During my eighth year of seminary, we devoted an entire
semester to study the Sacrament which is at the heart of today’s feast: the
Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ, the Eucharist. We studied how the
scriptures, like the great Bread of Life discourse from John’s Gospel, as we
heard today, influenced the early Church’s understanding of the Eucharist. We
studied some of the ancient Eucharistic Prayers and the early Church fathers.
St. Ignatius of Antioch, for example, around the year 130,
wrote about how sad it was that there were some who claimed to be Christian but
did not confess the Eucharist to be the real flesh and blood of Jesus Christ. We
continued through the early Church fathers to the medieval theologians, especially
St. Thomas Aquinas, who composed the prayers and hymns for today’s feast.
At the end of the semester, our professor, Fr. Michael Woost—now Bishop Woost gave us some advice for the upcoming exam. He said, the
best way to prepare for the exam is to “study everything”, as the exam would be
comprehensive of all the material we’ve covered since class one.
Well, exam day arrived, and I thought I was ready! Bishop
Woost handed us a small piece of paper with the exam’s only question, which
consisted of two words and a question mark.
The big exam question was “Why Eucharist?”
Bishop Woost said, “you have two hours, I suggest you use it
wisely.” I watched my classmates open
their exam book and start writing, but I just sort of sat there stunned for a
moment. Now I promise you, I had studied. I had studied St. Justin Martyr, St.
Fulgentius of Ruspe, Theodore of Mopsuesta, Blessed Sacrament Priest Eugene
LaVerdie, Cardinal Ratzinger; I memorized the third Eucharistic Prayer, and
most of the first and second ones. And this simple question, “why Eucharist?”
just stunned me.
I sat there for 5 minutes, unable to write anything, kind of
embarrassed. I’m 8 years into seminary, and I can’t think of where to start
writing about the Most Blessed Sacrament. So, I prayed. “Dear God, help me. Why
DID you give us the Eucharist?” And immediately an image popped into my mind: an
image of the Eucharist contained in the monstrance. And I thought of the many
holy hours that I had made as a seminarian: holy hours in the seminary chapel
here in Cleveland, holy hours when I was a student in Rome, holy hours in my
home parish. And at the conclusion of each of those holy hours is prayed the
prayer composed by St. Thomas Aquinas for today’s Feast of Corpus Christi:
“O God, who in this wonderful Sacrament have left us a
memorial of your Passion, grant us, we pray, so to revere the sacred mysteries
of your Body and Blood that we may always experience in ourselves the fruits of
your redemption.” And then I was able to begin writing. Now, I didn’t always
get A’s in my seminary classes, but that was one exam that it all seemed to
come together.
What the Church believes is expressed in her liturgical
prayer. And that collect prayer for Corpus Christi answered Bishop Woost’s
question: “why Eucharist”. Firstly, God gave us the Eucharist as a memorial of
Christ’s passion. And secondly, “so that we may experience in ourselves the
fruits of redemption”.
Let’s look at those two parts of the Collect prayer.
Firstly, the Eucharist is a memorial. Jesus, at the Last Supper said, “do this
in memory of me”. On the night before he died, our Blessed Lord took bread and
wine and transformed them into his Body and Blood, and taught us—commanded us—to
do the same. “Do this” Jesus says, “in order to remember what I have done for
you—in offering my Flesh and Blood to the Father for your redemption on the
cross, in my Passion.”
At Mass, bread and wine are truly transformed into our Savior’s Body and Blood.
And those with eyes of faith are able to see Him, know Him, and be in Communion
with Him as we receive His Body and Blood in the Eucharist.
And that brings us to the second part of that beautiful prayer: Jesus gave us the Eucharist “so that we may
always experience in ourselves the fruits of redemption.”
When we receive the Eucharist with Faith, in a state of
grace, that produces certain fruits, certain effects in us. The particular
fruits we receive in the Eucharist flow from his saving passion. When we
receive the Eucharist our venial sins are forgiven and we are strengthened in
unity with God and each other. As the Lord taught in the Gospel today, “Whoever
eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life” Jesus is the Eternal Word,
who has risen from the dead, and lives forever, and when we receive the
Eucharist, our souls are united with His Eternal Divine Life, so we too, may
live forever.
This is why St. Ignatius of Antioch called the Eucharist,
the remedy for our mortality, it’s the antidote against death. “whoever eats
this bread will live forever." That’s the ultimate fruit of redemption, the
reason Jesus died for us on the cross was to obtain for us eternal life, and
that eternal life is communicated to us through the Eucharist.
This is why it is so concerning when Catholics stop going to
Church and receiving the Eucharist in a state of grace. Without the eternal
life that the Eucharist nurtures in us, we become deprived of the antidote for
the powers of sin and death which seek to corrupt us.
The pride and lust and greed and selfishness which seek to
drive us away from God are counteracted when we receive the Eucharist with the
desire to overcome them. The fruits of patience, kindness, gentleness, and
self-control grow in us, when we receive the Eucharist with openness to these
grace.
Through the Eucharist, we become whom we are meant to be. Without
the Eucharist, we are not complete. We lose our identity. For Christ defined
Christianity at the Last Supper, to include taking, eating, drinking,
remembering His Body and Blood. So we pray that all those separated from the
Lord’s table may find their way home, here, to the altar, where we fed,
nourished, and sanctified.
Dear ones, today we celebrate the greatest treasure Jesus left His Church—the
gift of himself. He invites us to share in His divine life, to participate in
His eternal sacrifice, and to carry that life to others.
Today’s feast reminds us of our great privilege, but also
our great responsibility: to cooperate with the grace available here, to allow
Christ to shape and form us, and to bear the fruit of conversion out in the
world.
We offer ourselves along with the bread and wine to be
transformed, that our lives may become Eucharistic, that we may become what we
receive, as St. Augustine said, blessed, broken, and given, poured out for
others, for the glory of God and the salvation of souls.





