By Fr. George Dorbarakis
On Great Thursday, our Fathers have handed down to us to celebrate four things: the Sacred Washing of the Feet, the Secret Supper, the Preternatural Prayer, and also the Betrayal of Judas. That hymn which summarizes and connects most of these, highlighting their implications for our own life as well, is especially the Oikos of the Kontakion of Matins of the day:
“At the secret table, approaching with fear, let us all receive the bread with pure souls, remaining with the Master, that we may see how He washes the feet of the disciples and wipes them with a towel, and that we may do likewise as we have seen, submitting to one another and washing one another’s feet. For Christ Himself thus commanded His disciples, as He said beforehand. But Judas, the servant and deceitful one, did not listen.”
1. “Let us all receive the bread”: The Hymnographer, expressing the faith of the Church, calls us to approach the Secret Table in order to partake of the Immaculate Mysteries. We stand before the center of our church, the mystery of the Holy Eucharist, which the Lord Himself established precisely on this day, at the Secret Supper. The Lord at this Supper celebrated for the first time on earth the Divine Liturgy, calling His disciples to eat His holy Body and to drink His precious Blood. “Take, eat, this is My Body” and “Drink of it, all of you, this is My Blood” are the founding words of the mystery of the Holy Eucharist, which from then until now are repeated at every gathering of the faithful, according to the command of the Lord, “Do this in remembrance of Me,” thus perpetuating in the Spirit the Secret Supper itself. The Divine Liturgy is thus understood by our Church as the continuation of the Secret Supper; for this reason it has always been regarded as the center of the Church, around which all the other mysteries are woven. And this is, we could say, natural: the Lord, who came into the world and saved us — in the sense that He united us to Himself and thus reconciled us with God, something that becomes active for the believer from the moment of baptism and chrismation in the name of the Triune God — He Himself nourishes us with His Body and Blood, so that this relationship with Him may be preserved and grow “until we all attain to a perfect man, to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ.”








