P
peregrinus_sg
Guest
Very nice homily, I think. Many of us will identify our parishes in his description also.
Pope John Paul declared the year 2005, the Year of the Eucharist. At the conclusion of that year, he canonized five saints distinguished for their Eucharistic piety (S.C. No. 4). He also issued the Apostolic Letter Mane Nobiscum Domine and an Encyclical on The Mystery and Worship of The Holy Eucharist (2005). Pope Benedict continued on the same theme with his Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation, The Sacrament of Charity (Sacramentum Caritatis). The Congregation of Divine Worship issued an Instruction on The Sacrament of Redemption (2004). These valuable documents address the mystery of the Eucharist, and are closely related to the Priesthood.
The Year of the Eucharist has come and gone, and yet (as a diocese) we can hardly boast of a good grasp of these documents and the teaching they contain. My strong plea to the priests: put these documents within the reach of your parishioners. Help us translate them into vernacular languages where necessary. This is one way of reawakening and increasing Eucharistic faith. This is the supreme treasure of the Catholic Church.
While the Eucharist and Eucharistic Adoration have not emerged as a major theme at our Diocesan Synod, it is no doubt the basis, the foundation, the cornerstone of the themes adopted by the Synod.
Turning our attention to the Eucharist and Eucharistic Adoration can only enhance and deepen the themes adopted by the Synod.
The Eucharist is the source and summit of all that the Church is and does. The breaking of the bread has always been at the centre of the life of the Church (Mane, 3). The Eucharist holds within itself the whole spiritual treasure of the Church (P.A. No. 5).
Through the ministry of the priest, Christ entrusted to us a memorial of His own passion and resurrection. The memorial makes effectively present here and now an event in the past, the death and resurrection, of Jesus Christ. The power of these events touches, and transforms us. In Baptism and in the Eucharist we enter into a communion of life and mission with the crucified and risen Lord. We take upon ourselves His mission to transform both our lives and the lives of others. The Eucharist is the most precious gift, the pearl of great price given to the Church by the Lord Himself. After receiving both the Body and Blood of Christ, we say “Amen”, affirming the real presence of the Body and Blood of Christ Himself. His invisible presence is made visible through the visible signs of bread and wine. The Eucharist gives Catholics their unique identity. The non-celebration of the Eucharist because of the shortage of priests weakens this Catholic identity.
When there are serious and deep divisions and conflicts in our ranks as priests and in our parishes, then we contradict the spirit of the Eucharist which is “a sacrament of love, a sign of unity and a bond of charity” (S.C. No: 47).
One of the chief duties of a priest is to be a faithful disperser of the mysteries of God. To him it is given to lead his people to faith and conversion. “How are they to believe in him they have not heard? How are they to hear if no one preaches and how are men to preach unless they be sent?” (Rm.10.14) (S.C. No. 8,19).
The priest and the deacon have a close relationship with the Eucharist. The Eucharist, says John Paul, “is the principal and central raison d’etre of the Sacrament of the Priesthood. Priests derive from the Eucharist and exist for the Eucharist” (Ecclesia de Eucharistia, No. 2). Priests are in a special way responsible for the Eucharist. They are entrusted with the Eucharist for others. The people of God expect from priests a particular veneration and Eucharistic piety.
Now, Eucharistic Adoration “is simply the natural consequence of the Eucharistic Celebration, which is itself the Church’s supreme act of adoration” (S. Caritatis No. 66). Adoration, outside Mass “prolongs and intensifies’ all that takes place during the Eucharistic Celebration. Adoration itself is an act of witnessing when one sees many gathered in silence before the Lord. Eucharistic Adoration should become part and parcel of our way of being Church. Many have said that Eucharistic Adoration promotes vocations to the priesthood and to religious life. Children, youth and adults should be taught and encouraged to appreciate the beauty of silence in the presence of Jesus Christ.