Homily for Ordinary Time 19
August 8, 2021
Real Presence
Around
the year 1300 in a small mountain village of northwest Spain called O’Cebriero,
it was snowing hard on a cold winter’s day. The priest looked out into the
blizzard, with waist-high drifts, and was glad – because it meant he could lock
up the church without saying Mass. Sadly, this priest had lost his faith in the
Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist. He was about to lock the front door
when he saw a single peasant farmer, trudging uphill in waist-deep snow, to the
church. The priest was unhappy about this inconvenience, and when the farmer
entered the Church, the priest sarcastically remarked, “Why did you come all
this way for a piece of bread?”
The
priest then proceeded to begin Mass, and much to his surprise, as he held up
the Eucharist after the Consecration, it began to bleed. A statue of the
Blessed Virgin in the church turned and bowed her head towards the altar, to
recognize Who was present there. The priest’s faith was restored – and this
Eucharistic miracle has been preserved in that church. I have been there, and
have seen the statue of Mary, her head still bowing towards the tabernacle,
where Her Son Jesus resides.
It does
indeed take faith to believe that this small round Host which we receive at Mass
is truly the Body and Blood of the Lord. How can we explain such a mystery,
when our senses seem to tell us that it is just ordinary bread? Let’s take a deeper
look at the Scriptures to see how we can understand the Real Presence of Christ
in the Eucharist.
Jesus
clearly says that He is the Bread of Life. But Jesus says that He is many other
things that He only means symbolically – He calls Himself the Good Shepherd,
the Vine, the Light of the World. Could He be using “Bread of Life” symbolically?
Not if we look at the original Greek.
There are two Greek words for
eating: “ephago” and “trogon”. Ephago simply means “to eat” and that can be
used symbolically. We sometimes use “eating” symbolically in English when we
say, “Let me chew on that idea for a while” or we say, “I need to digest that
book.” Clearly we are meaning that symbolically. But the other word, “trogon”,
is much more graphic – it means to chew, to gnaw, to rip with one’s teeth. It
is a visceral, graphic verb that is never used symbolically. And it is this
verb that Jesus uses in John 6 to describe what we must do! He says we must “trogon”
His Flesh…we must literally put His Flesh between our teeth and consume Him!
This
should gross us out a bit…because that was certainly the reaction of the Jews! Immediately
after this Gospel, they start complaining loudly to one another, “How can this
man give us His Flesh to eat?” Jesus doesn’t back down – actually He doubles
down and says, “Unless you eat (trogon) the Flesh of the Son of Man and
drink His blood, you have no life within you. For My Flesh is true food, and My
Blood is true drink.” His listeners react with even greater disgust – and Jesus
does not apologize. Finally, it says later on in John 6 that “many of his
disciples returned to their former way of life and no longer accompanied Jesus”
– they walked away because of this teaching! Does Jesus run after them and say,
“No, wait, you misunderstand Me!”? No – He turns to His Apostles and says, “Will
you also leave?” And Peter responds, “Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the
words of everlasting life.” So Jesus teaches clearly, unambiguously that the
Eucharist is truly His Flesh, that we must truly consume Him, and He is willing
to lose followers over this teaching!
But then
how do we explain the fact that it still looks like bread? Well, have you ever
been to a restaurant or a fancy hotel and seen a flower display and thought to
yourself, “I can’t tell if that’s real or not!”? You go up to it, look at it,
maybe smell it, touch it…and sometimes you still can’t tell! Fake flowers are
sometimes so realistic that your senses tell you they’re real flowers, while
they are actually made of silk.
In the
same way, in the Eucharist, our senses tell us one thing – but what it actually
is is completely different. The great scholar St. Thomas Aquinas used the
terms “accident” and “substance”. Accident means what something looks like,
feels like, smells like, tastes like, etc – basically, our five senses. But “substance”
is what something actually is. At every Mass, we begin with bread – it looks
like bread, and it is bread. But at the point in the Mass called the “Consecration”
when the bells are rung, we believe that a transformation happens. Aquinas
called it “transubstantiation” – the substance of bread actually becomes
the substance of Jesus Christ Himself, even though the accidents remain the
same.
And I’m
glad they do remain the same! I wouldn’t want to receive a jiggling, bleeding
piece of flesh at Mass – it would be repulsive. So He hides Himself under the
appearance of very common things – bread and wine – in order for us to approach
Him without fear. But He desires to be so intimately united to us – not just spiritually,
but physically as well since we are both souls and bodies – and so He
desires to become our Food. Every other kind of food I eat becomes a part of my
body; but in the Eucharist, I become more like Him.
When we stop
and think about it, this is the most amazing miracle in the entire world. There
is literally nothing that we can compare to it – a small wafer of bread, a
small chalice of wine, when a priest speaks the words of Consecration over them,
becomes the very Flesh and Blood of God Himself. May we approach this
Eucharistic altar with awe and wonder; with souls cleansed of sin and aflame
with love – for so great a gift and mystery as Christ’s Real Presence in the
Holy Eucharist.
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