Thursday, January 29, 2026

Paul Foster on the Eucharist in the theology of Ignatius of Antioch

  

The Eucharist

 

Ignatius’s understanding of the Eucharist is closely linked to his ecclesiology. The link arises from his claim that the only legitimate Eucharist is that which is conducted with episcopal authorization. Thus Ignatius declares, “Only that Eucharist which is under the authority of the bishop (or whomever he himself designates) is to be considered valid” (Ign. Smyrn. 8.1b). It is notable that Ignatius does not state that the bishop must preside at every eucharistic celebration, but rather that those events must take place under his authority or with his delegated permission. In the wider context of this statement, Ignatius suggests that certain people “do not believe in the blood of Christ” (Ign. Symrn. 6.1), thus making themselves liable to judgment. Furthermore, it appears that certain opponents who hold docetic beliefs have abstained from the Eucharist. For Ignatius, refusal to participate in the Eucharist was not merely a rejection of the bishop’s authority, but it reflected deviant beliefs concerning the reality and redemptive nature of Christ’s death.

 

In this context, as a polemical response to those holding the beliefs that Ignatius opposes, he makes his strongest and most direct claim, affirming the Eucharist as “the flesh of our Saviour Jesus Christ” (Ign. Smyrn. 6.2). While this statement is certainly compatible with later understandings of the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist, and hence with a more developed notion of transubstantiation, it would nevertheless be unhelpful to take this statement out of its charged polemical context. In other passages, Ignatius perhaps does not go as far in equating the Eucharist with the flesh of Christ. For instance, writing to the Philadelphians, the community is instructed to unite in partaking of one Eucharist. The rational for this instruction is “for there is one flesh of our Lord Jesus Christ, and one cup that leads to unity through his blood; there is one alter, just as there is one bishop together with the council of presbyters and the deacons, my fellow servants” (Ign. Phld. 4.1). Here the Eucharist, like Christ’s blood, and like church-leadership structures, should lead to unity rather than division. Ignatius does not provide a thoroughgoing theology of the Eucharist. However, what emerges is his strong and repeated belief that only a Eucharist. However, what emerges is his strong and repeated belief that only a Eucharist held under the authority of the bishop or his delegate is legitimate. Furthermore, Ignatius presses the comparison between the eucharistic elements and the flesh and blood of Christ. (Paul Foster, “The Letters of Ignatius of Antioch,” in The Apostolic Fathers, ed. Paul Foster [Ancient Literature for New Testament Studies 4; Grand Rapids, Mich.: Zondervan Academic, 2025], 193-94)

 

 

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