its practice.\u00a0 Understanding these conceptual origins makes the Eucharist&#8217;s proper recipients, for example, as defined by the apostolic testimony, completely clear.<\/p>\n<p>Permeating the earliest known human literature is the horror produced by the shadow of death.\u00a0 Life for our most ancient ancestors was, as Thomas Hobbes put it, &#8220;solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short.&#8221;\u00a0 In their earliest stories, immortality was viewed not as something to be attained through a religious system or valiant deeds.\u00a0 Rather, it was something that had been lost in the past.\u00a0 It was a hope that had failed.\u00a0 And while the central drama of many of these stories surrounded the quest to reacquire eternal life, these quests inevitably failed.\u00a0 After all, even the divine kings of the first cities died and took up their abode in the dark underworld.\u00a0 One thread which connects many of these early epics and stories, from Gilgamesh to Adapa the Sage, is that the key to this immortality is the eating of a particular food, the food of the gods, over against the food which comes from the earth.\u00a0 The Greek gods ate ambrosia, nectar whose name means &#8216;immortality&#8217;.\u00a0 The story of Persephone inverts this imagery, with the food of Hades binding those who eat it to death.\u00a0 In Anglo-Saxon tales, the goddess Idun is the bearer of apples that bestow eternal youth upon the gods.\u00a0 The Scriptures speak of the <a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/2019\/09\/17\/the-tree-of-the-cross\/\">tree of life<\/a> in Paradise, whose fruit has the potential to bestow immortality.\u00a0 Humanity is expelled from Paradise explicitly to bar access to this fruit (Gen 3:22-23).\u00a0 Cut off from the tree of life and the other trees of Eden, humanity eats the food brought forth from the ground of this world.\u00a0 This food comes from the earth from which humanity was taken and to which humanity returns as a mortal creature (v. 24).<\/p>\n<p>After bringing the nascent people of Israel out of the land of Egypt, they began to complain that they had had food in abundance in Egypt, the land of death.\u00a0 In response to their complaints, Yahweh promises that he will send them bread from heaven (Ex 16:4).\u00a0 He promised to give them this bread daily.\u00a0 It would fall upon the earth for them to gather each day and only a day&#8217;s worth could be gathered, the rest would spoil.\u00a0 The exception to this rule was the day of preparation for the Sabbath, on which they could gather for two days.\u00a0 This bread became known as &#8216;manna&#8217; (v. 31) and a pot of it, as a witness to Yahweh&#8217;s provision, was placed in the holy of holies within the tabernacle (v.33-34).\u00a0 They received this heavenly bread for the entirety of their wilderness wanderings, ending as they approached Canaan under Joshua&#8217;s leadership (v. 35; Josh 5:12).\u00a0 This manna would later be called by the Psalmist the food of the angels (Ps 78\/77:23-25).\u00a0 Josephus describes manna as divine food and speaks of its sweetness, the connection to ambrosia&#8217;s nectar likely in view (<em>Antiquities<\/em>, 3.1.6).\u00a0 Manna is not only food provided by miraculous means but is itself spiritual food with miraculous preservative effects.\u00a0 For the forty years of wandering in the desert wilderness, the clothing and shoes of the people did not wear out (Deut 8:4; 29:5).\u00a0 Nehemiah would later connect the provision of food and the duration of this protection (Neh 9:21).<\/p>\n<p>In chapter 6 of St. John&#8217;s Gospel, Christ delivers his great discourse on the Eucharist.\u00a0 Unlike the other three Gospels (and 1 Corinthians), St. John does not record Christ&#8217;s words instituting the Eucharist at the Mystical Supper.\u00a0 Instead, St. John describes the washing of the disciples&#8217; feet.\u00a0 The apostle&#8217;s sense of the Eucharist is rather discussed in this earlier chapter and in terms directly related to manna.\u00a0 Here Christ contrasts the food of this world, which is brought forth from the soil through the labor of humanity since the expulsion from Paradise with the heavenly food which produces eternal life (6:27).\u00a0 His hearers respond that they would receive this bread and that Christ should do this sign as their fathers had eaten the heavenly bread, manna, in the wilderness (v. 30-31).\u00a0 Christ replies that not Moses but the Father gives bread from heaven (v. 32) and that Christ himself is the bread who has come from heaven to give life to the world (v. 33, 25).\u00a0 While the manna preserved the Israelites for 40 years in the wilderness, in the end, they all died (v. 48).<\/p>\n<p>While this produces confusion among Christ&#8217;s hearers, that Christ continues to say that they must eat his flesh and drink his blood in order to have eternal life, that he is the heavenly food of immortality, that he will offer himself as the sacrifice for a sacrificial meal, causes disgust and open disdain (v. 50-58).\u00a0 Human sacrifice and the cannibalism that accompanied it were considered monstrous through most of the ancient world, though it was acknowledged by all that it had taken place in their ancestral past and might, should sufficiently dire eventualities come to fruition, be practiced again.