Paschal mystery, institution pf the eucharist

Cards (100)

  • The Eucharistic Prayer is the central part of the Mass.
  • In the Eucharistic Prayer, we remember Jesus' death and resurrection.
  • He then raises the cup and says "This is my blood" or "Do this in memory of me."
  • Paschal mystery is the passion, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ
  • Advent is the birth of Jesus and celebrate on the last sunday of november
  • Lenten is the passion and death
  • The Greatest symbol of love is cross
  • Persecution is inevitable for anyone claiming to be savior, liberator, or healer of this world
  • martyr are the one wjo sacrifice themselves to fight through there faith in God
  • The passover recalls the time when moses helped the jews to escape slavery in ancient egypt
  • alb is long white robe symbolizes purity of heart
  • chalice is the cup for the blood of christ
  • The lord’s supper is the connection with the supper which the Lord took with his disciple on the eve of his passion
  • Holy eucharist in greek word is eucharistia meaning thanksgiving
  • Concluding Rite includes Final Blessing and Dismissal.
  • Eucharistic Prayer includes the Invocation of the Holy Spirit (Epiclesis) which is a part of the Last Supper's narrative of institution, acclamation, commemoration (Anamnesis), and the 2nd Invocation of the Holy Spirit.
  • Communion Rite includes Our Father, Prayer for Peace, Breaking of the Bread, Communion Prayer after Communion.
  • From earliest times, the Eucharist has been at the heart of the Church worship, celebrating the memory of the life, death and Resurrection of Jesus Christ.
  • At its celebrations of the Eucharist, the Christian congregation gathers together and knows Jesus Christ to be present in its midst, according to the saying of Jesus that has been passed down: For where two or three are gathered in my name, I am there among them (Matthew 18:20).
  • The congregation prays and hears God's word, as it is communicated in Scripture; here also Christ, the Word of God, is present.
  • Old Testament: Jewish Passover Meal (Exodus Great Events)
  • New Testament: Last Supper - It was celebrated in the context of the Jewish Passover Meal.
  • Today: Holy Eucharist - it is modeled from the Last Supper.
  • The Holy Eucharist is the Sacrament of the New law, which our Lord Jesus Christ Instituted permanently, with his body and blood, soul and divinity contained, offered and received under the appearance of bread and wine.
  • In the Catholic Church, the Holy Eucharist refers to both the celebration of the Mass, that is, the Eucharist liturgy, and the bread and wine which after the consecration are transubstantiated (changed in substance) into the body and blood of Jesus Christ, Lord and God, a declaration formulated by the Council of Trent with an anathema against anyone who denied this.
  • Holy Eucharist is a Sacrament and a sacrifice.
  • Eucharist comes from the Greek word "Eucharistia" meaning "giving thanks", "Thanksgiving" or communion given as an opportunity to continue the memory of Christ's passion and unite ourselves to him.
  • From earliest times, the Eucharist has been at the heart of the Church worship, celebrating the memory of the life, death and Resurrection of Jesus Christ.
  • Concluding Rite includes Final Blessing and Dismissal.
  • Eucharistic Prayer includes the Invocation of the Holy Spirit (Epiclesis) which is a part of the Last Supper's narrative of institution, acclamation, commemoration (Anamnesis), and the 2nd Invocation of the Holy Spirit.
  • Communion Rite includes Our Father, Prayer for Peace, Breaking of the Bread, Communion Prayer after Communion.
  • The Eucharist is the Catholic Church's fundamental act of thanksgiving worship of God, constituting at once a Sacrifice-Sacrament, a Communion-Sacrament, and a Presence-Sacrament.
  • At its celebrations of the Eucharist, the Christian congregation gathers together and knows Jesus Christ to be present in its midst, according to the saying of Jesus that has been passed down: For where two or three are gathered in my name, I am there among them (Matthew 18:20).
  • The celebrant offers peace of Christ to the faithful raising his hands and with the sign of cross, and the faithful receives this offer of peace with bowed head.
  • The consecration words are one of the most important parts of the Holy Eucharist, commemorating what Jesus did during the last supper as he was instituting Holy Eucharist for us.
  • Having received the body and blood of Jesus and his blessing, we go to continue the mission and sacrifice of Jesus in our lives.
  • The ringing of a bell in the Eucharist evokes a spirit of devotion and worship.
  • The breaking of the bread in the Holy Eucharist reminds the body of Christ broken by death and rejoined in resurrection.
  • The elevation of the bread that has become the living body and blood of Christ through Consecration words and sanctification by the Holy Spirit (Epiclesis) is raised to signify the resurrection and apparitions of Jesus.
  • Epiclesis, or the prayer of inviting the Holy Spirit, is another important part of the Holy Eucharist, where the celebrant prays to the Almighty Father to send his Holy Spirit on the gifts and sanctify them, by which the bread and wine on the altar becomes the body and blood of our Lord Jesus.