Eighteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time
But if you are not aware of that tradition, you may think the challenge coin is simply a nice, little knick-knack, but nothing more. If you don’t know the background of the challenge coin, you may not give that gift the same importance that someone who knows what’s going on would.
As we continue our Gospel readings on the Eucharist, we hear that the people do not understand the deeper meaning behind the miracle of the loaves and fish. The people were amazed at what happened, but their understanding was limited to the physical reality that they sensed, rather than the metaphysical reality that required going beyond the simple five senses. Jesus even tells them that they are looking for him simply because they liked eating the bread and fish, not because of a deeper faith. And then Jesus uses that to springboard to teaching about the true bread from heaven, which is not an “it,” but a “who”: Jesus Himself.
For followers of Jesus, this problem of not getting the deeper meaning still exists. It exists in a particular way among those who are not Catholic nor Orthodox. So many Christians see Communion as simply bread and wine. Yes, it has been prayed over; yes it is a reminder of Jesus’ presence, but they stop at the level of their physical senses. But sometimes even Catholics forget, or perhaps were never taught, that the Eucharist is not bread and wine, though it retains those physical properties, but truly Jesus–His Body and Blood.
We, as Catholics, believe that a valid priest of Jesus Christ, who was ordained by the successors of the Apostles (the bishops), and who follows the prayer of the Church, intending to do what the Church intends to do, by the power of the Holy Spirit changes the bread and wine into the Body and Blood of Christ, not just for the time of that prayer, but as long as the bread and wine have those physical properties that are proper to bread and wine. It looks like bread and tastes like bread, but it is no longer bread. It is the Body of the Lord. It looks like wine and tastes like wine, but it is not longer wine. It is the Blood of the Lord.
This wasn’t some new invention of the Middle Ages, either. St. Paul talks about partaking in the bread and cup as a sharing in the Passion of the Lord, which is what the Eucharist is: our participation in Jesus’ once-for-all sacrifice. St. Ignatius of Antioch, who died around AD 107, says that the Eucharist is truly the Body of Christ, born of the Virgin Mary, and a descendant of King David. St. Justin Martyr, writing slightly later, says the same thing. So, too, St. Ambrose and St. Augustine, in the fourth and fifth centuries (respectively) say that the Eucharist is truly the Body and Blood of Christ.
It wasn’t until the eleventh century that controversy really arose about the Eucharist, and whether or not it was the Body of Christ. Quickly, the Church re-iterated that it was, and solemnly proclaimed it in a the Fourth Lateran Ecumenical Council in 1215, using the word that has been codified: transubstantiation. While this teaching was rejected by the Protestants as they sprung up in the 1500s, the Ecumenical Council of Trent reaffirmed the perennial belief that the Eucharist is Jesus, not just a reminder, not just a symbol, but truly our Lord’s glorified Body and Blood.
That, of course, affects the way that we treat the Eucharist. If it really is Jesus, then we are extra-careful with it. We use precious metal to hold and house the Eucharist. We do not give it to those who do not believe what we do, which is why Protestants and non-Christians cannot receive the Eucharist–they don’t believe what we do about the Eucharist. Before we receive, we fast (currently the law is that we fast from all food and drink except water and medicine) for one hour before we receive Holy Communion. And as we approach the Eucharist, we do so with profound wonder and awe, knowing that we are receiving, on our tongue or in our hands, the very same Lord who was born of the Virgin Mary, and who is now seated at the right hand of the Father. We dare, only because He commanded us, to receive the King of Kings into ourselves. We dare because He told us we needed to receive Him to have the spiritual strength to follow Him.
As a sign of our respect and reverence our hands should be clean if we receive in our hands. And the Church invites us to bow before receiving the Eucharist (though some genuflect or kneel down). The point is that we want to show reverence for the divine encounter we have, an encounter with God that is the closest we can get to God on earth; greater than even the best sunrise or sunset, or the best musical composition, or even the love of a spouse, or whatever other way the we might encounter God. Nothing even comes close to just how truly awesome the Eucharist is. St. John Vianney, the priest, said, “What the Angels behold only with awe, the radiant splendor of which they cannot sustain, we make our food, we receive into us, we become with Jesus Christ one same Body, one sole Flesh.” He also said, “If we truly understood the Mass, we would die of joy.”
May we truly recognize that the Eucharist is not bread and wine, but our Savior, who chooses to humble Himself and make Himself vulnerable to us. May we value and treasure the Eucharist as the greatest gift we can receive here on earth, because it is already a foretaste, a preview of heaven!