During the first two weeks of the Easter season, our Gospel
readings have been accounts of the appearance of the risen Lord to his
disciples. He has appeared in his
glorified flesh and blood on the banks of the sea of Galilee, on the road to
Emmaus, in the locked room. Doubting
Thomas was even able to touch the marks in the Risen Lord’s flesh.
All of this week, our Gospel readings are taken from the
sixth chapter of Saint John’s Gospel. The
sixth chapter of John is usually known as the “Bread of Life Discourse” because
in it, Jesus speaks of Himself, as we heard today, as the Bread of Life, given
to us as real food and real drink.
In today’s Gospel the people were asking for a sign so they
could believe that Jesus was really sent by God. And Jesus said, I’ll give you
a sign: the bread of life.
Who here wants to see Jesus, as he really is? Who here wants
to look upon him, touch him, receive him into your hearts and minds? Today that
is truly possible, because of the Eucharist.
He really comes to us at Mass.
If we were to ask God the very same question the people
asked to Jesus in the Gospel: “where can I see him, now, and believe in him”,
the Eucharist IS God’s answer to our plea.
Pope Benedict XVI said: In the Eucharist “we no longer stand before an
imagined God but before the God who has truly given himself to us; before the
God who has become for us Communion and who thus frees us and draws us from the
margin into communion and leads us on to Resurrection.”
I think sometimes our young people forget when they come
into the Church that Jesus is really here in the tabernacle. This is why we
bend the knee, we genuflect, because he is really here. Our King and Our God is really here, and the
least we can do is bend the knee to recognize his presence and honor him.
And even when your teachers are watching, sometimes it seems
like you are embarrassed to genuflect, or you have to do it as quickly as
possible. Don’t let your genuflections be
hurried and empty. Put meaning into it.
Bend your knee all the way to the ground and don’t get up until you are
sure you gave Jesus proper respect. To
bend the knee before God is to recognize that we need Him, that he truly is the
bread of life our souls need to live.
If you can’t put your whole heart into honoring God, what
makes you think you can put your whole heart into anything? Without honoring
God as we should, the whole of our lives begins to empty of meaning and of
joy. But when we do honor God and love
God as we should, everything becomes transformed into an act of worship, and
our daily activities can become filled with joy.
Jesus, help us to see that you are really here in the
Eucharist, help us to deeply honor you with all our hearts, help us to receive
you with great reverence, that you may nourish our minds and souls and lead us
into everlasting life, for the glory of God and salvation of souls.
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