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Given
That We May Have Life
Sunday, May 25, 2008
Readings for the Solemnity of the Most
Holy Body and Blood of Christ (Corpus Christi)
Reading 1: Deut. 8:2–3, 14b–16a |
Responsorial Psalm: Ps. 147:12–13, 14–15,
19–20 |
Reading 2: 1 Cor. 10:16–17 |
Gospel: Jn. 6:51–58 |
Link
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Click
here for a Corpus Christi homily by Fr. Ray Ryland.
By Father Frank Pavone
The Eucharist is a sacrament of faith,
life, unity, worship, and love.
The Eucharist Is a Sacrament
of Faith. The consecrated Host looks no different
after the consecration than before. It looks, smells, feels,
and tastes like bread. Only one of the five senses gets to
the truth. As St. Thomas Aquinas’ Adoro Te Devote
expresses, “Seeing, touching, tasting are in Thee deceived.
What says trusty hearing that shall be believed?” The
ears hear His words, “This is My Body; this is My Blood,”
and faith takes us beyond the veil of appearances.
Christians are used to looking beyond appearances. The baby
in the manger does not look like God; nor, for that matter,
does the man on the cross. Yet by faith we know He is no mere
man. The Bible does not have a particular glow setting it
off from other books, nor does it levitate above the shelf.
Yet by faith we know it is uniquely the Word of God. The Eucharist
seems to be bread and wine, and yet by faith we say, “My
Lord and My God!” as we kneel in adoration.
The same dynamic of faith that enables us to see beyond appearances
in these mysteries enables us to see beyond appearances in
our neighbor. We can look at the persons around us, at the
annoying person, or the ugly person, or the person who is
unconscious in a hospital bed, or the person on death row,
or the unborn child in the womb, and we can say, “Christ
is there as well. There is my bother, my sister, made in the
very image of God!” We can look at all these people
and declare, “There is my brother, my sister, equal
in dignity and just as worthy of respect and protection as
anyone else!” The slightest particle of the Host is
fully Christ. Eucharistic faith is a powerful antidote to
the dangerous notion that value depends on size or appearance.
The Eucharist Is the Sacrament
of Life. Jesus is the Bread of Life. The Gospel passage
of today places the Eucharist in the context of giving and
receiving life. “Just as the Father who has life sent
me and I have life because of the Father, so the man who feeds
on me will have life because of me.” The Eucharistic
sacrifice is the very action of Christ by which He destroyed
our death and restored our life. Whenever we gather for this
sacrifice, we are celebrating the victory of life over death,
and when we receive this Sacrament, we receive the life that
never ends.
The Eucharist Is Also a Sacrament
of Unity. St. Paul declares in today’s second
reading, “We, many though we are, are one body, since
we all partake of the one loaf” (1 Cor. 10:17).
Imagine all the people, in every part
of the world, who are receiving Communion today. Are they
all receiving their own personalized, customized Christ? Are
they not rather each receiving the one and only Christ? Through
this sacrament, Christ the Lord, gloriously enthroned in heaven,
is drawing all people to Himself. If He is drawing us to Himself,
then He is drawing us to one another. When we call each other
“brothers and sisters,” we are not merely using
a metaphor that dimly reflects the unity between children
of the same parents. The unity we have in Christ is even stronger
than the unity of blood brothers and sisters, because we do
have common blood: the blood of Christ! The result of the
Eucharist is that we become one, and this obliges us to be
as concerned for each other as we are for our own bodies.
Imagine a person who receives Communion,
accepts the Host when the priest says, “The Body of
Christ,” says “Amen,” and then breaks off
a piece, hands it back, and says, “Except this piece,
Father!” This is what is done, spiritually, by the person
who rejects other people—whether by hatred, unforgiveness,
or a failure to recognize the dignity of one or more others.
In receiving Christ, we are to receive the whole
Christ, in all His members; in welcoming Him, we are to welcome
all those whom He made, whom He loves, whom He died to save—all
our brothers and sisters, whether convenient or inconvenient,
wanted or unwanted.
The Eucharist Is the Supreme
Act of Worship of God. Two lessons each person needs
to learn are, “1.There is a God. 2. It isn’t me.”
The Eucharist, as the perfect sacrifice, acknowledges that
God is God, and that “it is [His] right to receive the
obedience of all creation” (Sacramentary, Preface for
Weekdays III). In our culture, many consider “freedom
of choice” enough to justify even the dismemberment
of a baby by abortion. Choice divorced from truth is idolatry.
It is the opposite of true worship. It pretends the creature
is God. Real freedom is found only in submission to the truth
and will of God. Real freedom is not the ability to do whatever
one pleases, but the power to do what is right.
The Eucharist Is, Finally,
the Sacrament of Love. St. John explains, “This
is how we know what love is: Jesus Christ laid down his life
for us” (1 Jn. 3:16). Christ teaches, “Greater
love than this no one has, than to lay down his life for his
friends” (Jn. 15:13). The best symbol of love is not
the heart, but rather the crucifix.
Love says, “I sacrifice myself
for the good of the other person.” The culture of death
says, “I sacrifice the other person for the good of
myself.” In the Eucharist we see the meaning of love
and receive the power to live it. The very same words, furthermore,
that the Lord uses to teach us the meaning of love are also
used by those who promote the culture of death: “This
is my body.” These four little words are spoken from
opposite ends of the universe, with totally opposite results.
Christ gives His body away so others might live; some are
tempted to cling to their own bodies so others might die.
Christ says, “This is my body given up for you;
this is my blood shed for you.” These are the
words of sacrifice; thee are the words of love.
Gustave Thibon has said that the true
God transforms violence into suffering, while the false god
transforms suffering into violence. The suffering caused by
an unexpected pregnancy may bring the temptation to abortion;
the suffering caused by severe illness may bring the temptation
to euthanasia; the suffering caused by social injustice may
bring the temptation to unjust war. The Eucharist gives both
the lesson and the power to transform violence, and the temptation
to violence, into love. “This is my body, my
blood, my life, given up for you.”
Everyone who wants to follow Christ needs to say the same.
Spouse says it to spouse, parents to children, priests to
their congregations. We need to imitate the mysteries we celebrate.
“Do this in memory of me” applies to all of us
in the sense that we are to lovingly suffer with Christ so
others may live. We are to be like lightning rods in the midst
of this terrible storm of violence and destruction, and say,
“Yes, Lord, I am willing to absorb some of this violence
and transform it by love into personal suffering, so that
others may live.”
Indeed, the Eucharist gives us our marching orders. It also
provides the source of our energy, which is love.
Father
Frank Pavone is the national director for Priests
for Life, president of the National Pro-Life Religious
Council, and a member of CUF's advisory council. He is a contrubutor
to Lay
Witness magazine.
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