Sunday, June 22, 2014

Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ (Cycle A)

Be Who You Receive . . . Receive Who You Are 
Deuteronomy 8:2-3, 14-16; 1 Corinthians 10:16-17; John 6:51-58

Is not the cup we bless a participation in the Blood of Christ? Is not the bread we break a participation in the Body of Christ? St. Paul puts it well. He “says it like it is.” This is what happens inside this church today. This is what happens at this Mass . . . at each and every Mass: a participation . . . a holy communion. Christ not only speaks to us, Christ becomes one with us.

Here, in this place and time. This country, this county; here, in this week, in this year; in the life that is yours, in the life that is mine and this world that is ours, in this act of worship that we render to the awesome God, we don’t just talk about a baby born in the humblest of conditions in a stable long ago; we don’t just talk about the body of a prophet hungry and weary and racked with temptation in the heat of the desert; we don’t just talk about teachings of a wise rabbi who preached to fisherman on the sea and to priests in the Temple; we don’t just talk about that moment when God so loved the world that the universe stopped! And in the spilled blood of an innocent man, the tight-grip of sin released; and the strangle-hold of death gave way in the cry of our Savior: “Into your hands, Father, I commend my spirit! Into your hands I hand over my life.” No. We don’t just talk about Christ when we gather for Mass, we become one with Christ. And how we become one with him is what we celebrate today: Corpus Christi; the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ; the Eucharist; Holy Communion.

In a few minutes, during the offertory, before I empty its contents into the chalice and communion cups, I will pour a few drops of water into the flagon of wine. The wine represents Jesus; the water us. As I do this, the words that I pray are, in my opinion, some of the most meaningful in the entire mass. But the thing is, you’ve probably never heard me say them because they're prayed quietly, in a whisper. In fact, this prayer is actually called the “Secret.” But it shouldn’t be a secret. The words are so beautiful and so meaningful they should be shouted so everyone can hear. The words I pray are these: By the mystery of this water and wine, may we come to share in the divinity of Christ, who humbled himself to share in our humanity. Unlike oil and water, water and wine mix completely. They become inseparable and indistinguishable. This is exactly what happens in the Eucharist. When we receive the Eucharist, we are receiving Jesus’ Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity, and we are joined in such a close association with God, a communion, that our human nature is comingled with the divine!

Realize it or not, this is what happens here at Mass: in the Eucharist we receive, Christ becomes one with us, and we become one with him. In the early centuries of the Church, St. Augustine attempted to explain something of the meaning of Holy Communion. He pointed to the Eucharistic Bread on the altar and said to his people: BE WHO YOU RECEIVE . . . RECEIVE WHO YOU ARE! In other words: Your deepest reality is Christ. Christ is your truest identity. You and Christ . . . One and the same . . . One holy communion

His hands washing the dust off the feet of his disciples? Those are your hands washing your child in the bath tub. His hands feeding the hungry? Those are your hands feeding your father in a nursing home. The Lord weeping over the City of Jerusalem? His tears, are your tears when love’s pain runs deep, so deep that eyes can’t help but weep. Like the day you found out that the diagnosis was cancer. Like the time you had the argument with your teenage son. Like the night your spouse told you he no longer loved you and was leaving. Like the morning you sat all alone in your car not knowing how you were going to break the news to your family that you had been laid off from your job. His body sacrificed on the cross? That’s your body when, despite the desires within and temptations without, you choose to live chastely. His blood spilled on the cross? Yes, that’s your blood donated in a blood drive for someone you don't even know. All of this is a holy communion, when you put your life on the line or, as St. Augustine would say: when you put your life on the altar.

In a little while, our Eucharistic Ministers will join Father and myself here in the sanctuary and then they will be sent back into your midst to present the true and sacramental presence of our Lord to you. But in a real sense, we are all Eucharistic Ministers. We all have as our mission to make Christ present to the world. And we do that by we ourselves becoming Eucharist; by we ourselves becoming his Body and Blood manifest physically to the world; by we ourselves making Christ present through our presence . . . through the sincerity of our voice, the compassion in our eyes, the healing of our touch, the charity in our deeds.

This truth is beautifully expressed in a poem, which made such an impression on me in the very first class I took in my diaconate studies that I kept it all these years. It goes like this:

He was old, tired and sweaty,
Pushing his homemade cart down the alley,
Stopping now and then to poke around in somebody’s garbage
I wanted to tell him about EUCHARIST
But the look in his eyes,
The despair on his face, 
The hopelessness of his life filling his cart, told me to forget it.
So I smiled and said “Hi!” and gave him EUCHARIST.

She lived alone, her husband dead, her family gone,
And she talked at you . . . not to you.
Words, endless words, spilled out,
So I listened . . . and gave her EUCHARIST.

She couldn't say she was sorry, she could only stand there,
Stubborn, stiff, and still angry.
I reached out my hand, I forgave her, and we shared EUCHARIST.

He was dying of AIDS, terrified, alone and in so much pain,
All alone in the world, misunderstood, condemned; no one seemed to care.
I held his hand, and prayed with him; he was EUCHARIST for me.

It was a silly fight. Who started it? What was it all about?
We hugged, we reconciled, and we laughed EUCHARIST.

