Wednesday, April 1, 2026

From Rupture to Repletion

Reflection on the Holy Gospel Reading for the Maundy Thursday/Pesaha. St. Luke 22: 14-30


A man once lived with his wife and their young son. After the mother died following a long illness, the father, unable to care for the child alone, employed a caretaker/servant to manage the household chores and watch over the boy till he came back from office. One day, returning early from work, the father asked his son how the caretaker was treating him. The child replied innocently, “My mother was a liar, but the caretaker is an honest person.”

Shocked, the father asked how he could speak so of his departed mother. The child explained that whenever he showed mischievous behaviour, his mother would threaten not to feed him but after a while, she would return tenderly with his favourite food. The caretaker, however, kept his word and withheld the meal. What the child perceived, without fully understanding it, was that feeding is not merely discipline or duty-it is belonging. A mother feeds not because the child deserves it, but because the child belongs to her.

Tonight, the Church stands in the Upper Room. The Lord, knowing that His hour has come, gives Himself to His disciples, not first on the Cross, but at the table. On this holy night, we remember a truth woven through the Scriptures: the rupture of communion first appears through an act of eating, and the restoration of communion is likewise revealed through a sacred supper.

In Eden, the tragedy was not only that Adam and Eve consumed what was forbidden, but how they ate; in rupture, turning away from God, treating life as possession rather than communion. On Maundy Thursday, the Second Adam reverses this pattern. He does not seize but offers; He does not eat alone but desires to eat together. With tender longing, the Lord declares, “I have earnestly desired to eat this Passover with you before I suffer.” (St. Luke 22:15). He heals Eden at the table, revealing that humanity was created for communion, not isolation; for receiving life as gift, not for grasping it as control.

This pattern is not new. In Exodus 24:9-11, after the covenant is sealed with blood, Moses and the elders ascend the mountain, behold the glory of the God of Israel, and astonishingly eat and drink in His presence. The God whose holiness shakes the mountain does not drive His people away but receives them into fellowship. The psalmist echoes this wonder: “You prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies.” Salvation is not portrayed as escape from danger, but as dignity restored through hospitality and life sustained at God’s table. What Sinai anticipates and the psalm sings, the Upper Room now fulfils.

Pesaha begins in Egypt, where blood and eating belong together. The lamb is not only slain but consumed; redemption is not only witnessed but participated in. Only those who ate the Passover belonged to the redeemed community. Yet Israel ate in haste, under the shadow of death. Christ, however, does not rush this meal. He longs for it. He knows that Judas will betray Him, that Peter will deny Him, that all will flee yet He still breaks the bread and offers the cup. Here the Church learns something essential: the Holy Qurbana is not a reward for the flawless, but medicine for the wounded; communion for those who belong, even while they are still being healed.

On this night, Christ does something radical. He does not point to a lamb on the table; He points to Himself. “This is My body which is given for you; do this in remembrance of Me. Likewise He also took the cup after supper, saying, “This cup is the new covenant in My blood, which is shed for you.”- (St. Luke 22:19,20)

Such language on partaking His Body and Blood unsettles us because we are trained to trust only what can be measured and analyzed. Yet mystery is not foreign to human life; it is how life itself is first received. When a newborn receives milk from its mother, it is truly her life, her own flesh and blood, turned into tender nourishment. The child doesn’t examine or question it; instead, the child simply thrives by accepting this gift.

So, it is with the Holy Qurbana. What our eyes see as bread and wine, the Church confesses with reverence and trembling to be truly His Body and His Blood. Those who enter the Church through Holy Baptism are not spectators at a ritual; they are children of the household, invited to the family table, nourished by the Lord and the Bridegroom who feeds His children with His own Body and Blood.

Pesaha does not hide the darkness. Judas is remembered, betrayal is named, and the price of silver is counted. Yet even betrayal is not stronger than God’s purpose. Pesaha is not only about what Christ did then, but about what He continues to do now. The potter does not discard the clay; He reshapes it. The Eucharist is the place where God takes broken disciples, fractured communities, and wounded hearts, and forms them again into one Body. When we approach the Holy Qurbana, we proclaim that salvation is a gift, not an achievement.

On this holy night, Christ says, “Take. Eat.” (St. Matthew 26:26). On this holy night, we behold not a caretaker‑God who feeds only the obedient, but the One who feeds His children with mercy.  The Church survives not by strength or strategy, but by communion and sacrament.

Christ does not merely provide nourishment; He restores dignity by inviting us to sit at His table. And just as we would approach the invitation of a great earthly host with preparation and care, how much more are we called to cleanse our inner life when the invitation comes from God Himself who gives not ordinary bread, but His very Body and Blood as life for the world.

May this Pesaha renew in us reverence for the Holy Qurbana, and the courage to live as broken bread for the life of the world.  To Him be glory, honour, and worship, now and always. Amen.

In Christ,

Rincy

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