Thursday 7 August 2014

FOOD TECHNOLOGY!

SOME BREAD WERE COLLECT FROM YOUR PLATE WHILE YOU SAVE IT
WITH FELLING FROM EAT AND DRINK TIME AND RESPONSIBILITY ONLY SENSE FOR WASTAGE
SENSE AND EXTRA NATURE KILLING OF ENTERTAINMENT!

IF YOU DO IT, THIS PLATE MAY A REMEMBERING SPIRIT ONLY WITH YOU  
...AFTER MANY DAYS OVERCOME YOU WILL BE EXPERIENCED AND OUTBURST  FOR THEN
NOW TO CONTRIBUTE TO MATCH THE EMPTINESS OF FOOD FILLINGS THE NON
WASTAGE MOOD! 

AFTER LONG FASTING YOU MAY TRY TO MATCHING KIND IN UNHEALTHY IN YOU  WHILE ANOTHER HABITUAL FASTER MAY HAUL LIKE AND  FIND YOU LIKE PIT FALSE ,  TAKE  THE PLATE FOR EATING?


UNTIL WE LIVE WITH NON WASTAGE OF TIME TO TEST THE FASTER WORLD TIMING!
GENERALLY LUCK AND DESTINY WITH  YOU  AND  YOU HAUL ANOTHER LIKE NATURE 

DRUG
TO NOT YOU FOR DRUDGED NEARBY YOUR STOP-END  !


Origin of the Eucharist

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Main article: Eucharist
Jesus with the Eucharist at the Last Supper by Juan de Juanes, mid-late 16th century
Church teaching[1][2][3] places the origin of the Eucharist in the Last Supper of Jesus with his disciples, at which he is believed to have taken bread and given it to his disciples, telling them to eat of it, because it was his body, and to have taken a cup and given it to his disciples, telling them to drink of it because it was the cup of the covenant in his blood.[4]
The earliest extant written account of a Christian eucharistia (Greek: thanksgiving) is that in the First Epistle to the Corinthians (around AD 55),[5] in which Paul the Apostle relates "eating the bread and drinking the cup of the Lord" in the celebration of a "Supper of the Lord" to the Last Supper of Jesus some 25 years earlier.[6] Paul considers that in celebrating the rite they were fulfilling a mandate to do so.[7] The Acts of the Apostles presents the early Christians as meeting for “the breaking of bread” as some sort of ceremony.[8]
Writing around the middle of the second century, Justin Martyr gives the oldest description of something that can be recognised as the rite that is in use today.[9] Earlier sources, the Didache,1 Clement and Ignatius of Antioch provide glimpses of the what Christians were doing in their eucharists. Later sources, Tertullian and the Apostolic Tradition, offer some details from around the year 200.[10] Once the Church "went public" after the conversion of Constantine the Great in the second decade of the fourth century, it was clear that the Eucharist was established as a central part of Christian life.[10]
Contemporary scholars debate whether Jesus meant to institute a ritual at his Last Supper;[11] whether the Last Supper was an actual historical event in any way related to the undisputed early "Lord's Supper" or "Eucharist".[12] and have asked if the Eucharist had its origins in a pagan context, where dinners to memorialize the dead were common.


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