From the treatise On the Mysteries by Saint Ambrose, bishop
To the newly baptized on the Eucharist
Fresh
from the waters and resplendent in these garments, God’s holy people
hasten to the altar of Christ, saying: I will go in to the altar of God,
to God who gives joy to my youth. They have sloughed off the old skin
of error, their youth renewed like an eagle’s, and they make haste to
approach that heavenly banquet. They come and, seeing the sacred altar
prepared, cry out: You have prepared a table in my sight. David puts
these words into their mouths: The Lord is my shepherd and nothing will
be lacking to me. He has set me down there in a place of pasture. He has
brought me beside refreshing water. Further on, we read: For though I
should walk in the midst of the shadow of death, I shall not be afraid
of evils, for you are with me. Your rod and your staff have given me
comfort. You have prepared in my sight a table against those who afflict
me. You have made my head rich in oil, and your cup, which exhilarates,
how excellent it is.
It is wonderful that God rained manna on our fathers
and they were fed with daily food from heaven. And so it is written: Man
ate the bread of angels. Yet those who ate that bread all died in the
desert. But the food that you receive, that living bread which came down
from heaven, supplies the very substance of eternal life, and whoever
will eat it will never die, for it is the body of Christ.
Consider now which is the more excellent: the bread of
angels or the flesh of Christ, which is indeed the body that gives
life. The first was manna from heaven, the second is above the heavens.
One was of heaven, the other is of the Lord of the heavens; one subject
to corruption if it was kept till the morrow, the other free from all
corruption, for if anyone tastes of it with reverence he will be
incapable of corruption. For our fathers, water flowed from the rock;
for you, blood flows from Christ. Water satisfied their thirst for a
time; blood cleanses you for ever. The Jew drinks and still thirsts, but
when you drink you will be incapable of thirst. What happened in symbol
is now fulfilled in reality.
If what you marvel at is a shadow, how great is the
reality whose very shadow you marvel at. Listen to this, which shows
that what happened in the time of our fathers was but a shadow. They
drank, it is written, from the rock that followed them, and the rock was
Christ. All this took place as a symbol for us. You know now what is
more excellent: light is preferable to its shadow, reality to its
symbol, the body of the Giver to the manna he gave from heaven.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.