Solemnity of the
Body and Blood of Christ
As visitors enter our Church for the first time, they
would most likely be captivated or dazzled by the size and prominence given to
the two geometric shapes that form the backdrop of the sanctuary - the chalice where
the Precious Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ is contained, and the host-like
medallion perched above it, a symbol of the Blessed Sacrament, the Precious
Body of Our Lord Jesus Christ. But now with the recent renovations to our
sanctuary, that very same medallion now boasts of a beautiful and colourful
mosaic. Most people can discern that this is a figure of a lamb sitting on some
sort of dais. Well, it isn’t a dias. It’s actually the Book (or scroll) with
seven seals mentioned in Chapter 5 of the Book of the Apocalypse.
St John’s vision in the Book of the Apocalypse
introduces us to this scene of the scroll with seven seals. Everyone in the
court of God is extremely concerned to the point of despair, in knowing that no
one is worthy to break those seals. But then finally One emerges, the only one
who can open the seals and read the scroll. It is not a powerful, ravening
predator with dripping claws and fangs but a weak, vulnerable prey animal that
has been mortally wounded – a Lamb. Who is the Lamb? I believe you already know
the answer. Our Lord Jesus Christ, the son of David, the Lion of Judah, the
King of the new and heavenly Jerusalem, and the firstborn is that unblemished
lamb, who offers a perpetual, timeless, everlasting sacrifice of praise of Himself
to the Father. Christ’s sacrifice has ended all ineffective, repetitive, bloody
animal sacrifice that never did any good anyway. He is the perfect holocaust or victim. In
fact, the word “host” which we use to refer to the communion bread, is derived from
“hostia” which means “victim” or “sacrifice.”
But there is more to the Lamb who takes on the role of
a “saving sacrifice” (O Salutaris Hostia). Placed here in the Book of
the Apocalypse, He acts as Judge of both the living and the dead. Thus the opening
of the seals releases God’s judgment and wrath, in order to clean the earth of
evil in preparation for the Messianic Age. But this vision in the Book of the
Apocalypse is not meant to be a pronouncement of what “must” come about – a
future written in stone. Rather, it is meant to be a warning – a warning of
what “might” come about, if we fail to heed the stern warnings of the vision.
That is why every time we approach the Eucharist, we must remember that we are
coming before the glory of the Lamb that was slain for our redemption, the King
of the new and heavenly Jerusalem, the Judge of both the living and the dead.
At every mass, we are rehearsing that Final Day of Judgment.
How then is the Eucharist connected to judgment? In
the second reading taken from Chapter 11 of St Paul’s first letter to the
Corinthians, we are introduced to the words of institution, the words of
consecration which the priests, for centuries thereafter until the present
time, use at every mass. Omitted in the text are the following words by St
Paul: “Whoever, therefore, eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord in an
unworthy manner will be guilty of profaning the body and blood of the Lord. Let
a man examine himself, and so eat of the bread and drink of the cup. For anyone
who eats and drinks without discerning the body, eats and drinks judgment upon
himself. That is why many of you are weak and ill, and some have died. But if
we judged ourselves truly, we should not be judged. But when we are judged by
the Lord, we are chastened so that we may not be condemned along with the
world.” (vv. 27-32)
“Whoever, therefore, eats the bread or drinks the cup
of the Lord in an unworthy manner will be guilty of profaning the body and
blood of the Lord.” Now that language is
actually like civil judicial language. Somebody who's practically guilty of
murder or causing physical harm to some person’s body or desecrating a corpse is
guilty of the body and blood. For St. Paul, the Eucharist being Christ and thus
God himself, communion is not only an opportunity to eat and drink salvation,
but also an opportunity to eat and drink judgment on oneself.
And for St Paul these dangers are not just theoretical,
just as the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist is not merely symbolic. To
receive the Eucharist in a state of mortal sin is playing with fire of the
worst sort. That is why St. Paul teaches that examining oneself is a
prerequisite for worthy reception of the Eucharist. If that is violated, Holy
Communion has the opposite of the desired effect. Rather than bringing the
blessing of union with our Lord, it brings condemnation. Rather than offering
an antidote to death and an elixir of immortality, the Eucharist can prove to
be fatally poisonous to a person whose spiritual immunity has been compromised
by the infestation of sin. Therefore, we are required to abstain from Holy
Communion when there is mortal sin and should only come forward to receive Holy
Communion after we’ve made a sacramental confession.
The Didache,
written sometime between 90 and 110 A.D, provides us with an early
understanding that the Eucharist was not merely a table fellowship with sinners
but rather a sacral meal that presupposed grace and communion with the Church.
“If anyone is holy, let him approach; if anyone is not so, let him repent.
Maranatha. Amen. … But let no one eat or drink of your Eucharist, unless they
have been baptised into the name of the Lord; for concerning this also the Lord
has said, “Give not that which is holy to the dogs” (Didache 10, 9). In this
text, we see a tradition that is scriptural, ancient, and clear: the Eucharist
is a sacred meal that requires of us something more than just “showing up.”
It is here that we discover the Scriptural roots of
the theology and practice of fencing the altar, of excommunication, of
withholding communion, of refraining from partaking in Holy Communion when one
is not in a state of grace. And that theology and practice is in turn rooted in
the thoroughly biblical idea that there are different sorts of sins, some
minor, some major, some venial, some mortal. Neither Paul nor the Church after
him is being legalistic or unmerciful or mean in exercising Eucharistic discipline.
Ultimately, if encountering God directly in the Eucharist is dangerous, even
deadly, withholding it should be seen as an act of charity, an act of love. It
is not an act of love to give someone something that may kill them.
In our present day where notions of inclusivity and
unity seem paramount, love has been reduced to simply giving people what they
want. To a large degree, such unity is a contrived unity, one that overlooks
the truth necessary for honest, real, substantive unity. Such a notion of
communion is shallow at best, and a lie at worst. For St Paul, truth requires
conversion and repentance. Communion is a matter of doctrine (faith and morals)
and not just hospitality; it is a matter of life and death. But no one is
forever barred from this life-giving food. Reconciliation and conversion opens
the door to Holy Communion. A worthy reception of the Sacrament of Confession
cleanses, purifies, enlightens and sanctifies the soul to receive the Eucharist
with a better and more fervent disposition. As Pope Emeritus Benedict so wisely
puts it: “The Eucharist is not itself the sacrament of reconciliation, but in
fact it presupposes that sacrament. It is the sacrament of the reconciled, to
which the Lord invites all those who have become one with him; who certainly
still remain weak sinners, but yet have given their hand to him and have become
part of his family.” The Lamb of the Book of the Apocalypse stands as a sign, a
warning to those who are in need of repentance and a sign of hope to those who are
committed to the path of repentance and conversion. For the latter, the Lamb
will no longer be seen as a stern judge, but He will be their “lighted torch”,
illuminating the heavenly city that would no longer “need the sun or the moon
for light” (Rev 11:22).
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