eucharistise
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English
[edit]Verb
[edit]eucharistise (third-person singular simple present eucharistises, present participle eucharistising, simple past and past participle eucharistised)
- Alternative form of eucharistize
- 2012, Nick Page, Kingdom of Fools: The Unlikely Rise of the Early Church:
- Eating with people was one of Jesus' signature activities. It was also a specific command. Writing to the Corinthians, in a letter which was primarily focused on their failure to 'eucharistise' properly, Paul recalls the specific command that Jesus gave to his followers, to remember him by drinking wine and eating bread, and how Paul had these instructions handed down to him: they were one of the core instructions of the early church.
- Alternative form of Eucharistize
- 2013, Elizabeth Harrington, David Orr, Carmel Pilcher, Vatican Council II: Reforming Liturgy, page 158:
- It lists detailed instructions to 'eucharistise' the bread on her table, sign the bread three times, and speak a concluding prayer and thanksgiving which includes a petition for 'heavenly nourishment'.
- 2015, Dom Gregory Dix, The Shape of the Liturgy, page 93:
- These little agape prayers may be taken as the exact Eastern equivalents of Hippolytus' general direction to the laity when met without a cleric at the Lord's supper to 'eucharistise' the food each one for himself, and then 'eat in the Name of the Lord'.