The perfect food for this life and beyond
By Sheena George
By Sheena George
It was
a chilly Wednesday evening just two weeks ago, but the Little Flower Church,
our parish church situated on a hillock in Nerul, Navi Mumbai, and encompassed
by several Hindu temples, was humming with activity.
The occasion was the weekly Eucharistic adoration led by our parish priest. When the service reached its crescendo, Vivek (name changed), a non-Christian, who comes to the church frequently, saw something unusual on the monstrance, a vessel in which the consecrated Host is exposed for the Eucharistic adoration. Vivek couldn’t believe his eyes.
The occasion was the weekly Eucharistic adoration led by our parish priest. When the service reached its crescendo, Vivek (name changed), a non-Christian, who comes to the church frequently, saw something unusual on the monstrance, a vessel in which the consecrated Host is exposed for the Eucharistic adoration. Vivek couldn’t believe his eyes.
He saw the image of a lady and child in the
Eucharist displayed in the monstrance. The Benediction service was going at
that time with the priest blessing the people with the monstrance.
A flabbergasted Vivek, who uses a walker
after a recent accident, kept on looking at the apparition. He asked himself:
who are this lady and child? He rubbed his eyes in disbelief. He looked at
others. The amazing thing is that nobody else seemed to have seen anything
unusual.
After the service, he asked the priest about what
he had seen. The priest, pleasantly surprised, explained to him. We all know
that, without doubt, it was Mother Mary and child Jesus he saw in the
Eucharist, the real body of Jesus Christ. But the question is: why nearly 300
people assembled in the church could not see this apparition? Why only a
non-Christian like Vivek saw this image? Is it our lack of faith or our take it
for granted attitude? It’s a fact that
most of the faithful are indifferent to the fact that Jesus is present in the
Eucharist
A few years ago I was fortunate to visit the
Catacombs in Rome, Italy. The Catacombs are ancient underground burial places originated
about the middle of the second century by early Christians. They were also used
for regular worship, memorial services and celebrations of the anniversaries of
Christian martyrs and Popes buried there. One of the wall paintings there,
showed the agape scene (love feast) with only seven people. I asked the priest, the
official tour guide of the site, why only seven people were shown? He said, “it
shows they are having a perfect food.” As we know in the Bible, number seven
symbolizes completeness or perfection. Yes the Eucharist is the perfect food.
About the Eucharist, the real Body of Christ, Pope Francis in his apostolic
exhortation had said although it is the fullness of sacramental life, is not a
prize for the perfect but a powerful medicine and nourishment for the weak.
When
the priest celebrates the Holy Mass, the bread and wine become Christ’s Body
and Blood (Transubstantiation) after the priest says the Christ’s words and with invocation of the
Holy Spirit. It is not man that causes the things offered to become the body
and blood of Jesus or by the righteousness of either the celebrant or the
recipient, but by the power of God, says the Catechism of the Catholic Church
(CCC).
In the
old testament we see God provided Manna, the food from heaven for their journey
through the desert. About this John 6:48-50 in Bible says, Jesus said “I am the
bread of life. Your ancestors ate the manna in the wilderness, yet they died.
But here is the bread that comes down from heaven, which anyone may eat and not
die.”
The growth in Christian life needs the
nourishment of Eucharistic Communion, the bread for our pilgrimage until the
moment of death, it says.
We can never thank the Lord
enough for the gift of the Eucharist. "That is why it is so important to
go to Mass on Sundays, to go to Mass, not only to pray, but to receive
Communion, the bread which is the Body of Jesus Christ, that saves us, forgives
us, and unites us with the Father," Pope Francis said.
The Lord addresses an invitation to us,
urging us to receive Him in the sacrament of the Eucharist: "Truly, I say
to you, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of man and drink his blood, you
have no life in you." To respond to this invitation we must prepare
ourselves for so great and so holy a moment.
The
first announcement of the Eucharist divided the disciples, just as the
announcement of the Passion scandalized them. "Will you also go away?"
the Lord's question echoes through the ages, as a loving invitation to discover
that to receive in faith the gift of his Eucharist is to receive the Lord himself.
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