Body and
Blood of Christ B 2021
Today we
celebrate the Feast of the Eucharist; the Feast of Corpus Christi; the Feast of the Body and Blood of Christ.
May we
ponder in faith and in awe the mystery that we celebrate.
Today as we
receive Communion, as we receive the host in our hands at Communion,
we are holding the Body of Christ. We
are holding Jesus who taught us his parables of love and forgiveness for one
and all. We are holding in our hands
Jesus who walked on the water. We are
holding in our hands Jesus who died on the cross to save us from our sins.
What a
profound privilege we have to receive the Body and Blood of Christ!
Regrettably
we too easily take for granted this mystery of the Eucharist.
I must
confess that too often skipping breakfast is relatively easy for me as long as
I get my caffeine jolt with a cup of coffee.
I am not bragging about this. As
we all know, this doesn’t make for a healthy diet.
Sad to say, it
is also easy to neglect spiritual food. It’s
too easy to skip daily prayer and the weekly celebration of the Eucharist. We often don’t seem any worse for the wear
and tear. But over the long haul, we can
get out of touch with our deepest spiritual hungers.
The thing of
it is with spiritual hungers; we can be spiritually hungry without being in
touch with our deep hunger. As the great
St. Augustine, you have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our hearts are restless
until they rest in thee.
Far from
being a pit stop for fast food and entertainment in the journey of life, the
gift of the Body and Blood of Christ is the necessary sustenance for the
spiritual growth of each member of the community and for the community itself.
As we
reflect on the mystery of the Sunday Eucharist, we are reflecting on the
central prayer of our faith tradition.
We are part of a tradition that is nearly 2000 years old. The Sunday Eucharist is our participation in
the paschal mystery of Christ Jesus. The
Sunday Eucharist satisfies the deepest hungers of the human heart.
I suggest
our deepest spiritual hungers are for Jesus’ power to love and forgive his
enemies rather than embarrass and crush them.
What we hunger for is Jesus’ power to be bighearted; to love beyond one’s own family, and to love
poor and rich alike; to live inside of charity, joy, peace, patience, goodness,
despite everything in life that militates against these virtues.
Left to our
own will power and our own desires, we get too easily trapped in
self-centeredness. The truth of the life
of all of us is that we are deeply flawed by sin.
With great
joy, we have recently celebrated two
First Communion weekends in the parish.
The spiritual joy experienced in our First Communicants and in their
families is so very precious. The ritual
of our First Communion celebrations are so inspiring. It is a moment of joy for me as a priest to
give First Communion to one of our younger parishioners. In age appropriate ways, they celebrate the
life giving presence of Jesus within them.
Thanks be to God.
The challenge
we have as a parish community is to sustain our Eucharistic faith and joy
continuously throughout the year. Even
though our First Communicants won’t be
wearing their communion dresses and suits Sunday after Sunday after Sunday,
nonetheless the God whose love for us is unending continues to offer to us the
Bread of Life and the Cup of salvation always.
As the
congregation approaches the altar and receives communion, it is as if the
Church is filling up with Christ. We are
not only in union with Christ, we are in communion with all those who receive
him. The Eucharist is a community
affair, not simply Jesus and me. We are
not only in union with Christ; we are in
communion with all those who receive Christ. This is the meaning of Church. The Church is a people of God who are in union with Christ in the
mystery of the Eucharist. We are also a
people in communion with all those who receive Christ Jesus in the Eucharist.
There are
some who want us to judge whether a person is worthy or eligible to receive
Communion. I am clearly not in that
lane. I believe that none of us are
worthy to receive Communion as we pray before receiving Communion: Lord, I am not worthy that you should come
under my roof but say but the word and my soul shall be healed.” This is a profound truth that it is the love
and mercy of Jesus that enables us to approach the altar.
As Pope
Francis, the Eucharist is not a prize for the perfect; it is medicine for the
sick.
The
Eucharist is our bond of communion with Christ who cleanses us our sins and
unites in marvelous communion with God and gives our dignity to be God’s
beloved sons and daughters. Further, the
Eucharist binds us together with each other as brothers and sisters in Christ Jesus. We are called to the Body of Christ – the
bearers of hope and love to people who are sick in body and spirit.
At the Last
Supper, Jesus gathers his disciples with the context of something very old –
the Passover meal – to give them something very new -- the Eucharist. He creates for them a new covenant. These disciples must carry on the work of
Jesus. They will be able to do his work
through the empowerment of His presence.
The Eucharist has a social dimension.
It is always an encounter of the Church, the people of God, with the powerful
presence of Jesus in the new covenant of His blood. This is why the Eucharist is so central to
the life of the Church.
The Mass is
our greatest prayer; we gather to give thanks to the Lord our God. Yet it is what we do outside the Mass that also
determines the genuineness of the offering we make at the altar each
Sunday. By our mutual love and, in
particular, by our concern for those in need we will be recognized as true
followers of Christ. Go in peace
glorifying the Lord by our lives in all
that we say and do this day and every day.
As a
Eucharistic community, we gather with an attitude of gratitude. We gather to give, to give thanks to the Lord
our God. We give thanks because we have
been fed and nourished at the Table of the Lord with a food that enables to
live as Jesus lives, to love as Jesus loves, to forgive as Jesus forgives. Amen
Have a
Blessed Day.
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