\u00a0 Places where such acts had taken place, as Mt. Lykaion for the Greeks, were places of darkness and dire prophecy. It is not coincidental that after the coming of Christianity, Lykaion&#8217;s peak was re-consecrated to St. Elias.<\/p>\n<p>Beyond even this offense, Christ&#8217;s reference to the drinking of his blood was particularly offensive to Jewish sensibilities representing a violation of one of the core commandments of the Torah.\u00a0 As seen in <a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/2018\/03\/05\/acts-15-law-church\/\">Acts 15<\/a>, there were four commandments of the Levitical holiness code which applied to all humanity, both Jew and Gentile.\u00a0 Two of these concerned the violation of consuming even animal blood.\u00a0 This commandment is retroactively issued in Genesis following the flood account where it is paralleled with the crime of murder (9:3-6).\u00a0 This prohibition is related here to the identification of the blood as the life of a creature.\u00a0 This association was near-universal in the ancient world.\u00a0 The Israelites were forbidden to use the blood beyond specifically prescribed rituals (such as ordination and the Day of Atonement).\u00a0 In all other cases, they were to pour it out at the base of the altar.\u00a0 In pagan practice, blood was sometimes ritually drunk or allowed to remain in slaughtered meat.\u00a0 More commonly, however, it was poured into the graves of the dead.\u00a0 In Greek practice, for example, temples typically contained both an altar to a god and the shrine of a hero, founder or another ancestor.\u00a0 The blood of that temple&#8217;s sacrifices was poured on the grave of the hero and was seen to extend the life of his shade in the underworld.\u00a0 Homer dramatizes this in the <em>Odyssey<\/em> 11.<\/p>\n<p>There is, therefore, a clear sense in which the drinking of Christ&#8217;s blood can be seen to be imbibing his life, the eternal life of God himself, as he shares that life with human persons.\u00a0 Beyond this, however, Christ&#8217;s words in instituting the Eucharist as preserved by other apostles clearly bring the Eucharist into parallel with another set of sacrifices from Scripture, not pagan human sacrifices.\u00a0 Christ identifies his blood as &#8220;the blood of the new covenant&#8221; (Matt 26:28; Mark 14:24; 1 Cor 11:25).\u00a0 The entirety of Hebrews serves as a meditation on the sacrifice of Christ and frequently uses this &#8220;blood of the covenant&#8221; understanding (Heb 9:20; 10:29; 12:24; 13:20).<\/p>\n<p>In using these words, Christ connects his sacrificial self-offering as participated in through the Eucharist to events at the foot of Mt. Sinai surrounding the giving of the Torah as a covenant.\u00a0 After receiving the covenant from Yahweh, the people are commanded to offer whole burnt offerings, animals given entirely to God, as well as peace offerings, a communal meal shared by them with each other and with God (Ex 24:5).\u00a0 This festal meal celebrated the gift of the covenant from Yahweh in gratitude and thanksgiving, the latter of which is the origin of the word &#8216;Eucharist&#8217;.\u00a0 The people gave thanks not only for the great deeds of Yahweh, the victory he had won over the gods of Egypt and their deliverance from slavery, and the further deeds which were to come.\u00a0 They also gave thanks for the commandments of the Torah which represented the rule of God over their lives as persons and as a community.\u00a0 This latter took the form of an agreement to keep these commandments which was sealed through their sprinkling with &#8220;the blood of the covenant&#8221; (Ex 24:7-8).<\/p>\n<p>This, then, has given an outline to the celebration of the Eucharist.\u00a0 Through the sacrificial meal of the Eucharist, human persons come to participate in the sacrifice of Christ and thereby also become recipients of the <a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/2019\/02\/03\/renewed-israel\/\">new covenant<\/a> prophesied of old and fulfilled in Christ.\u00a0 This takes the form of thanksgiving, of a Eucharist, for the great deeds of Jesus Christ.\u00a0 His victory over the powers of sin and death and the Devil is celebrated as well as that great deed which is to come, his glorious appearing to judge the living and the dead.\u00a0 Further, however, participation in the Eucharist contains an element of repentance and recommitment to keeping the commandments of Christ which are likewise good and the source of life.\u00a0 Just as those sealed in the covenant through Moses made themselves liable to the curses of the Torah for disobedience, so also it becomes possible to participate in the Eucharist without this repentance and therefore do so unworthily.\u00a0 The consequences of such participation are, in fact, even more dire for those who have &#8220;tasted the heavenly gift&#8221; and then &#8220;profaned the blood of the covenant&#8221; (Heb 6:4-6; 10:28-29).<\/p>\n<p>At every Divine Liturgy of the Church, human persons are invited to &#8220;taste the heavenly bread and the cup of life and see how good the Lord is.&#8221;\u00a0 They are invited to &#8220;receive the body of Christ and taste the fountain of immortality.