Gospel Reflections by Father Gerry Pierse, C.Ss.R.

C - Body and Blood of Christ (Corpus Christi)


Gen 14:18-20 • 1 Cor 11:23-26 • Lk 9:11-17

You Must Feel Good to Become Good


Many years ago my schoolmate Paddy was engaged to marry Kay when she was discovered to have cancer and to have only about a one -year life expectancy. She told him that he could call it all off. He replied that if he had loved her in good health he would love her in bad, and the wedding went on as scheduled. Sixteen sickness filled years and four children later, I was visiting when Kay entered her last illness. During my visits to her I was struck by her lack of concern about herself. Her only thought was for the happiness and welfare of her husband and children when she was gone. One Thursday night I said Mass in her hospital room with her husband and children looking across at me from the other side of her bed. When I held up the bread of the Eucharist and said "This is my body which is given for you," it was her emaciated body that I saw in front of me. She died the next day but she left me with a new understanding of Corpus Christi, the body of Christ, the feast we celebrate today.

The night before Jesus died he took bread, blessed it, broke it and gave it to his disciples. I began to understand more what happened to Jesus, and what he was doing for us and telling us, when I saw what happened to Kay. She had been taken and blessed. She had been taken into life by God and into marriage by Paddy. Then she was broken, but the more she was broken the more her nobility and beauty appeared. Eventually, she was given over to death. No, she gave herself over for her family, for others.

This too is what Jesus did. He himself was taken from among his people. He was called by God in his conception and blessed to be the Messiah, the son of God. But this blessing did not exempt him from what is human. Rather, it immersed him in it all the more. He enjoyed and suffered the whole gamut of human emotions. His joy was real at meeting his friends. His sorrow was equally real when he was betrayed. He was given over for us by Judas, by his apostles, by the people, and by the Father. But he rose from it all and when asked to authenticate himself all he did was show his human wounds.

The Corpus Christi can never be seen as remote from human woundedness. When we bring our own woundedness, like the woundedness of Kay, into the presence of Christ we have Eucharist. Unfortunately many people see religion, and particularly prayer, as a way of escaping woundedness and pain. For Jesus pain was a reality to be faced and he faced it in his passion. He asked us to celebrate Eucharist, "Do this in memory of me." to remember him as the one who went through suffering to glory.
Meditation is a Eucharistic way of prayer in the sense that it is a way of sitting before God in thanksgiving and in acceptance. As one is present to the prayer word, one is present totally to God's will. One is present and available to be taken, blessed, broken and given by the Lord, at the time and in the manner that he alone decides.

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Taken from Sundays into Silence - A Pathway to Life. Copyright © 1998 by Claretian Publications

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Sundays into Silence

A Pathway to Life

by Gerry Pierse, cssr
380 pp., PhP 299, U$ 19.95

“The best word I can find to describe this book is integration. In these reflections on the gospel readings for year A, B, and C of the liturgical cycle, Fr. Pierse integrates the richness of the word of God with experiences and stories from life in the community. He shows how through silence, the word can bear fruit in service and sacrament.” (R. J. Cardinal Vidal)

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