The official Roman Catholic explanation of the change taking place in the sacrament, called transubstantiation, is that the substances of bread and wine are turned miraculously into the substance of Christ himself, the elements changed retaining only the appearance, taste, etc. (the accidents) of bread and wine. Catholic doctrine holds that the Godhead is indivisible so every particle or drop thus changed is wholly identical in substance with the divinity, body, and blood of the Crucified Savior.
It has been presented that it is all the same, different names but same service. I content that it has so many differences that it is not even close.
When it is offered.
Why it is offered.
How it is offered.
What it is called.
What is used [leaven vs unleaven]
what does it symbolise vs what it really does
In comparing these and many more questions... the differences are too vast to be even thrown into the same basket and called the same thing. The meaning is different. The tranference of focus from then to now changes the meaning. I do not find any Messianic Judaism groups talking about the euchrist like it is the same thing as the Passover Seder.
It has been presented that it is all the same, different names but same service. I content that it has so many differences that it is not even close.
When it is offered.
Why it is offered.
How it is offered.
What it is called.
What is used [leaven vs unleaven]
what does it symbolise vs what it really does
In comparing these and many more questions... the differences are too vast to be even thrown into the same basket and called the same thing. The meaning is different. The tranference of focus from then to now changes the meaning. I do not find any Messianic Judaism groups talking about the euchrist like it is the same thing as the Passover Seder.