Christianity
The breaking or the fraction of 'bread' is one of the rites of Christianity, and it involves the breaking up of the Eucharistic bread, after which the Eucharistic wine will be poured, in order to prepare for Holy Communion. In early times, in fact, all Christians generally referred to their Church going activities as the "Breaking of the Bread," as seen in 'the Acts of the Apostles', wherein Saint Luke describes the life of Christians as being devoted to the 'breaking of bread', and to the prayers in Acts 2:42. Here, the 'breaking' stated by Saint Luke refers to the so-called 'celebration of the Eucharist', or the 'Lord's Supper'. The description in the Acts 2:42 reminds one of the story that Saint Luke retold of the time of the Resurrection of the Lord Jesus Christ, when two of Jesus' disciples happened to encounter Him on the road to Emmaus, and Christ He was in fact, 'made known to them in the breaking of the bread'. (The Communion Rite in accordance with the General Instruction of the Roman Missal and the Norms for the Distribution and Reception of Holy Communion under Both Kinds)
When Jesus happened to perform this liturgical action of breaking the bread, He would in fact repeat the action during the Last Supper, and the action would be repeated at His command by his disciples, in his loving memory, and this in fact gave the entire Eucharistic action its name. Therefore, it has become clear that the 'Breaking of the Bread' is another name for the Mass, and this in turn indicates the importance of the Eucharistic ceremony. This important Christian Rite signifies to all believers that it is a "sign that in sharing the on bread of life which is Christ, we who are many are made one body," according to GIRM, 56-c, wherein the very act reveals the people's unity with the body of Christ.
However, there is a liturgical meaning to the breaking of the bread, and this relates to the Last Supper. Jesus Christ, the night before His Death, gathered together all his followers for one final meal, and during the last meal, Christ is supposed to have taken the bread, and the wine, and broken the bread into pieces and offered it to all of his followers present at the table, after saying a blessing and a prayer to the Father. Christ then declared that the bread in fact was his own body broken for all, and the cup of wine that he offered as his own blood that was being offered as a salvation for all. At Mass, bread is broken and wine is poured, and the significance of these two acts is that Christ is offering his own body and his own blood so that mankind may be saved. The Eucharist is usually celebrated at the moment of the breaking of the bread, and this signifies the recalling of the sacrifices and the sufferings and the obedience in our own lives to Christ's own Paschal mysteries. Therefore, it is evident that a believer would see Christ in the bread and in the wine that is offered at Mass, and would also see Christ's presence in the lives and in the deaths of Christians everywhere, all over the world. (The Communion Rite in accordance with the General Instruction of the Roman Missal and the Norms for the Distribution and Reception of Holy Communion under Both Kinds)
The Eucharist is also known as the virtual "Source and the Summit of the Christian life," and that all the other sacraments of Christian faith are irretrievably bound up with the Eucharist and are in fact completely oriented towards it. The reason for this type of orientation and faith in the Eucharist is because it is stated that it is within the Eucharist that the entire spiritual good of the Church is contained, and this in turn signifies that within the Church, what good can there be other than Christ himself, who is also the people's 'Pasch'? The Eucharist is also the efficacious sign and the cause of Communion in Divine life, and the innate beauty of the meaning of the Eucharist...
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