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21: THE SYMBOLISM OF THE BREAD AND THE WINE 97 |
Question.—The Christ said: “I am the living bread which
came down from heaven, that a man may eat thereof and
not die.”
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What is the meaning of this utterance?
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Answer.—This bread signifies the heavenly food and
divine perfections. So, “If any man eateth of this bread”
means if any man acquires heavenly bounty, receives the
divine light, or partakes of Christ’s perfections, he thereby
gains everlasting life. The blood also signifies the spirit of
life and the divine perfections, the lordly splendor and
eternal bounty. For all the members of the body gain vital
substance from the circulation of the blood.
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It is evident that the bread of which the disciples ate and
were filled was the heavenly bounty; for in verse 33 of the
same chapter it is said: “For the bread of God is He which
cometh down from heaven, and giveth life unto the
world.” It is clear that the body of Christ did not descend
from heaven, but it came from the womb of Mary; and
that which descended from the heaven of God was the
spirit of Christ. As the Jews thought that Christ spoke of
His body, they made objections, for it is said in the 42nd
verse of the same chapter: “And they said, Is not this
Jesus, the son of Joseph, whose father and mother we
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know? how is it then that he saith, I came down from
heaven?”
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Therefore, it is evident that the spirit of Christ is a
heavenly grace which descends from heaven; whosoever
receives light from that spirit in abundance—that is to
say, the heavenly teachings—finds everlasting life. That
is why it is said in the 35th verse: “And Jesus said unto
them, I am the bread of life: he that cometh to Me shall
never hunger; and he that believeth on Me shall never
thirst.”
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Notice that “coming to Him” He expresses as eating,
and “belief in Him” as drinking. Then it is evident and
established that the celestial food is the divine bounties,
the spiritual splendors, the heavenly teachings, the universal
meaning of Christ. To eat is to draw near to Him,
and to drink is to believe in Him. For Christ had an elemental
body and a celestial form. The elemental body was
crucified, but the heavenly form is living and eternal, and
the cause of everlasting life; the first was the human nature,
and the second is the divine nature. It is thought by
some that the Eucharist is the reality of Christ, and that
the Divinity and the Holy Spirit descend into and exist in
it. Now when once the Eucharist is taken, after a few moments
it is simply disintegrated and entirely transformed.
Therefore, how can such a thought be conceived? God
forbid! Certainly it is an absolute fantasy.
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To conclude: through the manifestation of Christ, the
divine teachings, which are an eternal bounty, were
spread abroad, the light of guidance shone forth, and the
spirit of life was conferred on man. Whoever found guidance
became living; whoever remained lost was seized by
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enduring death. This bread which came down from
heaven was the divine body of Christ, His spiritual elements,
which the disciples ate, and through which they
gained eternal life.
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The disciples had taken many meals from the hand of
Christ; why was the last supper distinguished from the
others? It is evident that the heavenly bread did not signify
this material bread, but rather the divine nourishment of
the spiritual body of Christ, the divine graces and
heavenly perfections of which His disciples partook, and
with which they became filled.
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In the same way, reflect that when Christ blessed the
bread and gave it to His disciples, saying, “This is My
body,”
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and gave grace to them, He was with them in person,
in presence, and form. He was not transformed into
bread and wine; if He had been turned into bread and
wine, He could not have remained with the disciples in
body, in person and in presence.
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1. | Cf. John 6:51, 50. [ Back To Reference] |
2. | Matt. 26:26. [ Back To Reference] |