To read the texts click on the texts: Ex 24:3-8; Heb9:11-15; Mk 14:12-16, 22-26Ex 24:3-8; Heb9:11-15; Mk 14:12-16, 22-26
My parishioners and I
went on a picnic one Sunday. As we reached the picnic spot, some of them said
to me: “Father, let’s finish Mass, then we can enjoy”. At first, this request
took me by surprise, since I had not regarded the Eucharist as separated from
life and enjoyment. I later realized what they meant when they made their
request. The Eucharist is seen as something to be “finished” as quickly as
possible so that real life can begin. It is also often seen as an obligation to
be fulfilled in order to be safe from sin and from God’s wrath and punishment.
Those who see Eucharist
as something to be quickly finished or as an obligation have missed the point.
This is because if one still uses the language of “obligations” when one is
referring to the Eucharist or, if one mistakenly believes that the Eucharist is
concluded with the final blessing in the Church, then one has not experienced
the power of the Sacrifice of Jesus and has not grasped its significance.
The feast of Corpus
Christi, or the Body and Blood of Christ, has been interpreted to mean the
feast of the Eucharist. 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.
Communion with Christ has always been a mark of the follower of Christ. We
would make significant gains in our life of discipleship if we would focus on
the Eucharist. It is the deepest expression of our communion with Christ.
The theme brought out
powerfully in all the readings for today’s feast is Covenant. The first reading
from Exodus recounts the ratification of the Covenant between God and his
people made on Mount Sinai. His people agreed to do all that the Lord had commanded
them. The letter to the Hebrews speaks about the Covenant between God and
people made, not with the blood of animals but, with the blood of Jesus
himself. This was, therefore, the more perfect and complete covenant. The
Covenant that Jesus made with the whole of humanity through his disciples is
narrated by Mark in the Gospel text of today. At the Passover meal, Jesus
offers his body and his blood as the mark and sign of the new covenant.
The covenant with the
people of Israel is consummated when, after building an altar and offering
sacrifice on it, Moses sprinkles the blood of the sacrificed animals on the
alter and on the people. This sprinkling of blood, which is a symbol of life,
is also an indication that the people who accepted the covenant are bound by it
and will do everything in their power to live it out.
The letter to the Hebrews
affirms that, like with the people of Israel, blood was also used to consummate
the new covenant between God and humans. However, this blood is no longer the
blood of sacrificial animal but that of Jesus himself. It is the blood that he
poured out on the Cross and which he confirms that he will shed for many in the
Gospel text of today.
Even as he did that, he
invited those who partook of it to keep remembering and renewing this Covenant
of unconditional love. By his own words, this broken bread was now his own body
that would be broken and then raised to glory. This simple yet profound action
signifies that, as we share this sustenance, we are bound to him and to one
another. It is significant that Mark has placed, on either side of the breaking
of the bread and sharing of the wine, the predictions of the betrayal by Judas
and denial by Peter. This is to indicate that, despite betrayal and denial,
Jesus will continue to give of himself. He would continue to give and to love
unconditionally.
Though at first, the
disciples did not respond to the Covenant that Jesus made with them because of
their lack of understanding, their cowardice, and their fear, later they
accepted it and boldly proclaimed the Kingdom that Jesus had inaugurated.
The Covenant which Jesus
made with his disciples, and continues to make with us even today, has to be
constantly accepted by us if it is to be a covenant in the true sense of the
word. This acceptance is shown when we first partake of the body of Christ at
every celebration of the Eucharist and, in doing so, express our willingness to
do the same with others. It is shown when we do not regard the Eucharist as
merely a ritual to be celebrated only in the church and only in order to
fulfill an obligation. It is shown when we let the celebration of the Eucharist
continue in our lives and in our willingness, like Jesus, to become bread for
others.
If our celebration of the
feast of Corpus Christi is to be meaningful, we need to realize that we, as
disciples of Jesus, are today his body and blood. When we are willing to give
of ourselves to others as Jesus did, without counting the cost and without
heeding the pain then we, in a true sense of the word, make him present today.
It is in our doing this that his promise to be in the world till the end of
time will become a reality here and now.
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