(Homily for the Solemnity of the Corpus Christi Year A)
Today the
Holy Mother Church celebrates one of her most sublime Mysteries: the Eucharist, the Solemnity of Corpus
Christi, the Solemnity that recalls the Mystery of the real presence of
Christ in Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity in the Sacrament of the Holy
Eucharist. The aim of this solemnity is
three-fold: first, it serves an invitation for us to be always conscious of the
greatness of this Gift; second, to make our faith always alife and convinced in
It; third, to reawaken in us the sensibility always to render gratitude to
Jesus who instituted It, “the very night he was to be betrayed”, as a sign of His extreme and endless love for us. The Eucharist is the perpetuation of both
his Love and Presence. It is the
Sacrament of Christ’s extreme love for humanity. It is a sign of his continuous
Incarnation in human history. In the words of Giovanni Vannucci, “man is the only creature that has God
in his blood”, we have in us a divine
chromosome, for Jesus dwells in us! The word Eucharist comes from the Greek
word “eucharistia” which is a translation of the Hebrew word “berakah”
and they all stand to signify thanksgiving or praise to God for his wonderful
deeds. This Sacrament therefore, reminds us of the Jewish
religious tradition of Berakah, which has to do with blessing, thanksgiving and praise to God for
the wonders he has wrought, for this the first reading invites us to remember
and not to forget his mighty deeds.
Going
through history lane, we remember that in the Old Jewish tradition, when the
family gather for the Passover Meal, it was prescribed that the last born of
the house, asks a question to the Father of the family, thus: What does this ritual mean? This was the
question that someone (maybe John that was the youngest apostle) could have directed
to Jesus, the evening they were at table for the Last Super. And maybe in
response, Jesus might have explained to them how the whole celebration from the
night of the Exodus on, with the killing of the lamb and the Passover Meal,
were not but a figure and a prophecy of Him; the Lamb of God (cf. Gen. 22:7; Jn. 1:29), that has to
be slaughtered in order to take away the sins of the world, and to be food and
drink for his friends. Likewise, the same question can situate us well into the
context of our present gathering, therefore, let us ask ourselves: What is the
meaning of this ritual? Not because we do not know what we are about to do or
the essence of our celebration, but for the Lord to explain it to us again, through
his Word and Sacrament, always for a
more profound understanding. No doubt, to that question the readings of today
have much in stock for us.
In the first reading (Dt. 8:2-3. 14-16) Moses
spoke to the people of Israel and today he is speaking to us calling our
attention to two imperatives: Remember
and Do not forget, What? Moses
admonished the people to have always fresh in their minds all that the Lord has
done for them. Remember how he laid
you in the wilderness, do not forget
that he led you out from Egypt and how their fathers were nourished with manna.
And to us as well, his words resound in our heart: remember and do not forget. The people of Israel were not to forget
all the good deeds of the Lord, in order to render gratitude to God, and to remain
faithful to him. The imperative call of
Moses is also extended to us, for we have to remember and not to forget all the
wonderful works the Lord has worked for our Salvation, starting from his Incarnation,
Passion, Death and Resurrection to the
perpetuation of his presence in the Eucharist; the Ever Present Emmanuel! Here
the people were nourished by manna which they did not know, but Jesus feeds us
with what we know: Himself.
In this passage, the sacred author
affirmed that God “humbled you, he made you feel hunger, he fed you with manna
which neither you nor your ancestors had ever known, to make you understand
that human beings live not on bread alone but on every word that comes from the
mouth of Yahweh” (v.3). This passage anticipates the real Bread
(Eucharist), Jesus’ self-giving to humanity. In the words of Jesus: “This
is the bread which has come down from heaven; it is not like the bread our
ancestors ate: they are dead, but anyone who eats this bread will live for
ever” (Jn. 6:58). The Eucharistic Jesus is not bread like the
one eaten by the Jews in the desert, rather he is the real Bread that gives
life, He is both Bread and Word of God. Jesus is the Word that became Flesh,
not only Flesh but also Bread. It is indeed illuminating the word of God in
John 6:63: “The words i have spoken
to you are spirit and they are life”. Now, you can imagine, if the spoken words
of Jesus give life, imagine Him the Word of God! Indeed, Jesus the Word and Bread
of life gives life. For this, we are
invited to live not on mere bread but on the Word that took Flesh, and later
became Bread. In fact, we may well affirm that the Eucharist is the second and continuous Incarnation of Jesus on
earth.
