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Lay Witness
To
Whom Shall We Go?
by Leon J. Suprenant, Jr.
My
seven-year-old daughter Virginia made her First Holy Communion
this past April. A couple weeks before this happy occasion,
I took her to lunch and talked with her about the Eucharist.
To test her, I said, "Now Virginia, the Eucharist symbolizes
Christ, right?" Virginia looked at me partly in horror
and partly in surprise at my apparent ignorance. "Oh
no, Daddy," she said. "The Eucharist really
is the body and blood of Jesus."
I affirmed her response and told her that sometimes I go out
to speak to groups of people about the Eucharist. So I asked
for her "advice" as to what I should tell people.
Reveling in her new role as theological consultant, Virginia
replied, "Daddy, I would start by telling them about
Jesus. Jesus is God. He can do anything. Of course He can
make Himself present under the appearance of bread and wine."
Don't Walk Away
I am so grateful to God for Virginia's child-like faith and
pray that she continues to deepen her relationship with Our
Eucharistic Lord as she matures into adulthood. Sadly, many
adults don't have Virginia's faith. It is said that there
are lies, damn lies, and statistics, so I have a healthy distrust
of polls that attempt to quantify Eucharistic belief. Even
so, despite the welcome resurgence of Eucharistic adoration
and devotions and other positive signs of life in the Church,
far too many Catholics have an inadequate understanding of
the Eucharist.
When we consider the current scandals in the Church, we most
typically point to secondary, external causes and effects.
The Holy Father has pointed out that underlying the external
problems is the perennial mystery of evil and sin. So why
does sin seem to be having a field day right now? I think
the heart of the matter is a crisis of faith. And while faith
in Christ identifies us as Christians, our belief in Christ's
Real Presence in the Eucharist and the apostolic authority
entrusted to the Pope and bishops is what most clearly identifies
us as Catholics.
When Our Lord gave His great Eucharistic discourse in John
6, many of those who were already numbered among His disciples
could not accept this teaching and returned to their former,
pre-Christian lives (cf. Jn. 6:60, 66). No other recorded
teaching of Christ had such an effect.
There are many today who do not believe in God, let alone
His Incarnate Son. Then there are Christians whose rejection
of the Eucharist sadly perpetuates divisions dating back to
the 16th century. And there are those who consider themselves
Catholic but who hold out for a different Christ and a different
Church.
After many disciples left because of Jesus' teaching on the
Eucharist, Jesus asked Peter, "Do you also want to leave?"
(Jn. 6:67). And Peter's response, the response of the Church,
was, "Master, to whom shall we go? You have the words
of eternal life. We have come to believe . . ."
(Jn 6:68).
Our Lord's questionwhich goes out to each of usdemands
an act of faith, an adherence to revealed truth. Indifference
about the Eucharist, ambivalence about the Church, is clearly
not an acceptable response. Yet the actions of many baptized
Catholics manifest such indifference and ambivalence. That's
why todayand alwaysthe Church needs heroic witnesses,
indeed martyrs, to the truth about Jesus Christ, to the truth
about the Church, to the truth about the Eucharist.
Pilate Light
In St. John's account of the Passion, proclaimed every Good
Friday, we hear the dramatic exchange between Our Lord and
Pontius Pilate in which Jesus makes this remarkable statement:
"For this I was born and for this I came into the world,
to testify to the truth" (Jn. 18:37). Just one dayor
four chaptersearlier, Jesus identified Himself as "the
way, the truth, and the life" (Jn. 14:6). Perhaps
with Pilate we might ask, "What is truth?" (Jn.
18:38), or at least, "Lord, what do you mean?"
All the books in the world can't contain the full answer (cf.
Jn. 21:25), but we can say that Christ came to show Himself
as the Son of God, who came that we may partake of
His divinity as adopted sons and daughters of God (cf. Rom.
8:29; Gal. 4:4-7). He is the King of the New Israel, the Church,
which in His name and through the power of His Spirit is called
to renew the face of the earth. This kingdom is fully in this
world, but ultimately does not belong here (cf. Jn. 18:36),
pointing instead to a new heaven and a new earth (cf. Rev.
21:1-4). And Jesus is the eternal High Priest, whose
once-for-all sacrifice, made present to us through the ministry
of the apostles and their successorsbishops and priestsis
the one source of salvation for the whole world (cf. Heb.
9:12).
This truth about Christ reveals to us the truth about ourselves.
Human sinfulness and folly are part of the story, but not
the whole truth. Rather, Christ shows us the liberating truth
of our vocation as children of God and heirs of heaven, and
even more, gives us the grace to live this truth.
That's why the Eucharist is so important. As the "Sacrifice
Sacrament," it re-presents and makes effective in our
lives Christ's priestly sacrifice on Calvary. As "Communion
Sacrament," it establishes us not only as subjects of
Christ's kingdom on earth, but strengthens the familial bonds
of charity and solidarity we experience in the "communion"
of saints and impels us to bring others into that communion
through evangelization. And as "Presence Sacrament,"
the Eucharist is a tangible reminder that Christ has not rescued
us from sin only to abandon us in the desert of our own devices.
He is always Emmanuel, God with His beloved children.
Handling the
Truth
Throughout the current scandals in the Church, I have continually
returned to the Holy Father's exhortation to the laity, which
has found its way into the Catechism of the Catholic Church:
"The saints have always been the source and origin of
renewal in the most difficult moments in the Church's history"
(no. 828). Many of these saints were martyrs whose very blood
has been the seed of renewal in the Church.
This call to sainthood, to holiness of life, goes out to the
entire Church. Perhaps few of us will be called to martyrdom
in the strict sense of bearing witness to the truth of our
Catholic faith even to death. But as our Holy Father teaches
(see pp. 54-55 of this issue), our fidelity to the truth in
the ordinary circumstances of our lives calls us, with God's
grace, to a courageous, even heroic, commitment. This faith
in action impels us to uncompromising lives of charity, which
includes adherence to God's holy law in the moral sphere.
Blameless conduct not only avoids scandal, but even more,
reflects a life of integrity given over to God and His saving
truth. And should we nonetheless sinand who among us
doesn'twe have a compassionate High Priest ready to
shower His mercy and healing upon us when we repent of our
sin and turn to Him through sacramental Confession (cf. Heb.
4:15-16).
Still the One
Throughout the media's "feeding frenzy" that has
characterized the recent scandals, there have been different
strains of criticism and calls for reform from within and
from outside the Church. In justice and charity, Catholics
should contribute to "the formation and diffusion of
sound public opinion" (Catechism, no. 2495), so CUF has
issued a position paper patiently addressing the range of
issues presented by this controversy (call 1-800-MY-FAITH
or click
here).
As important as it is to respond faithfully to specific charges
of varying merit leveled against the Church, even more we
must proclaim in season and out of season the truth about
Jesus Christ, about His Church, and about the Eucharist. The
Church, despite the sins and failings of her members and even
her shepherds, is the herald of Christ's words of eternal
life and is the universal means of salvation for all mankind.
Rejecting or even cursing the Church makes as much sense as
a branch disavowing its need for the vine (cf. Jn. 15:5-6).
We must take courage that Our Lord is with us and that His
grace far exceeds human weakness and sin. As Our Holy Father
beautifully summarizes: "God alone is the source of holiness,
and it is to Him above all that we must turn for forgiveness,
for healing, and for the grace to meet [today's] challenge
with uncompromising courage and harmony of purpose."
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