THE LAST SUPPER / HOLY THURSDAY HOMILY - Theme: “The Night Love Became Food: The Eucharist, Priesthood, and the Mystery of the Human Heart”
THE LAST SUPPER / HOLY THURSDAY HOMILY
Theme: “The Night Love Became Food: The Eucharist, Priesthood, and the Mystery
of the Human Heart”
1. Introduction
My dear
brothers and sisters in Christ,
Tonight, time slows down.
We are not simply remembering an event—we are stepping into “the
Hour” of Christ.
Throughout the Gospel of John, Jesus says:
“My hour has not yet come.” (John 2:4)
But tonight, everything changes.
“Jesus knew that his hour had come…” (John 13:1)
This is the hour:
·
When eternity touches time
·
When God speaks without words
·
When love expresses itself not in speech—but in
a gift
👉 The
Last Supper is not a farewell—it is a transformation of presence.
Christ does not leave.
He changes the way He remains.
Tonight, we
enter not just a memory—but a mystery.
Not just a historical moment—but a living reality.
We are
gathered in the Upper Room.
We are seated at the table.
We are witnesses to the most intimate moment in the life of Christ.
This is the
night:
- When bread becomes His Body
- When wine becomes His Blood
- When love becomes sacrifice
- When God gives Himself completely
The Last
Supper is not merely a farewell meal—it is the beginning of Calvary made
sacramentally present.
Tonight, we
are not spectators.
👉 We are
participants.
2. Biblical Foundation
Let us
enter into the Word of God:
Institution of the Eucharist
“This is my
body which is given for you. Do this in remembrance of me.”
— Luke 22:19
“This cup
is the new covenant in my blood, which is poured out for you.”
— Luke 22:20
The Mandate of Love
“I give you
a new commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you.”
— John 13:34
The Washing of Feet
“If I then,
your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you also ought to wash one
another’s feet.”
— John 13:14
3. Theme of the Homily
👉 The
Last Supper is the moment where:
- The Eucharist is born
- The Priesthood is instituted
- The New Commandment of Love is given
- The Human heart is revealed—both in
fidelity and betrayal
This night
is a mystery of divine love and human response.
4. The Shadow of the Cross at the Table
👉 The Last
Supper is already Calvary in advance.
Jesus is
not waiting for the Cross to begin His sacrifice.
He begins it here.
- On Calvary → His Body is broken
physically
- In the Upper Room → His Body is offered
sacramentally
👉 The Cross
is bloody
👉 The Supper is unbloody
👉 But both are the same sacrifice
This is why
Jesus says:
“This is my
body… this is my blood…”
Not “this
will be”—but this is.
5. The Eucharist: Love That Becomes Food
👉 Why did
Jesus choose bread and wine?
Because:
- Bread must be broken
- Wine must be poured out
👉 Love must
be broken
👉 Love must be poured out
Jesus
transforms:
- Bread → His Body
- Wine → His Blood
- Food → Presence
- Meal → Sacrifice
This is not
symbolic.
“My flesh
is true food, and my blood is true drink.”
— John 6:55
👉 The
Eucharist is:
- Not a reminder
- Not a symbol
- But a Person: Jesus Himself
6. The Priesthood: “Do This in Memory of Me”
At the Last
Supper, Jesus does something revolutionary:
👉 He gives
His power to human hands.
“Do this in
remembrance of me.”
— Luke 22:19
👉 The priest
is not just a leader
👉 The priest is another Christ (Alter Christus)
When a
priest says:
👉 “This is my Body”
It is not
the priest speaking alone—
👉 Christ speaks through him
This is the
birth of the priesthood.
When Jesus says:
“Do this in remembrance of me” (Luke 22:19)
He entrusts divine power to human weakness.
👉 The greatest risk of
divine love.
Because:
·
The priest is human
·
The priest is imperfect
And yet:
👉 Christ chooses to act through him
This teaches us something profound:
👉 God does not wait for perfection to act
👉
He transforms weakness into an instrument
7. The Washing of Feet: Authority Becomes Service
Jesus does
something shocking:
👉 He kneels
👉 He washes
👉 He serves
“The Son of
Man came not to be served but to serve.”
— Mark 10:45
👉 The
towel becomes the symbol of true greatness.
In the
world:
- Authority dominates
In Christ:
- Authority serves
👉 Leadership
in the Church = Humility + Sacrifice
The Paradox of Greatness: The Towel and the Basin
In the same
evening, Jesus does something astonishing:
“He began
to wash the disciples’ feet.” (John 13:5)
The One who
is:
- Master
- Teacher
- Lord
Becomes:
- Servant
👉 The world
builds greatness by rising above others
👉 Christ reveals greatness by stooping down
This is the
paradox of Christianity:
👉 The higher
you are, the lower you must bend in love
8. Judas and John: The Two Responses to Love
At the same
table, two hearts are revealed:
Judas
- Receives Jesus
- But rejects Him internally
“Satan
entered into him.”
— John 13:27
Judas: The Tragedy of Misplaced Love
Judas is
not simply a villain.
He is a
warning.
👉 Judas
loved something more than Christ.
And that
“something” led him away.
