Being as Communication
563
ICor.6,2. Compare. Previous note.
564
Acts 6:1-6.
565
That every ordination, especially a bishop, requires the event of Pentecost as its context is proved in the Orthodox liturgical tradition by the fact that in every episcopal consecration the feast of Pentecost is celebrated.
566
John 3:8.
567
John 16:14.
568
IICor. 5:1-5. Compare. I Cor. 15:53-54.
569
Thessalonians 2:7-9; IICor. 4:7 et seq.
570
IIcor.1:22; 5,5; Ephesians 1:14.
571
Rev. 4-5 and 22:17.
572
ICor. 11:23.
573
Luke 22:19; I Cor. 11:24-25.
574
Didache 9.4, 10.5. Compare the description of the Eucharist as "synaxis epi to auto" in Ap. Paul and Ignatius (cf. note 11 above). It is also noteworthy that the celebration of the Liturgy very early began to be associated with the resurrection (Rev. 1:10; for the testimonies of early sources, see W. Rohrdorf, "Sunday: The History of the Day of Rest and Worship in the First Centuries of the Christian Church", 1968, pp. 177 ff. and 238 ff.). The significance of the celebration of the Eucharist on Sunday lies in the fact that Sunday is primarily an eschatological day. If the Eucharist is to be understood primarily as anamnesis in historical terms, then the natural day of its celebration should be the day of its institution before the crucifixion, and not on the day of the resurrection.
575
I Cor. 10:16-17; Mark 14:24 and parallels. On the ecclesiological consequences of this idea, compare. 4 above: "The Eucharist and Catholicity."
576
See especially the Fourth Gospel (6:27-51) and in Ignatius (Eph. 20:2; Magn. 6:2, etc.). On Ignatius, see I. Romanides, The Ecclesiology of St. Ignatius of Antioch, 1956.