Mass of the Lord’s Supper
Some 55 years later, wars still rage and the world and our country desire unity. It seems like every election comes down to a slim majority determining the track of the country for the following years. We equate compromise with cowardice. Citizens in our country operate on very different philosophies about the human person and how society should operate, even including how to define men and women (if a person even admits that such a definition is possible). We are a divided nation, perhaps not this divided since the Civil War.
Our church, too, seems ever divided. Some, even those who hold sacred office, seem to want to change unchangeable Church teaching. Bishops and Cardinals sling verbal attacks at each other. It seems we fight our own ecclesial war between progressivism and traditionalism, even if most of the soldiers are keyboard warriors.
But singing a jingle and buying Coke (the drink, not the drug) will not bring unity. The unity that we seek cannot come from our own making, though we do have to cooperate with it. The unity we seek finds its source in Christ, not in us. And as God assembles us tonight to celebrate the Mass of the Lord’s Supper, we celebrate the Sacramentum unitatis, the Sacrament of unity, and the one priesthood that our Lord established.
The Eucharist is the sacrament of unity because it unites us with the one head of the Church, Jesus Christ. When we receive worthily Holy Communion, unlike other food that becomes part of us, we become part of the Body of Christ, which we have just received. Through the Eucharist, Christ brings together all those who believe in Him to be one with Him and one with each other. The Didache, a second-century Greek ecclesial text talks about how many grains are gathered together to make the bread that becomes the Eucharist. The many grains, ground into one batch of flour, join to each other through the water of baptism, and then bake in the fire of the Holy Spirit to become bread, which becomes the Body of Christ. Likewise, many individual grapes are pressed through suffering to become juice which ferments over time to become wine, used to become the Blood of Christ. Unity comes from diverse individuals, but all united through Holy Baptism, the Holy Spirit, and suffering, which joins us to Christ.
But unity with Christ can only come when we submit ourselves to Christ. The reason why the non-baptized, and even the baptized who are not in full communion with the Catholic Church, cannot receive Holy Communion is because Christ is the ruler for unity, not us. And Christ is the Way, the Truth, and the Life. We cannot reject parts of the truth that Christ has revealed, and then claim unity with Truth Incarnate. That would be a lie. Unity does not come from rejecting what we know to be true until we get to a lowest common denominator of truth, but from embracing the truth has Christ Himself has revealed it through His teachings in the Scriptures and in the Church.
Both the Eucharist and the priesthood bring about unity because they find their source and power in the one Jesus Christ. When we conform our lives to Him, we find the true unity because we can join ourselves, diverse as we are, to Him. He brings us together as different parts of His Mystical Body to cooperate with each other and do what we cannot do on our own. I do some things well, but other things not as well, or even poorly. You do other things well, but not maybe the same things I do well. When we bring our gifts to Christ, He allows them to work together so that we support each other, rather than combatting each other or each trying to do everything on his or her own.
Coca-Cola won’t bring us unity, catchy jingle or not. Politics will not bring us unity, no matter who has the executive and legislative branches and how many laws they pass. True unity, the unity that we desire, can only come from Christ, who both instituted the priesthood and the Eucharist tonight. May our worthy reception of Holy Communion, made possible by my consecrated hands, but through no worthiness of my own, unify us so that we can find the peace and harmony we all desire.