In the Gospel (Jn. 6:51-59) St. John presents a wonderful
teaching on the Eucharist, done by Jesus himself. Jesus says “I am the living bread”, “my body is true food and my blood real
Drink”. What Jesus is offering is
not just a mere sign, rather they are real food and real drink, yet more
than that. Moreover, body and blood stand to indicate the totality of the
person, therefore, He is giving us all Himself without reservation (Body,
Blood, Soul and Divinity). Indeed, Jesus gives himself under the appearance of
Bread and Wine. He says: “the bread I
will give is my flesh for the life of the world” and his blood “will be poured for the remission of sins”,
that is, he offers himself in his state of being a sacrificial victim, in
obedience to the Father and for the remission of our sins. In the Incarnation the divinity of
Christ is present in the fragility of a human body; in the Eucharist, the
crucified, risen and glorified Christ is present in the fragility of bread and
wine.
During his
great teaching on the Eucharist, Jesus makes an eschatological promise: “who eats my flesh and drinks my blood will
have eternal life”: therefore, receiving
Jesus in the Eucharist we participate already in this world in the divine life
of God and eternal life in the world to come. He further expressed “who eats my flesh and drinks my blood, I
will raise him up on the last day”, he who nourishes himself with Jesus in
the Eucharist will participate as
Jesus promised in his mortal body the glory of the Risen Christ in the Final
Resurrection. On
hearing this teaching, the Jews questioned him saying: “how can he give us his
flesh to eat?” Therfore, they intended very well the language of Jesus, it is
not in metaphorical or symbolical sense that he invites them to eat his body,
rather in the realistic sense, to eat and nourish themselves with his body. Jesus by no means minimized the intensity
of his discourse, little wonder the disciples said “this language is strong,
who will admit it?”. Some of the disciples stopped following him, and he
turned and asked the apostles, “do you want to go away also?”.
The
reception of this Sacrament creates a wonderful intimacy and union between
Jesus and the receiver, Jesus promised “who
eats my flesh and drinks my blood, I will live in him and him in me”, that
is, through the Eucharist a profound union is established between Christ and
the faithful. Through this intimacy,
there comes a sort of a progressive transformation of the faithful, until he is
Christified. It was the German philosopher Fuerback that said “we become
what we eat”, this is true to some extent, that is why we are called to become
WHAT or WHO we receive in the Eucharist. We
are called to be christified and to become carriers of Jesus, living tabernacles:
“Christophers”, Christ-bearers. In the words of St. Leo the great, one
of the effects of the Eucharist is to make us become what or whom we eat. Thus, there are some existential implications, for
Jesus in response to the argument of the Jews says “if you do not eat the flesh of the Son of man and drink his blood, you
have no life in you” (Jn. 6:53),
again he says: “so whoever eats me will
also draw life from me” (Jn. 6:57b).
St. Paul understood this vividly well when he said “it is no longer I that live
but Christ lives in me” (Gal. 2:20).
Are we ready to live for Him? Are we ready to make a space in our life for
Jesus? In the book of Revelation He says: “I am standing at your door and
knocking if someone hears my voice and open to me, I will come in and eat with
him” (Rev. 3:20). There He does not
come to dwell in us by force, rather he waits for us to open the door of our
heart to him. Child of God open your heart, for the Eucharistic Jesus is
knocking.
