Sermon for Feast of the Precious Body and Blood of our Lord

Body to be eaten and Blood to be drunk
Holy Eucharist as a Sacrificial Meal
During the liturgical year there are at least two feasts that invite us to meditate on the mystery of the Eucharist: the Maundy Thursday and the Feast of the Precious Body and Blood of our Lord (that is today!).  On the Maundy Thursday, the reflection on the Eucharist is centred on the Passover meal and the institution of the priesthood.  In the context of the Easter triduum (the three days of preparation towards Easter), the celebration of the Eucharist of the Maundy Thursday is also emotionally coloured by the impending passion, death and resurrection of Jesus. The feast of today gives us yet another opportunity to contemplate the mystery of the Eucharist.
Allow me to begin our reflection with a very concrete structure in the Church: the altar.  […]

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Sermon for Corpus Christi: Precious Body and Blood of Our Lord – Cycle B


Feast of the Precious Body & Blood of Jesus – Cycle B
“This is my blood, the blood of the covenant, poured out for many” (Mk 14: 24)
There are two feasts in the liturgical calendar that invite us to meditate on the mystery of the Eucharist: Maundy Thursday and the Feast of the Precious Body and Blood of Jesus, that is, today.  The celebration of the Maundy Thursday reminds us that the Eucharist is a sacrificial meal.  The altar is not only the place of sacrifice but also the table where a meal is being served.  The Eucharistic-food offers us the possibility “to share in the divinity of Christ who humbled himself to share in our humanity.” When we receive the Eucharistic bread we commune with God.
Related to the theme of the sacrificial meal, the Liturgy of the Word today invites […]

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Maundy Thursday: Eucharist a Sacrificial Meal

Jesus knew that the hour had come (Jn 13:1)
In the Gospel of John, the concept of the ‘hour’ has a specific significance.  At the Wedding at Cana, when the Mother of Jesus draws his attention to the fact that “They have no wine”, Jesus comes up with the very sharp reply, “My hour has not come yet” (Jn 2:4).  But the Mother of Jesus continues to act as if the hour has already begun to come.  In a sense she ushers in the hour. During the encounter between Jesus and the Samaritan woman, Jesus assures her, “Believe me, woman, the hour is coming when you will worship the Father neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem” (Jn 4:21).  Today’s gospel text introduces the last supper with these words: “knowing that his hour had come to pass from this world […]

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