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Ten Practical Suggestions: Implementing Eucharistic Theology in Our Daily Lives

By Father Nicholas L. Gregoris

And now, here are ten practical suggestions for implementing all of this Eucharistic theology in your own life of faith and devotion.

1. Would you expect to be admitted to a fine, elegant restaurant wearing jeans, sneakers, a tee shirt or shorts? No. Then strive to wear your Sunday best when coming to the House of God, especially for Sunday Mass. In this we can learn a great deal from the good example of many of our Protestant brothers and sisters and Jewish friends. And to those who say, “God doesn’t care what we wear to Church,” let them recall the parable Our Lord tells of the man who is evicted from the wedding feast precisely because he is improperly clad.

2. Mindful of the heavenly provisions we receive in the Sacrament of the Altar, we ought to have regular recourse to the Sacrament of Penance, engage mind and heart in prayerful preparation and thanksgiving for the reception of Holy Communion, and observe the Church’s law of a one hour fast before Eucharistic reception. Remember that to receive Holy Communion with mortal sin on one’s soul means committing a sin of sacrilege. Consequently, we should pray in a special way for those who neglect the Lord’s Real Presence and make reparation for the many offenses and sacrileges committed against it especially by so many thoughtless and unworthy receptions.

3. Do you deliberately arrive late and leave early at a baseball game of your favorite team or at a concert of your favorite band? Rather, do you not rush to be in front of the television for the beginning of your favorite show and sit there diligently until the very end? Then why do so many Catholics think it is “OK” to arrive late and leave early from Mass, even doing so immediately after receiving Holy Communion? Is not Our Creator and Lord worthy of the full hour of worship that we should offer Him each Sunday? Is He not more important than any sporting event, concert or TV show?

4. The tabernacle is the dwelling place of God among men. It is the throne of the King of Kings and the Lord of Lords, yet so many come into the throne room and fail to show the proper respect and homage due its King. Therefore, be sure to genuflect properly when entering and leaving the church and when passing before Our Lord and King present in the tabernacle.

5. As the Church directs, make a profound bow before receiving Holy Communion as a visible reminder to yourself and others of the respect and reverence one should have before the awesome, sacred, real presence of the Lord in the Most Blessed Sacrament of the Altar.

6. Maintain a sacred silence in church, especially when no verbal response is called for and when you are in proximity to the sanctuary area and tabernacle. Have respect for God’s presence and for your fellow parishioners who should be able to pray without any undue distractions. After all, the purpose of going to church is not to engage in frivolous socializing but to pray and worship Our Eucharistic Lord. We need to allow God to speak to us, as we hear in the beautiful hymn based on the ancient Liturgy of St. James: “Let all mortal flesh keep silence and with fear and trembling stand, ponder nothing earthly minded for with blessing in His hand, Christ Our God to earth descendeth, our full homage to demand.”

7. Make visits to the Blessed Sacrament outside of scheduled liturgical events. Our Lord patiently awaits us day and night in the tabernacle. If we are not willing to spend time with Jesus now, what would make us want to spend an eternity with Him in Heaven?

8. Attend Eucharistic devotions like Exposition and Benediction, holy hours, all-day or perpetual adoration, Eucharistic processions and congresses, First-Friday devotions. These are means of continuing adoration of the Lord beyond Holy Mass and serve as invitations to live the fruits of the Mass.

9. Actively participate in giving the responses and in singing during the Sacred Liturgy. Some individuals come to Mass to be edified and entertained as passive spectators, they are unwilling to make their own contribution to enhancing the beauty of the celebrations. What if everyone—including the priest—had the same attitude?

10. Pray for vocations to the priesthood at each celebration of the Mass and foster them within your home, so that the mystery of the Eucharist can continue to be renewed in our midst and we can reap its eternal benefits.

On a personal note, I must say how disedifying it has been for me during these past ten years of priestly ministry to witness countless people who do not receive Holy Communion with proper reverence, who come to the altar chomping on gum, who grab for and handle consecrated hosts as though they were potato chips, sometimes disposing of them in pews and missalettes!

How distressing to discover laity who feel compelled to become extraordinary ministers of Holy Communion, even when there is no apparent need for their service because they are wrongly convinced that this is the most suitable form of a lay man’s actual participation in the Eucharistic Mystery! How shocking it is to hear people approach and say: “No wine for me, today, Father!” or, “Just give me the plain bread!” Their language leads me to ask myself: “Do such persons actually believe the Church’s teaching on the Eucharist? Should such individuals be receiving Our Lord in Holy Communion? And, as an ordained steward of the sacred mysteries, should I be giving Our Lord to such individuals?”

Let us use the beautiful feast of Corpus Christi, first, to examine our consciences and then to recommit ourselves to the proper respect and adoration due to the Lord’s Real Presence in the Most Blessed Sacrament of the Altar, to which the prayers and hymns of St. Thomas Aquinas are such a sublime tribute.

Father Nicholas L. Gregoris, a member of the Priestly Society of the Venerable John Henry Cardinal Newman, holds a doctorate in Sacred Theology from the Pontifical Theological Faculty Marianum in Rome and serves as the managing editor of The Catholic Response. He is the author of The Daughter of Eve Unfallen: Mary in the Theology and Spirituality of John Henry Newman, published by Newman House Press. He is likewise the translator and editor of Father Giovanni Velocci’s book Prayer in Newman, just released by Newman House Press.

Also by Fr. Gregoris:

“O Sacred Banquet": St. Thomas Aquinas and the Office of Corpus Christi

The Sacrament of Charity: Homily for the Solemnity of Corpus Christi

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Catholics United for the Faith has offered assistance to the Catholic bishops in the United States in their great work of furthering the all-important renewal which the Documents of the Council call for and which Pope Paul VI described as an inner, personal, moral renewal. This purpose, which is first in importance, and which is a prerequisite for the others, means that we exist in order to respond publicly and together to what Vatican II called the universal call to holiness. This spiritual renewal must be realized by the response of large numbers of the laity to the call to perfection, by an awakening to the depth and totality of Christ’s call; it means a real conversion into that leaven, that salt, that light which Christ asks us to be.

H. Lyman Stebbins
December 1981