From the treatise Against Heresies by Saint Irenaeus, bishop
The Eucharist, pledge of our resurrection |
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If
our flesh is not saved, then the Lord has not redeemed us with his
blood, the eucharistic chalice does not make us sharers in his blood,
and the bread we break does not make us sharers in his body. There can
be no blood without veins, flesh and the rest of the human substance,
and this the Word of God actually became: it was with his own blood that
he redeemed us. As the Apostle says: In him, through his blood, we have been redeemed, our sins have been forgiven.
We are his members and we are nourished by creatures,
which is his gift to us, for it is he who causes the sun to rise and the
rain to fall. He declared that the chalice, which comes from his
creation, was his blood, and he makes it the nourishment of our blood.
He affirmed that the bread, which comes from his creation, was his body,
and he makes it the nourishment of our body. When the chalice we mix
and the bread we bake receive the word of God, the eucharistic elements
become the body and blood of Christ, by which our bodies live and grow.
How then can it be said that flesh belonging to the Lord’s own body and
nourished by his body and blood is incapable of receiving God’s gift of
eternal life? Saint Paul says in his letter to the Ephesians that we are members of his body, of his flesh and bones. He is not speaking of some spiritual and incorporeal kind of man, for spirits do not have flesh and bones.
He is speaking of a real human body composed of flesh, sinews and
bones, nourished by the chalice of Christ’s blood and receiving growth
from the bread which is his body.
The slip of a vine planted in the ground bears fruit
at the proper time. The grain of wheat falls into the ground and decays
only to be raised up again and multiplied by the Spirit of God who
sustains all things. The Wisdom of God places these things at the
service of man and when they receive God’s word they become the
eucharist, which is the body and blood of Christ. In the same way our
bodies, which have been nourished by the eucharist, will be buried in
the earth and will decay, but they will rise again at the appointed
time, for the Word of God will raise them up to the glory of God the
Father. Then the Father will clothe our mortal nature in immortality and
freely endow our corruptible nature with incorruptibility, for God’s
power is shown most perfectly in weakness.
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