The Most Holy Blood of Christ, Corpus Christi / Msgr. Owen F. Campion
The Sunday Readings
This weekend the Church celebrates the Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ, or as perhaps it is better known by its traditional Latin title, Corpus Christi.
The first reading is from the Book of Deuteronomy, one of the first five books of the Old Testament. Deuteronomy recalls the passage of the Hebrews from Egyptian slavery to the Promised Land. Moses is the central figure in this book, in the Pentateuch and in the list of ancient Hebrew prophets. He is the principal figure in this weekend’s reading.
To understand this book, and indeed to grasp it is necessary to realize how bleak and sterile the Sinai Peninsula was (and still is, for that matter) at the time of the Hebrews’ escape from slavery in Egypt. Their plight in their journey across Sinai was bitterly difficult.
The fleeing Hebrews virtually were helpless. They faced death from starvation and thirst. Food and water were in short supply at best.
Through Moses, God supplied. As a result, the people lived. They did not starve. Eventually, they arrived at the Promised Land.
St. Paul’s First Epistle to the Corinthians supplies the second reading. Along with the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, and Luke, First Corinthians provides the New Testament records of the institution of the Eucharist.
The presence of this record in First Corinthians indicates how important the Eucharist was in early Christianity. The similarity among all the accounts shows how carefully the first Christians wished to put what happened at the Last Supper at the center of their worship.
St. John’s Gospel is the source of the last reading, and it is powerful and eloquent. Jesus states, “I am the living bread come down from heaven. If anyone eats this bread, he shall live forever; the bread I shall give is my flesh, for the life of the world” (Jn 6:51).
Jesus used no symbolic phrases, no vague illusions. The biblical texts are clear. He said, “I am the living bread come down from heaven”, directly and exactly. It is a simple, straightforward declaratory sentence. Not surprisingly, the first Christians, as does Catholic teaching today, remembered the Lord’s words as literal.
Reflection
Few Americans die of starvation, despite the chronic poverty endured by many. But millions around the world die for lack of food. This was a plight that the desperate Hebrews feared in across the Sinai Peninsula, as recalled by Deuteronomy, the source of the first reading.
Completely at the mercy of an unknown and very unforgiving terrain, they had no way out. They could do nothing to help themselves. Without food and water, without any direction as to where to go, they were facing death, literally.
God supplied them with food and water, pointing them on the right path to the Promised Land. God gave them life.
Even if blessed with material plenty, we all are in circumstances like those confronted by the ancient Hebrews. Today, as humans have been in any time, we are lost in our own stark and sterile Sinai Peninsulas created by sin and human limitation.
Perhaps the worst danger is that we so often assume that we know where we are, where we should go with our lives and that we have more control than we have.
In fact, we, too, are at the mercy of harsh, even deadly, conditions threatening us. In the spiritual sense, we all are vulnerable to the eternal death created by sin.
Here, God enters the picture, giving us Jesus, the Son of God. The Lord gives us himself in the Eucharist. As the early Christians so firmly believed, the Eucharist is not merely a symbol. The Eucharist is, in a traditional phrasing of Church teaching, the Lord’s “body, blood, soul and divinity.” In the Eucharist, Jesus brings us into an intimate communion with himself. Jesus nourishes us with his own body and blood. †