Reading: Deut. 8:2-3.14-16; Ps. 147; 1Cor. 10:16-17; John 6:51-58
Rev.
Fr. Emmanuel Emenike Onyia
CELEBRATING
CHRIST'S LOVING PRESENCE FOR HUMANITY IN THE EUCHARIST.
Today
we celebrate the Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ also
called the Corpus Christi celebration. This solemnity usually takes place on Thursday
or Sunday after the Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity. It is a solemn
celebration were we reaffirm with great joy our faith in the Eucharistic
Mystery of Christ's loving presence for humanity. An event that reminds us of
God’s infinite gift of love for humanity which was made present in the Person
of Christ Jesus under the appearance of Bread and Wine.
The
mystery of the solemnity of Corpus Christi, constitutes a very important aspect
of our Christian faith, which is rooted in the historical and cultural context
of the Jewish people's experience with God, of which Jesus is the fullest of
this experience and revelation. Therefore, in the occasion of our Gospel
passage today, we heard how Jesus engaged the people in a very important
discussion about the reality of his sacrificial love for humanity that is not
so familiar with the people.
He said to them “I am the living bread which
has come down from heaven. Anyone who eats this bread will live for ever; and
the bread that I shall give is my flesh, for the life of the world… I tell you
most solemnly, if you do not eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood,
you will not have life in you. Anyone who does eat my flesh and drink my blood
has eternal life, and I shall raise him up on the last day. For my flesh is
real food and my blood is real drink. He who eats my flesh and drinks my blood
lives in me and I live in him.
This
teaching seemed so hard and difficult to understand as many disciples of Jesus
withdrew from him and abandoned him just like some of our brethren in faith
chose to abandon this same truth of our faith concerning the Real Presence of
Christ in the Eucharist. However, their abandoning Jesus does not made him to
change his statement. But for those Apostles who stayed, he made known this
mystery at the Last Supper when he instituted the Sacrament of the Holy
Eucharist and gave them power and authority to do this in memory of him.
This
is a very important mission, which the Apostles had faithfully carried out and
have passed on to all of their successors, the bishops and the priests of the
Church, who have been ordained and received the same power and authority of the
Lord to celebrate the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. For at Last Supper, Jesus
presented the Bread and Wine as his Body and Blood which he offered as a
sacrificial love for humanity and ask his disciples to do the same in memory of
him.
This
very mandate of Christ is what the Church is doing at every celebration of the
Holy sacrifice of the Mass, where Christ through the priest who act ‘in persona Christi’ by the power of
consecration, transubstantiate the Bread and Wine into his Real Body and Blood
and offer it to God His Father as an unbloodied sacrificial love for humanity.
This
means that the substance and essence of the bread and wine the priest blessed
and offered to God at the celebration of the Holy Mass, has truly become the
very Body and Blood of Christ Himself, under the appearance of bread and wine
through the mystery of Transubstantiation. Thus, through the word
‘transubstantiation’ from the two words ‘Trans’ which means ‘change’ and
‘Substantiate’ meaning ‘substance or essence’, we can explain the mystery of
the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist. Here, we have the change of the
whole substance of bread and wine into the Body and Blood of Christ through the
prayer of consecration by Christ Himself through the priest in the power of the
Holy Spirit.
Therefore,
at every Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, through the power of the Holy Spirit the
substance of bread and wine become the Real and Most Precious Body and Blood of
Christ Jesus, just in the same way he spoke at the Last Supper saying ‘This is
My Body, which shall be given up for you’, ‘This is the Chalice of My Blood,
the Blood of the New and Eternal Covenant, which shall be poured out for you
and for many for the forgiveness of sins’.
This he fulfilled at the Cross in Calvary,
where he offered himself; Body, Soul and Divinity for the salvation of
humanity. Hence, we share in this grace of salvation when we participate fully
in this sacrificial offering of God’s love for humanity. That is why the Church
defined the Eucharist as the sacrament of the true body and blood of Jesus
Christ, together with his Soul and Divinity, under the appearance of bread and
wine. Though, the appearances of bread and wine remain in the Holy Eucharist,
for we cannot see Christ with our bodily eyes in this sacrament. But we do see him
with the eyes of faith
Little wonder St Paul says in our second
reading today that: The cup of blessing that we bless is a participation in the
blood of Christ, and the bread that we break is a participation in the body of
Christ. For there is only one bread in a form of a single body and we all have
a share in this one bread of which we aspire to become what we receive. This is
because Jesus offers his own blood, having won an eternal redemption for us. He
has purified our inner self from dead actions so that we can offer our service
to the living God.
The fact remains that in the Eucharist, we
are physically and spiritually fed much more than the Israelites in the
wilderness, who were fed with manna as we have it in our first reading. For they were given the manna to survive in the
wilderness, but Christ gave us the Eucharist not just for us to survive in this
world, but, for us to gain eternal life and come to share in his love. This
will help us to understand that the Eucharist is the presence of Christ's love
for humanity.
Dear friends, what is our relationship
with Jesus in the Eucharist? What is our attitude towards the Holy Eucharist?
What is our experience of Jesus in the Eucharist? How has the Eucharist we
receive almost everyday change our lives positively? How has the Eucharist
influence our lives to sacrifice for the good of humanity? Do we still have
that strong desire to receive Christ in the Eucharist? Do we still believe in
the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist? Do we still feel the love of
Jesus in the Eucharist?
How
often have we abuse the Eucharist and treat the body of Christ without due
reverence? How often have we received the Eucharist unworthily? The answer to
these questions is blowing in the wind because we have forgotten that anyone who
received the Eucharist in an unworthy state, received judgment unto his or
herself (1Cor. 11:27-29). For anyone who is aware of having committed a mortal
sin must not receive Holy Communion, even if he experiences deep contrition,
without having first received sacramental absolution, unless he has a grave
reason for receiving Communion and there is no possibility of going to
confession ( CCC. 1457).
Therefore,
it is important that we receive the Eucharist worthily and reverently. And
these are benefits we gain when we receive Eucharist worthily: first we gain eternal
Life and renew the life of grace we received at Baptism. We also gain forgiveness
of Venial Sins, we receive spiritual joy, Supernatural Protection and closeness
to the Trinity. Yes, the Eucharist fills our hearts with love and thanksgiving.
It gives us hope that God is with us in our daily struggles. In the Eucharist
we have a personal communion with Christ. For it keeps us in one communion with
God, the church and with one another. It reminds us of God's constant presence
with humanity and his love for us.
So,
today we are called to embrace the love of God present in the Holy Eucharist,
the power of God’s mercy for sinful humanity. We are called to deepened our
understanding of the rich mystery of our faith in the Eucharist. Today we are
called to change the way we relate with Jesus in the Eucharist. We are called
to strive to worthily receive the Holy Eucharist. We are called to be grateful
for this Sacrificial love of Christ in the Holy Eucharist and form the habit of
adoring Christ our Lord present in the Holy Eucharist. We are called to let the
love of his presence to transform our souls into that purest love that will
renew our families, our societies, our country and the world at large.
LET US
PRAY: Heavenly Father, through the sacrificial love of your Son Jesus Christ in
the Holy Eucharist, grant us the grace to constantly experience your presence
within us especially in the midst of doubt, ignorance, persecution, trials and
uncertainties of life. May the Eucharistic Power of Christ's love fill our
hearts once again and so renew the hatred, greed and corruption in the hearts
of sinful humanity. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen. Happy Sunday to
you all.
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