We Become What We Eat

Solemnity of the Body and Blood of Christ – Corpus Christi
By Fr. Chinnappan Pelavendran

The Eucharist is the greatest sacrament of the Catholic Church. In the Eucharist, Christ is present for the assembly, in his words but above all, in the bread and wine transformed into his Body and Blood for his people. During his life on earth, Jesus expressed his love, especially for those who were rejected and unloved in society, he shared meals with them. For the Jew, shared meals were signs of acceptance and friendship. They invite only friends and important people, but not sinners and tax collectors. Jesus was challenging their tradition, eating with sinners, and making friends with those who had no friends. He was showing them respect and love, and drawing them into the family of God.

In the Old Testament, God worked great wonders for his people. He brought them together, led them through the desert, fed them with bread from heaven, freed them from slavery, and guided them through vast and dangerous lands. In the New Testament God brought us together through Jesus Christ. Jesus taught us how to walk in the light, and freed us from sin and its stain. Through Jesus Our Father feeds us, and the food we eat will give us life forever. He is the Father’s gift to us. Jesus told us that he and the Father are one, and if we see him, we see the Father.

When we celebrate the Eucharist, we are celebrating a meal to which all are invited and made to feel at home. God loves us so much that he wants to be with us and wants us to be with him. When we love someone, we want to be with him or her always. God desires to be with us in the most complete way possible. God became physically present in the person of Christ, the true God and true Man. The presence of God in the form of bread and wine is made available to us on the altar at Mass and preserved there for our nourishment and worship. Jesus gave us his Body and Blood so that he might live in us and become life for the world.

This is what happens in the Eucharist. God not only speaks his words to us. He enters into us. He takes possession of our hearts, minds, and bodies. He becomes one with us. He wants to make us one with him. Eating the Body of Christ and drinking his blood is the greatest moment of intimacy that can exist between God and us.

We become the body of Christ when we receive Christ in the Eucharist. From here, we start our mission, through our bodies, we carry Christ to others. It is our tongues which now speak the Good News to those longing to hear it. It is our feet now that Christ uses to walk the extra mile with people and seek out those who have gone astray in life and lost their way.

The Eucharist ends with a sending on Mission: “Go in Peace to love and serve the Lord.” We have to carry the Eucharist into the world. Just as the Lord has become our food, giving himself completely to us, so, too, we must give of ourselves for the sake of the world. We must become sources of nourishment for the world, as Christ has become a source of nourishment for us. Let us today approach the Eucharist with a more lively faith in the real presence of Jesus in the Eucharist and we shall experience therein God’s saving power and transforming love.

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