&#8221;\u00a0 The fruit of the tree of life, the food of immortality, is offered to us as Christ offers himself to us.\u00a0 Christ who has conquered death offers to us his invincible life.\u00a0 The deepest and most ancient of human yearnings since the expulsion from Paradise is fulfilled in the Eucharist.\u00a0 The Eucharist, therefore, forms the center of life for a new kind of human person living in a new kind of human community, a life which has no end.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The Eucharist has always stood at the center of the life and worship of the Christian Church.\u00a0 The sacrifice of the Eucharist is the preeminent act of Christian worship, the central focus of Christian life, and the constituent element of the church as community.\u00a0 Sacrifices are meals, meals shared together by the community with the community&#8217;s God.\u00a0 Several past posts have focused on the sacrificial nature of the Eucharist and its nature as a meal.\u00a0 There is also much to be said about the elements themselves, the food which constitutes this meal.\u00a0 Beginning by at least the seventh century and especially in the West, there has been considerable discussion and debate as to how the body, blood, and indeed the\u2026 <a class=\"moretag\" href=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/2019\/11\/04\/the-bread-of-heaven-and-the-blood-of-the-covenant\/\">  <i class=\"fa fa-arrow-circle-right\"><\/i> <\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":13,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"jetpack_post_was_ever_published":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-978","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"yoast_head":"<title>The Bread of Heaven and the Blood of the Covenant - The Whole Counsel Blog<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/2019\/11\/04\/the-bread-of-heaven-and-the-blood-of-the-covenant\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"The Bread of Heaven and the Blood of the Covenant - The Whole Counsel Blog\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"The Eucharist has always stood at the center of the life and worship of the Christian Church.\u00a0 The sacrifice of the Eucharist is the preeminent act of Christian worship, the central focus of Christian life, and the constituent element of the church as community.\u00a0 Sacrifices are meals, meals shared together by the community with the community&#8217;s God.\u00a0 Several past posts have focused on the sacrificial nature of the Eucharist and its nature as a meal.\u00a0 There is also much to be said about the elements themselves, the food which constitutes this meal.\u00a0 Beginning by at least the seventh century and especially in the West, there has been considerable discussion and debate as to how the body, blood, and indeed the\u2026\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:url\" content=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/2019\/11\/04\/the-bread-of-heaven-and-the-blood-of-the-covenant\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:site_name\" content=\"The Whole Counsel Blog\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:published_time\" content=\"2019-11-04T22:49:26+00:00\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:image\" content=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/37\/2019\/10\/communion-of-the-apostles.jpg\" \/>\n<meta name=\"author\" content=\"Fr. 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Stephen De Young","image":{"@type":"ImageObject","inLanguage":"en-US","@id":"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/#\/schema\/person\/image\/","url":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/54dc899af5499978d3770526996cf817d0a8e3c9e776a06507dd686f6923d420?s=96&d=mm&r=g","contentUrl":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/54dc899af5499978d3770526996cf817d0a8e3c9e776a06507dd686f6923d420?s=96&d=mm&r=g","caption":"Fr. Stephen De Young"},"description":"The V. Rev. Dr. Stephen De Young is Pastor of Archangel Gabriel Orthodox Church in Lafayette, Louisiana. He holds Master's degrees in theology, philosophy, humanities, and social sciences, and a Ph.D. in Biblical Studies from Amridge University. Fr. Stephen is also the host of the Whole Counsel of God podcast from Ancient Faith and author of four books, the Religion of the Apostles, God is a Man of War, the Whole Counsel of God, Apocrypha, and Saint Paul the Pharisee. He co-hosts the live call-in show and podcast Lord of Spirits with Fr. Andrew Stephen Damick.","sameAs":["http:\/\/stgabriellafayette.org"],"url":"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/author\/frstevedeyoung\/"}]}},"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/978","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/13"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=978"}],"version-history":[{"count":5,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/978\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":1022,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/978\/revisions\/1022"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=978"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=978"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=978"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}