Sunday, June 02, 2024

Solemnity of Corpus Christi (B)

(Edited) Reflections (from) Solemnity of Corpus Christi (B), June 10, 2012

Liturgical readings

Exodus 24:3-8
Psalm 116
Hebrews 9:11-15
Mark 14:12-16, 22-26

"He took bread and gave it to them; He likewise took a cup and passed it to them."

The passage from the book of Exodus presents the person of Moses offering sacrifices to Yahweh in behalf of the people Israel. The sacrifices involved the use of animals; their blood was splashed on the altar as part of the ritual. Now proceeding to the New Testament, the passage from Mark's gospel presents the Person of Jesus offering His very Self as a sacrifice for the redemption of the new Israel. As Moses used animals in the rite, Jesus used bread to signify His Body, and wine to signify His Blood in the Last Supper rite. The sacrifices offered by Moses and the priests of the Old Testament sealed the covenant between Yahweh and the 12 tribes of Israel. The sacrifice of Jesus' Body and Blood in the New Testament sealed the covenant between the God and the new Israel - signified by the 12 apostles.

The Last Supper marked the institution of the Eucharist in our history as children of God. The meal of bread and wine was an act of the Lord's mercy toward us. The Father provides us not only physical food from creation, but He provides us more important and real food - His very Son - to give life to our souls and spirit. The Eucharist calls us to elevate our minds and hearts to what is above, and to leave behind for awhile secular concerns that can weigh our minds, hearts, and souls down to earth. Examining closely the gospel passage, one will find that the Last Supper was held in an "upstairs room" - symbolic of what God wants of His children. Jesus calls us in the Eucharist to lift our sights and our hopes also to a spiritual level, besides temporal concerns.

Whenever one attends the Sunday Eucharist, let it be a reminder of the important sacrifice the Father had done to save us from earthly bondage to sins committed in the rush for power, money and sex. He has saved us, is saving us, and will always save us through the once-for-all sacrifice of His only Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, at Calvary. As the priest or bishop in the Sunday Eucharist elevates the bread and the wine during the consecration, we are invited to respond to the call to elevate our minds and hearts to this mystery of God's mercy. It is God's grace that ultimately lifts and elevates our spirit and souls to what is noble in us, what is best in us and what would influence us and others towards the greater good. For when we receive Christ Himself in communion, all are called to bring the spirit of Jesus to others: in word and deed.

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