This great mystery is to be considered from
different aspects: as a sacrifice, banquet and a mystery that calls for
commitment. ►The Eucharist
as a Sacrifice: The Eucharist is above all, the sacrifice that renders the self-immolation of Christ actual and
perenially present. It is the sacrifice of the New covenant ratified with
the blood of Christ. In the celebration of the Eucharist, Christ is
present in the state of a victim for the expiation of our sins: in the bread it
is his flesh that is given, his slain body, in the wine, his shed blood. In the Eucharist Jesus renders present,
actualizes in a sacramental, unbloody but real manner, his sacrifice. As
such, every eucharistic celebration represents and renders actual in all its
redemptive efficacy the sacrifice of Calvary, unsurprisingly, we call it the
holy sacrifice of the Mass. ►The Eucharist as a Banquet: The
Eucharist is not only the sacrifice of Christ, but at the same time, it is a
supper, a feast, to which everyone is invited. Jesus instituted it in the
context of the Last Supper, with typical elements of a banquet: bread and wine,
In
the Eucharist Jesus makes himself present not only to represent or actualize
his sacrifice of expiation, of propitiation and glorification of the Father,
but also to become our food, our spiritual nourishment. We cannot but underline
the insistence with which Jesus uses the words: eat and drink. During the
moment of the Institution, at the event of the Last Supper, Jesus will say:
“take and eat”, “drink all of you” (cf.
Lk. 22:19-20; Mk. 14:22-25; Mt. 26: 26-29). The Eucharist is the divine banquet that every soul is invited to
participate in order to be nourished of Christ. ►The Eucharist
as a mystery which calls for commitment: The Eucharist is not a mere rite
or a simple cultual act, that is repeated in a formal way. Above all, it is a
mystery that requires a conscious and active participation. It is a mystery
that demands fully the commitment of a believer. The Eucharist as a sacrifice requires
those who participate in it the effort to make themselve a living sacrifice
acceptable to God, to unite their daily sufferings to that of Christ. And
as a banquet, it is a feast around which we gather as children of God, the Eucharist as such, invites us to live
in communion, fraternity and love.
Interestingly, in his Gosple narrative,
John does not include the institution of the Eucharist in his account, rather,
he narrated the event of the washing of the apostles’ feet by Jesus.
Corollarily, the humble service of
Jesus, demonstrates to us how the Eucharist should transform our lives from
acts of self-centredness to acts of love, humble service to others. And
again, before this unprecedented gesture of Jesus, one may ask: why does Jesus
offer himself as our food and nourishment in the Eucharist? Extrapolating from
the affirmations and promises of Jesus in this passage, we are urged to make
threefold considerations: ●Jesus gives us himself in the Eucharist to unite us
with him, to communicate to us his divine life and to transform us in him. ●To
deposit in us seed of immortality, in his words: “who eats my flesh will live
forever”. ● To make us one people, his Church, so that we will live in
communion among us (cf. 1Cor.10:17).
Drawing the
issue further, we can identify three important elements in relation to this
sublime mystery, namely: ●The substantial
change of the bread to the body of our Lord Jesus Christ and the wine to
his blood. This is what we refer to as transubstantiation,
as opposed to transfiguration. ●The element
of thanksgiving, which in Greek is “Eucharistia”. ●The phenomenon of remembrance or memorial. This serves as a reminder to the people
of God not to forget the good deeds of the Lord.
The second
reading (1Cor. 10:16-17) delineates
what should be the fruits of the Eucharist in us and its existential
implications. St. Paul tells us clearly how the Eucharist puts us in union with
Christ and with each other. The Chalice of blessing and the Bread will break
are signs of communion with Christ. And this communion should not only be with
Christ but among men, partakers in the one Cup and one Bread. The particpation
in one Bread bestows on us the grace of becoming one body even though many. In chapter 11 St. Paul admonishes us to
receive the body of Christ worthily, if not the person eats and drinks his
condemnation. The reception of the
Eucharist is not to be seen as a daily routine. We are all invited to
nourish ourselves with Christ, but worthily, it does not exclude anyone, except
if one excludes himself by sin.
