J
JFlats
Guest
Greetings to all: A homily, given by Bishop Gumbleton on Corpus Christi Sunday, was published by *National Catholic Reporter *[The Peace Pulpit Homilies by Bishop Gumbleton June 13, 2004]](The Peace Pulpit Homilies by Bishop Gumbleton June 13, 2004]). A friend of mine received it from her friend, a fallen-away Catholic now attending the local Church of God.
Even though I know that his eminence is to the left of the Pope, the homily really left me breathless (hyperventilating?). He begins by stating,
“Back in the late Middle Ages, there were many difficulties in the church-much corruption, a lot of bad teaching. And among those who were trying to reform the church was someone we all know of very well, Martin Luther. He was a priest of the Augustinian Order. And one of the things that he said and that he was so determined to try to do something about was the Holy Eucharist. He says, “The church has turned an action into a thing.” He was proclaiming a very important truth about what had gone wrong in the church. The church turned an action into a thing. What could he mean by that?”
Frankly, it goes downhill from there. His eminence ends by saying,
“[A] child had learned about the Blessed Sacrament and really came to a deep understanding in simple words, but they’re words that maybe all of us could remember. He said about bread, “This is not just any bread, this is God bread. And it shows us that God loves us and that we must love one another.” That’s the whole message. If we do the action of the Eucharist well, then we understand God loves us, but also that we must love one another.”
I agree with my Catholic friend that the homily requires a response, and I intend to help her craft a magisterial, Catechism-based, Scripturally sound answer that goes beyond the “can’t we all just get along?” watered down image of the Holy Eucharist.
Please pray … for my friend, her friend, and most especially for Bishop Gumbleton.
Thanks & God bless all of you
Even though I know that his eminence is to the left of the Pope, the homily really left me breathless (hyperventilating?). He begins by stating,
“Back in the late Middle Ages, there were many difficulties in the church-much corruption, a lot of bad teaching. And among those who were trying to reform the church was someone we all know of very well, Martin Luther. He was a priest of the Augustinian Order. And one of the things that he said and that he was so determined to try to do something about was the Holy Eucharist. He says, “The church has turned an action into a thing.” He was proclaiming a very important truth about what had gone wrong in the church. The church turned an action into a thing. What could he mean by that?”
Frankly, it goes downhill from there. His eminence ends by saying,
“[A] child had learned about the Blessed Sacrament and really came to a deep understanding in simple words, but they’re words that maybe all of us could remember. He said about bread, “This is not just any bread, this is God bread. And it shows us that God loves us and that we must love one another.” That’s the whole message. If we do the action of the Eucharist well, then we understand God loves us, but also that we must love one another.”
I agree with my Catholic friend that the homily requires a response, and I intend to help her craft a magisterial, Catechism-based, Scripturally sound answer that goes beyond the “can’t we all just get along?” watered down image of the Holy Eucharist.
Please pray … for my friend, her friend, and most especially for Bishop Gumbleton.
Thanks & God bless all of you