Friday, April 3, 2026

40. The Last Supper


 
I. In the Last Supper Jesus Christ exhibits His love, and proves Himself to be our best Friend. The account of it begins: “having loved His own who were in the world, He loved them to the end” (John xiii. 1). This was the farewell banquet on the last evening of His earthly life; in it He delivered His Testament, His final word of love, and bequeathed us a keepsake and eternal memorial of Himself. This bequest was not His portrait, not even the most valuable of His created works, not an empty type or figure of Himself; it was Himself under the form of a simple creature, it was His own Body and Blood, it was the food of eternal life for our souls under the appearance of perishable bodily nourishment. This gift was not bestowed in its reality on the twelve alone, and as a mere historical remembrance for succeeding generations, but it was to be a personal gift for every human being to the end of time; it was to be the means of incorporating Christ, not merely with the human species in general, but with each individual soul. In this Supper Our Lord gives expression in act to that which He declared of old: “My delights are to be with the children of men” (Prov. viii. 31); and He literally fulfils that other promise: “Behold I am with you all days, even to the consummation of the world” (Matt. xxviii. 20). This gift is the supreme expression of Christ’s love for you: the devout reception of it is the supreme expression of your love for Him. You receive in it the full effects of His love, and you are able to make Him a full and adequate return.




II. On this occasion Our Lord further exhibits the most profound humility, and makes Himself our Servant; according to His word: “the Lord . . . will gird Himself, and make” His servants “sit down to meat, and passing will minister unto them” (Luke xii. 37). In this He places us above Himself: “Which is greater, he that sitteth at table, or he that serveth? . . . But I am in the midst of you as he that serveth” (Luke xxii. 27). Our Lord showed His humble servitude by kneeling before His Apostles and washing their feet. By this He cleansed them from the remnants of their sins, and represented the much more lowly servitude by which He cleanses mankind from the intolerable loathsomeness of their iniquity. Thank Our Lord for this exceeding humiliation. He points out its lesson to you: “I have given you an example, that as I have done to you, so you do also” (John xiii. 14). “You also ought to wash one another’s feet” (ib.), by humble service towards them. How have you done this in the past; how will you carry it out in the future? By doing so to men you repay the debt that you owe to Christ.




III. The Last Supper was also the inauguration of the Eternal Sacrifice, and in it Jesus exhibits Himself as our High Priest. In the giving of His Body and Blood, He connects it significantly with the sacrifice that He was to offer on the cross the following day. “This is My body that shall be delivered, My blood which shall be shed.” The action in the supper-room was an anticipation of the action on Calvary. That mystical banquet was not only a memorial of Our Lord to us, it is also an act of worship on the part of men towards God. We receive in it a gift from heaven, we render back a sacrifice to Our Maker. Further, Our Lord conveyed the participation in His priestly office to the Apostles and their successors, saying: “Do this for a commemoration of Me” (Luke xxii. 19). By this instrumentality the Sacrifice of Calvary was made an eternal sacrifice, to be offered unceasingly among the Gentiles from the rising of the sun to its setting (Mal. i. 11). The Pasch of that evening was the Pasch of all time, and all mankind are called to partake of it with Jesus and His Apostles. This was the compendium of all God’s bounties: “He hath made a remembrance of His wonderful works; He hath given food to them that fear Him” (Ps. cx. 4, 5). Venerate this mystery of mysteries. In it you really partake in that solemn supper and in the sacrifice that Jesus offered on Calvary.
  

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