Again to
our earlier question: What does this ritual mean? Our Lord responds to us,
first of all, with the words of St. Paul: “whenever you eat this bread and
drink this cup, you are proclaiming the Lord’s death until he comes” (1Cor. 11:26). And at the moment of the
Institution of the Eucharist Jesus said to his apostles: “Do this in
remembrance of me” (1Cor. 11:24).
Indeed, it does appear the keyword for the understanding of the Eucharist is
Memorial / Remembrance. But memorial of what? Of the death of the Lord,
certainly, but not only of this, Jesus said: “In memory of me”, the Eucharist, therefore, remembers (brings
to heart) Him, all his mysteries; His prefiguration in the Old Testament and
his actualization in the New Testament. The Eucharist is a Remembrance / Memorial
of the Lord and the Salvation he wrought, that culminates in his Death and
Resurrection. Drawing
the issue further, here remembrance entails something more than mere
recollection. In the context of the
Passover, it is God and not just the people who remembers. And as such, He
makes present the great acts of redemption. Similarly, at each Eucharist, we do not just look back in remembrance of the Last
Supper; instead the Last Supper is made present to us in order that we might
experience the saving power of Jesus. In the Eucharist we both remember and relive what Jesus has done for us
and this great gift of Himself in the Eucharist. It is worthy of note that in
the biblical language, ‘remembrance’ (zikkaron) rather makes one to relive
the reality really; it is a remembrance
and a presence at the same time!. The Death and Salvation of Christ, in the
Eucharist, are not relived only in our memory, but they are relived really even
though in an unbloody manner; there is a real presence on the altar.
Above all
else, however, from what has been said it
is clear that the participation in the Eucharist does not end with the final
blessing, it is to be lived, it must permeate and influence all our actions.
And here we want to consider a Eucharistic experience from three different but
interconnected perspectives: before,
during and after the celebration. In the
‘before’ of the celebration, there are numerous elements that predispose us
to an ever more lively celebration of the sacrament. Before the celebration,
the believer is invited to consider the gratuitousness of the gift that he goes
to celebrate and to recognize himself as a sinner. The ‘during’ is the time of celebration, the space in which the
encounters between one believer and another, the human and the divine take
place. It is a moment of a very strong involvement, of feeling welcomed by God
and the brethren. So, it is also a time of fraternity. It is a time to let
ourselves be given the therapy by the Word of God. It is a time of
confrontation with oneself and the Word, and this attitude holds the secret for
constant growth in Christian maturity. Lastly, the ‘after’ of this encounter with God and with the brothers and
sisters should instill in us a life of communion already anticipated during the
celebration, as an element coming from the encounter with Jesus. What we celebrate
must have moral and social values in our life or in our experience. After the
example of self-donation, sharing and love given to us by Jesus, the ‘after’
celebration must therefore be a time of extension of the Eucharistic experience
in our everyday life. And I would like
to conclude with these profound and piercing words of Don Tonino Bello: “Unfortunately,
flashy opulence makes us easily see the body of Christ in the Eucharist of our
altars. But it prevents us from seeing the body of Christ in the uncomfortable
tabernacles of misery, need, suffering, loneliness. (...) I believe that the
feast of the Body and Blood of Christ demands our conversion. Not the altitude
of our words. Nor the empty pomp of our liturgies.” Truly, Jesus in the
Eucharist continues to demand for our conversion. May He make our presence before his Presence a
transforming encounter. May we become more of Him and less of us. Amen!!!
Verbum caro factum est!
Verbum panis factum est!
Verbum caro factum est!
Verbum panis factum est!
(Fr. Vitus M.C. Unegbu, SC)
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