Tired, weary, disgusted, lonely,
Go to your friends, open their door,
Say, “Look at me” . . . and receive their EUCHARIST.

I laughed at myself, and told myself,
“You, with all your sin, all your selfishness,
I forgive you, I accept you, I love you.”
It’s nice, and so necessary, too . . . to give yourself EUCHARIST.

My father, when will we learn, that you cannot talk EUCHARIST,
Cannot philosophize about it . . . you do it!
You don’t dogmatize EUCHARIST.
Sometimes you laugh it,
Sometimes you cry it, often you sing it.
Sometimes it’s wild peace, then crying hurt,
Often humiliating, never deserved.
You see EUCHARIST in another’s eyes,
Give it in another’s hand held tight.
Squeeze it with an embrace.
You pause EUCHARIST in the middle of a busy day,
Speak EUCHARIST with a million things to do,
And listen EUCHARIST for a person who wants to talk.
For EUCHARIST is as simple as being on time
And so profound as sympathy.

Jesus took bread in his hands, he looked at it and said, "Change."
He took the cup in his hands, he looked at the wine and said, "Change."
And they became EUCHARIST, his blood and his body.
Jesus takes us in his hands, he looks at us and says "Change."
And we become EUCHARIST, his blood and his body.
And we become EUCHARIST, until he comes again.

I give you my life, I give you me,
I give you . . . EUCHARIST.

The crowds in today’s gospel witnessed the miracle of the loaves and the fish but couldn’t accept the implications of Jesus’ words of the even greater miracle of his own flesh being the living bread come down from heaven. At every mass, we too witness a miracle: ordinary bread and wine transformed into this living bread. Can we accept the implications? Eucharist cannot be passive - simply taking, eating, drinking. Eucharist is active and dynamic, and the miracle of the Eucharist is not complete until we BECOME and SHARE. Be who you receive . . . Receive who you are.

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Graduation

How do you judge the success of a school? Through the academic achievement of it's students? Through awards they receive? Through the values of good ethics and good citizenship that the administration and faculty imbue in its student? Yes to all of the above. But for a Catholic school, there is one aspect that an award ceremony, a report card or a diploma can't measure.  And that is faith. But how is that intangible to be measured?

In February, on the Tuesdays and Thursdays that I spent with the Eighth Grade students of St. Therese School, we discussed the Beatitudes, the eight virtues that Jesus tells us we are truly blessed if we possess, the virtues of citizenship in the Kingdom of God, the virtues that probably were most evident in Jesus’ own personality. I gave them an assignment. They had to compose five Beatitudes of their own. Below are the twenty-eight Beatitudes of St. Therese’s Graduating Class of 2014, one from each of our Graduates. I think through them, we will be able to judge that which a test could not – the profound and admirable faith of these students.

The Beatitudes
of the 2014 Graduating Class of St. Therese School 
Blessed are the loyal, for they will be shown faithfulness.

Blessed are you when you try your best, for you will do better.

Blessed are the generous, for they will receive much.

Blessed are the worrisome, for they are instilled with reliance on God.

Blessed are those who don’t feel uncertain to share their feelings, for they will never be afraid to share the truth.

Blessed are those who are prayerful, for their relationship with God shall grow.

Blessed are they who are scared and seek God, for they will no longer know the meaning of fear.

Blessed are they with heavy hearts; they shall find comfort in the arms of the Lord.

Blessed are the sad on earth, for they will eternally be happy in heaven.

Blessed are the considerate, for God will consider them.

Blessed are those who go to church, for they shall feel the never-ending love of God in their lives.

Blessed are those who are blinded by faith, for their eyes will be open.

Blessed are they who sacrifice for others, their reward will be in heaven.

Blessed are the lonely, for they shall be surrounded by friends and loved ones.

Blessed are the givers, for they will be given Heaven.

Blessed are those who forgive, knowing everyone makes mistakes including themselves, for they will seek and find and delight in the good qualities of the people around them.

Blessed are those who strive for holiness, for they shall be welcomed into heaven.

Blessed are those that show people the path for good, for they will be great leaders. 

Blessed are the poor, for they teach us to be thankful for what we have in our lives.

Blessed are the lost, for they shall be led by God.

Blessed are those who are drawn from the crowd, for they are one in a million with God.

Blessed are they who give a little bit of time to God every day, for God will bless them with an eternity with him.

Blessed are those who love others, for they shall receive ten times more love.

Blessed are those who recognize God in each of us, for they will receive God’s love.

Blessed are the forgiving, for they know that no one is perfect except for God.

Blessed are the honest, for they will see through lies in Heaven.

Blessed are those who have lost a loved one, for they will be comforted and watched by a guardian angel sent by God.

And blessed is the entire world, for one day they will see into their hearts that war shall be replaced with peace.

Heavenly Father, bless these beautiful young people that that we and YOU delight in. We give thanks tonight for their achievements, their academic success, the talents they possess, the ways in which they have used the gifts that you have given them to make our school and our lives better, richer and more beautiful. May they continue to glorify you as they move on to the future and continue the quest to become the people that you call them to be. May they always strive to live out the Commandments you have given us, emulate the way of life that your son Jesus lived for us, and be faithful to the Beatitudes that they themselves say they are truly blessed if they possess. We ask this through Christ, our Lord.
Amen.