This is the
real danger:
👉 Not
rejecting Christ openly
👉 But preferring something else silently
John
- Leans on the heart of Jesus
“The
disciple whom Jesus loved was reclining next to him.”
— John 13:23
John: The Power of Nearness
John does
not ask many questions.
He stays
close.
This
teaches us:
👉
Transformation does not come from information
👉 It comes from intimacy
👉 The
Eucharist does not force love
👉 It reveals the heart
👉 The same
Jesus:
- Saves one
- Condemns another (by their own choice)
9. The Tragedy of Betrayal in the Presence of Love
The most
painful reality:
👉 Judas
betrays Jesus after receiving Him
This is
deeply relevant for us.
👉 We too
receive the Eucharist
👉 But do we remain faithful?
👉 The
greatest sin is not ignorance—but betrayal after intimacy.
The Mystery at the Table: Freedom in the Presence of Love
One of the
most striking elements of the Last Supper:
👉 Not
everyone responds the same way
At the same
table:
- One betrays
- One denies
- Others flee
- One remains close
This
reveals a powerful truth:
👉 The
presence of Christ does not eliminate freedom
👉 It intensifies responsibility
👉 The
same sun that softens wax hardens clay.
The
Eucharist does not force transformation.
👉 It reveals
the heart.
10. The New Commandment: Love as Sacrifice
“Love one
another as I have loved you.”
— John 13:34
How did
Jesus love?
👉 Not
emotionally
👉 Not partially
👉 But totally—unto death
👉 True
Christian love:
- Forgives
- Sacrifices
- Serves
- Endures
This is not
ordinary love.
It is:
- Not selective
- Not convenient
- Not emotional
It is:
👉
Sacrificial
👉 Faithful
👉 Total
The measure
of love is no longer:
👉 “Love others as you love yourself”
But:
👉 “Love others as Christ has loved you”
11. Spiritual Diagnosis
Let us
examine ourselves:
- Do I receive the Eucharist with faith or
routine?
- Am I closer to John or Judas?
- Do I serve others or seek to be served?
- Do I live the Eucharist after Mass?
·
Is there something we love more than Christ?
This night demands a response.
12. Illustration
A saint
once said:
👉 If we
truly believed the Eucharist is Jesus, our churches would be full all day.
People
travel far to meet celebrities…
👉 But Jesus
waits silently in the tabernacle.
13. Practical Application
This week:
- Spend time before the Blessed Sacrament
- Receive the Eucharist with preparation
- Forgive someone who hurt you
- Serve someone silently
- Pray for priests daily
14. Pastoral Reflection
The world
today:
- Is hungry for meaning
- Is broken by division
- Is wounded by selfishness
👉 The answer
is the Eucharist.
👉 The answer
is sacrificial love.
A World That Has Forgotten Presence
Our world
is full of:
- Noise without meaning
- Activity without depth
- Connection without intimacy
And yet:
👉 Christ
remains present
Silent
Hidden
Faithful
Waiting to
be received.
15. The Call of the Hour
Tonight, Christ is not asking for admiration.
He is asking for:
·
Presence
·
Faithfulness
·
Love
👉 Stay with Him
👉
Receive Him worthily
👉
Become what you receive
👉 Return to
the Eucharist
👉 Rediscover reverence
👉 Become living tabernacles
Let your
life say:
👉 “I have
received Christ—now I become Christ to others.”
16. Conclusion
Tonight, we
have witnessed:
- Love becoming food
- Service becoming greatness
- Sacrifice becoming salvation
👉 The
tragedy is not that Christ is absent—
but that we are absent from Him.
Let us not
leave Him alone.
Let us not
betray His love.
Let us not
receive Him in vain.
👉 Instead,
let us become:
- Eucharistic people
- Loving people
- Serving people
The Night That Never Ends
This night
is not over.
It
continues:
- In every Eucharist
- In every altar
- In every faithful heart
17. Prayer
Lord Jesus
Christ,
On this
holy night,
You gave Yourself completely to us.
Teach us:
- To receive You with faith
- To love as You love
- To serve as You serve
Make our
hearts like the Upper Room—
A place where You are always welcome.
Save us
from being like Judas.
Draw us closer like John.
May the
Eucharist transform our lives,
Our families,
And our world.
Amen.
Contact
details:
Homilies
by Dr. ADDANKI RAJU.
Blogger:
https://addankiraju.blogspot.com
Sermon
Central:
Email:
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/ WhatsApp:
+91
98481 43047
X:
Dr. ADDANKI RAJU@addankiraju
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A Gentle Invitation to Share
If this
message has brought you even a small measure of joy, light, encouragement, or
spiritual nourishment, I humbly invite you to share this spiritual food with
others.
Someone you
know may be waiting for a word of hope.
Someone may be silently searching for meaning.
Someone may be thirsty for God.
By sharing
this message, you become a simple yet powerful instrument in God’s hands. This
small act of sharing becomes a beautiful act of evangelisation — a quiet
mission of love you carry out in your daily life.
Let the
Word that touched your heart reach another heart.
May the
Lord use you to spread His light.
May His Word bear abundant fruit.
God bless
you abundantly.
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