To read the texts click on the texts :Deut 8:2-3, 14-16; 1 Cor 10:16-17; Jn 6:51-58
A
team of Russians and Americans were on a common expedition. Among their cabin
foodstuff was Russian black bread. It was tasty but hard on the teeth. During a
meal an American bit into a piece and snapped a tooth. He threw the bread
overboard and growled: “Lousy Communist bread.” The Russian countered: “It is
not lousy communist bread, but a shaky capitalist tooth.” Some of us may
complain in a similar manner about the Eucharist being useless. However, if we
do not experience the transforming power of the Eucharist it is not on account
of the Eucharist but on account of our shaky faith and lack of understanding of
what the Eucharist really means.
The
feast of Corpus Christi is usually thought to be the feast of the Eucharist and
while this is certainly true, it would be a mistake to restrict the
understanding of the feast to the ritual of the Eucharist. The feast goes
beyond the ritual to life itself, just as the Eucharist does.
The
Eucharist is both a sacrament and a sacrifice. The Eucharist is a sacrament, an
outward sign in and through which we meet Christ who shares his life of grace
with us. Through signs of bread and wine he nourishes and strengthens us for
our journey through life. We see with human eyes what looks like bread and
wine. We see with eyes of faith, not bread and wine, but the risen, living Lord
Jesus.
The
Eucharist is a sacrifice, the representation or reliving of Christ’s
sacrificial death on Good Friday and of his Resurrection on Easter Sunday.
The
scripture readings today stress how God made a covenant with His people, first
through Moses and then, finally and forever, through Christ, a covenant sealed
and ratified by his blood. This covenant or bond of love between God and us is
renewed and deepened through and in every Eucharist or Mass.
The
second reading today, from Paul, is the earliest recorded story of anything
Jesus did. And that earliest story is about a meal, the Last Supper, which
Jesus shared with his disciples. In a very particular way, he made that meal a
way to remember him. It brings forward his sacrifice and death and
resurrection, his fellowship and unity with us, and everything he taught us.
And he did not want his followers to eat it just once that night but to do it
again and again, so that we continue to remember.
St
Augustine often stressed to his parishioners a unique quality of the
Eucharistic food. The ordinary food we eat, he says, becomes part of us. We are
what we eat. But partaking of the Eucharist, we become part of Jesus, We become
more Christ like, more patient and kind, more forgiving and understanding. We
still live our ordinary daily lives, but it is Our Lord who inspires our
attitudes and actions. We begin to see
people and events through his eyes, to think as he did. When Jesus was on this
earth, he used his own hands to reach out to people, but when he wants to feed
the poor today, he uses my hands, your hands to do this.
Surely,
we hunger and thirst for something new, when we share in the grief, anger,
misery and neglect of the impoverished, the unjustly accused, and victims of
violence caused by religious intolerance, ethnic hatred, terrorism and racism.
We are hungry indeed for peace and thirsty for reconciliation in this our
troubled world. We are hungry and thirsty for a new world, a world where we
will look one another in the eye and recognize the kinship of sisters and
brothers who are all children of God. The promise of this new world is set forth
in the strongest possible terms when Jesus declares, “Those who eat my flesh
and drink my blood abide in me and I in them…”
This
feast, then, of the Body of Christ, sums up three important confessions of our
faith. First, and most important, God became physically present in the person
of Christ – true God and true Man. Secondly; God continues to be present in His
people as they form the Mystical Body of Christ in his Church. And, thirdly,
God becomes present in the form of bread and wine on the altar at Mass.
Eucharist, then, should not remain simply a “going to” or “taking of” that
begins and ends in the sanctuary. It should become the deepest expression of
our communion with Christ.
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