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The Holy Eucharist is the Whole Christ
Rev. John A.
Hardon, S.J.
The most fundamental question to ask about the Blessed Sacrament is, "Who is the
Holy Eucharist?" And the correct answer is: The Holy Eucharist is Jesus Christ.
There is more behind this answer than many Catholics realize. When the Council
of Trent in the sixteenth century defined the meaning of the Eucharist, it
declared that "the Body and Blood, together with the Soul and Divinity of our
Lord Jesus Christ, and therefore the whole Christ, is truly, really and
substantially contained in the sacrament of the Holy Eucharist."
Shortly after Trent, Pope St. Pius V authorized the publication of the <Roman
Catechism> which built on the Council of Trent and explained its teachings for
the pastors of the Church.
Regarding the Real Presence, the pastors were told to explain that "in this
sacrament is contained not only the true Body of Christ-and that means
everything that goes to make up a true body, such as bones, nerves, and so
on-but also Christ whole and entire." Consequently the Eucharist contains Jesus
Christ in the fullness of his divinity and the completeness of his
humanity.
Jesus is therefore in the Blessed Sacrament "whole and entire: the Soul, the
Body and Blood of Christ, with all their component parts. In heaven a
complete human nature is united to the divine nature in one. . . person. It is a
denial of the faith to suppose that in this sacrament there is anything less."
It is not speculation but cold revealed fact that the Holy Eucharist is the Son
of God who became the Son of Mary.
Whatever makes
Christ, Christ, is in the Holy Eucharist; nothing less.
Consequently when we speak of <transubstantiation>, we mean that the whole
substance of bread and wine, its "breadness" and "wineness," is replaced by the
living and glorified Jesus Christ. What remains of what had been bread and wine
is only their external properties that can be perceived by the senses. As the
Greek Fathers of the Church say, the <ousia> or being of bread and wine is
changed into the being or reality of Jesus Christ. On the altar after the
consecration there is no longer bread and wine but the same Jesus who was
crucified, died and rose from the grave; and who will come in his glory on the
last day to judge the living and the dead.
Is there any real difference between Jesus in heaven and Jesus in the Eucharist?
No, it is the same Jesus. The only difference is in us. We now on earth cannot
see or touch him with our senses. But that is not a limitation in him; it is a
limitation in us.
JESUS is really now on earth in the Eucharist.
Jesus IS really now on earth in the Eucharist.
Jesus is REALLY now on earth in the Eucharist.
Jesus is really NOW on earth in the Eucharist.
Jesus is really now ON earth in the Eucharist.
Jesus is really now on EARTH in the Eucharist.
Jesus is really now on earth IN THE EUCHARIST.
The foregoing six statements, repeated and separately emphasized, explain why
the Catholic Church has defended the reality of the Real Presence so strenuously
down the centuries.
What else could she do? She believes that our Lord's promise, "I will be with
you all days, even to the end of the world," is being literally fulfilled in
every tabernacle of the Catholic world. He is in our midst with all that makes
him man, including his pulsating Sacred Heart. And he is here to continue his
work of redemption by giving us the light and strength we need to serve him with
all our heart.
We speak correctly of believing in the Real Presence. But we should grow in our
understanding of what this implies.
The living, breathing Jesus Christ is in the Blessed Sacrament. This is the
reality. When we speak of presence, however, we are saying something more.
Two people may be really near each other physically, but not present to each
other spiritually. To be present to each one means to have another person in
mind by being mentally aware of their existence, and to have them in one's heart
by loving that other person.
What, then, is the most important implication of our belief that Jesus is on
earth in the Holy Eucharist? It is our duty to cultivate an awareness of this
fact and to act on the awareness with our love.
When we sing the <Tantum Ergo> at Benediction, we ask "that our faith may supply
for what our senses cannot perceive." What are we saying? We profess to believe
that Jesus is in the Eucharist with all the qualities of his risen humanity,
although our senses cannot perceive what we know, on faith, is true.
The reality of the Eucharist is clear. It is Jesus of Nazareth who was born of
the Virgin Mary. But we must make ourselves mentally conscious of this reality
and voluntarily respond to what we believe.
Jesus is on earth in the Blessed Sacrament. Why? In order that we might come to
him now no less than his contemporaries did in first century Palestine. If we
thus approach him in loving faith, there is no limit to the astounding things he
will do. Why not? In the Eucharist he has the same human lips that told the
raging storm, "Be still" and commanded the dead man, "Lazarus, come forth!"
There are no limitations to Christ's power, as God, which he exercises through
his humanity in the Eucharist. The only limitation is our own weakness of faith
or lack of confidence in his almighty love.
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