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Corpus Christi - The Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ (A) 

On this solemnity of Corpus Christi, the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ, the Church begins the 2nd Year of our three-year focus on Eucharistic Revival.  This is the “parish phase” where we focus at the parish level on strengthening Eucharistic devotion and belief in the real presence of Jesus in the Eucharist.  How do we come to believe that the Eucharist is the Body and Blood of Jesus?  That it is not just a symbol but, as we hear Jesus say in the Gospel today, “the bread that I will give is my flesh for the life of the world”?  I came to believe in the real presence of Jesus in the Eucharist not by taking a theology class in the seminary or by reading the Catechism, but by the witness of my parents.  The theology class, the catechism, and CCD classes when I was a child gave me words or language to express the belief, but it was the witness of my parents that imparted the belief to me.  The belief comes before any words or formal “teaching” is given.  We come to believe by a form of “osmosis” - by absorbing the belief by sharing life with those who believe.  We come to believe through a gradual or unconscious assimilation of ideas and knowledge.  When I was a child, as a family, we went to Mass every Sunday.  Going to Mass was part of life.  It wasn’t looked at as an obligation, but we went because going to Mass was a life-giving experience.  I saw in my parents that participation in the Mass and the life of the parish was important.  It wasn’t spoken to us as a rule - “you have to do this.”  Rather, I saw in them their desire to be there and to follow and to serve - to give of themselves - in this place. My father was a lector, an extraordinary minister of Holy Communion, a cantor, and taught CCD.  My mother joked that my dad did everything but celebrate the Mass.  We would sit in the 2nd pew from the front.  To my annoyance as a young boy, my mom would always hang out after Mass talking with all her friends.  Where we were living at the time was more than an hour away from both sets of my grandparents, so it wasn’t easy for my parents to see their parents often.  The parish community - it was a small country church - became our family.  Our life was intimately connected to this place.  Our life was centered on what happened there.  The parish priest became a friend of the family.  I knew that my parents loved him.  Because my parents loved and respected him, and he was welcome in our home - it was very special when father came over for dinner - I too had an affection for him and saw that what he did was important to this life that we shared.  What happened at St. Mary’s church in Kutztown, Pennsylvania was a source of life for me and my family, and what was celebrated there was the Mass.  The Mass was the source and summit of what we did as a family.  It was very real to me that love and life were connected to what happened on the altar.  I was an altar boy from the time I received First Holy Communion until I went off to high school.  We lived in a town with very few Catholics, and by far, most of my friends in school were not Catholic.  During high-school, I got invited to a sleep-over at a friends house one Saturday night.  I was able to go, but I remember my parents making sure - talking to the non-Catholic parents of my friend - to make arrangements for me to go to Mass on Sunday.  What did this communicate to me and to my friend’s parents?  That going to Mass was essential to my life.  It was just as important as food.  Would my parents allow me to stay overnight someplace without an assurance that their child would eat?  They made sure I was being fed spiritually as well.  It was a public statement of our belief as Catholics, something, in most cases, very different than among Protestants. 

          When I got to college and was on my own, I still went to Mass on Sundays.  No one was making me go to Mass, but I kept going.  I wasn’t motivated, as far as I can remember, by any thought of the perils of eternal damnation if I missed Mass.  I wanted to go.  As a freshman in college, I suppose I realized at some level that there was something different about me.  While most of my classmates stayed in bed all of Sunday morning, I would get up and go to Mass, even if I was out as late as they were the night before.  Why did I keep going to Mass?  In a way I was being proposed the same question that Jesus posed to the disciples after the Bread of Life discourse - the teaching that we hear in today’s Gospel.  When all but the twelve disciples left Jesus because they didn’t understand how this man could give them his flesh to eat and his blood to drink - because they found the teaching “too hard”, Jesus asked them, “Do you also want to leave?”  He was asking them to judge their heart - their desire.  Peter’s response was expressive of a genuine faith.  “To whom shall we go?  You have the words of eternal life.”  “No.  I don’t wish to leave you.”  This was a fact of his experience.  Peter didn’t understand any better than anyone else how it was possible to eat his flesh and drink his blood, but if he couldn’t believe Jesus, who could he believe?  He couldn’t imagine his life apart from Jesus.  He had found a new life with Jesus.  He was loved by Jesus in such a profound way that he could trust his word.  His life wouldn’t make sense apart from Jesus, even if he couldn’t explain how or why.  We can say, at the time, the reason for the bread of life discourse was not to give a theological explanation of Jesus’ real presence in the Eucharist but to provoke this judgment in the disciples.  Why are you following me?  We know Jesus said to the crowds, “Amen, amen, I say to you, you are looking for me not because you saw signs but because you ate the loaves and were filled.  Do not work for food that perishes but for the food that endures for eternal life, which the Son of Man will give you.”  The crowds were following Jesus for superficial reasons - because he multiplied the loaves and the fish.  They wanted to see another miracle or get another free lunch.  Jesus is trying to get them to be in touch with a deeper hunger in their lives - a hunger for eternal life.  Without that desire awakened, they will leave when things get hard.  The challenge that Jesus gives is to purify their intention or motivations for following Jesus.  This is an echo of what we heard in the first reading from Deuteronomy in which the Exodus journey is recalled.  The Lord tested the people by affliction to find out whether or not the people intended to follow the Lord.  He let them be afflicted with hunger and then fed them with manna - the bread from heaven, “in order to show you that not by bread alone does one live, but by every word that comes forth from the mouth of the Lord.”  Jesus is proposing something that corresponds to the deepest desire of the heart - for eternal life.  I stayed with Mass in college because I couldn’t imagine life without the life I encountered through my parents and the parish of my youth.  There was quite a banquet or buffet of things to taste in college, but when I was free to go to Mass or not, I was being asked to judge what really satisfied my heart - what was I really looking for?

          During Covid, the church universal experienced an affliction with the lockdowns when the churches were closed for public worship.  The Lord let us be afflicted with hunger - a hunger for the Eucharist - and then fed us with the Bread of Heaven.  When the churches re-opened and there was no obligation to go to Mass, those who came to Mass became a witness that one does not live by bread alone (simply our physical needs being satisfied), but by the living Bread that comes down from heaven.  The life that Jesus gives us is more important than physical life.  It is, in fact, what makes life worth living.  How many people discovered through the affliction and came to the judgment that they could not live without the Eucharist?  Many people who were following Jesus for superficial or cultural reasons fell away from the practice of going to Mass when it became “too hard”.    What we do in our “free time” reveals to us what we value, what we prioritize, what is most important to us.  What we need for a Eucharistic revival is not simply clearer teaching but more witnesses that our communion with Jesus gives us life and sustains our life.  One of the best witnesses is to go to Mass when it is not convenient.  We are going to find the local church and find a way to go to Mass when we go on vacation or are visiting our relatives who do not go to Mass.  Yes, you can play sports on Sunday or join a travel league, but we are also going to find a way to go to Mass.  When sickness or old age or the loss of a car keeps you from going to Mass, make arrangements for the priest or an extraordinary minister to bring you Holy Communion.  There is no reason to be embarrassed or afraid to tell others that you go to Mass.  Jesus gives us the life that the world needs and without our witness others will not discover that need and the answer to that need.  The celebration of Corpus Christi traditionally includes a public procession with the Blessed Sacrament.  The procession is a reminder that our Eucharistic faith needs to be seen  - that we have to take our Eucharistic faith out into the world because Jesus is the savior of the whole world.  He came to give us life and life to the full.  May we be witnesses to the life of Jesus - that we have life because he feeds us with the Eucharist.