The Holy Eucharist
The Holy Eucharist
"The Holy Eucharist is the sacrament commanded by Christ for the continual remembrance of his life, death, and resurrection, until his coming again."
— The Book of Common Prayer (1979)
At the heart of our life together is the Holy Eucharist—the meal Jesus gave his followers on the night before he died. In bread blessed, broken, and shared, and wine poured out, we meet Christ not as an idea but as a living presence. The Eucharist is the Church’s central act of thanksgiving and communion: it nourishes us with the life of Christ and unites us to one another in love.
To receive the Eucharist is to receive not a reward for the faithful but the sustenance of grace for the journey. It is Christ who invites us, feeds us, and sends us. At Incarnation, the Eucharist is celebrated with reverence, beauty, and joy. Whether in the stillness of a quiet morning or the fullness of Sunday song, we gather around the altar to encounter the mystery of God’s self-giving love.
