THAT’S right. For us to be truly human, to be a real
person who is both grounded and oriented properly, we need to be Eucharistic in
mind and heart, because the sacrament of the Holy Eucharist is where we have
our most precious treasure, our everything, our light, our purification, our
salvation.
That’s where we have Christ not only in real presence, as
in the Blessed Sacrament, nor as spiritual food, as in the Holy Communion, but
primarily as our savior who continues to offer his life on the cross for us, as
in the Holy Mass.
We need to be theological in our thinking to capture this
reality and live in accordance to it not only from time to time, but rather all
the time and everywhere, whatever our situation is.
We have to overcome the very common phenomenon of
treating the Holy Eucharist as just a special part of our life that we may
attend to in some special moments of the day or on Sundays and holy days of
obligation only.
If we believe that God is everything to us, then we have
to believe also that Christ, the son of God who became man, is also everything
to us. That’s why he said he is “the way, the truth and the life, no one goes
to the Father except through me.”
Now, if we believe in Christ as everything to us, then it
follows that we have to believe in the Holy Eucharist also as everything to us,
since it is the Holy Eucharist where the whole redemptive life of Christ is
summarized and sacramentalized, that is to say, made present to us through
time.
With the Holy Eucharist, we become contemporaries of
Christ in his most supreme act of salvific love for us. But, alas, how many of
us realize this, and among those of us who do, how many have the skill to turn
this realization into reality?
We need to do a lot of catechizing and discussion if only
to air out the many possibilities and practical considerations we can have to
make the Holy Eucharist everything to us not only in theory and aspiration, but
also in practice in our daily grind.
At the moment, many of the believers still consider the
Eucharist as too special as to leave it only in some secluded if very holy,
solemn places, where it is, of course, adored and exalted. But it largely
remains there. Its spirit, its effects hardly are brought out to the world.
We need to correct this predicament. That’s why we have
to deepen our knowledge of this sacrament, and more than that, to cultivate a
greater love, a sharper hunger and thirst for it. And that is not enough. We
need to bring the Eucharist everywhere, we need to bear witness to it
consistently.
This is a big challenge that all of us face and,
therefore, also have the responsibility to do something about it. It’s good
that Cebu will be the next International Eucharistic Congress, scheduled for
2016, so that in preparation for it, we can start studying the relevant
doctrine and cultivating the relevant attitudes and practices.
One main obstacle in this regard is the common thought
that the Eucharist is hardly relevant to our daily practical affairs of the
real world. This is like saying that Christ has a limited relevance in our life
or that he has nothing or nothing much to say about most of our mundane
affairs.
The main thing to correct here is the way we think. We
have to be more theological in our thinking, inputting the truths of our faith
and giving them a priority over all the other inputs that come from our common
sense, and our knowledge derived from the sciences and arts, from economics,
politics, business, etc.
We need to refer everything to God, and to do this, we
need to refer everything through the Holy Eucharist which is precisely the
living Christ made present in the Blessed Sacrament, made our food in the Holy
Communion, and made our true and ultimate Savior in the Holy Mass.
In other words, we need to do a better, deeper and wider
inculturation of the Holy Eucharist in our system, both individually and
collectively, both personally and socially. Let’s hope that we can be more
conscious of this need, and start to develop the necessary attitudes and the
appropriate skills and virtues.
The net effect should be that we become more and more
Eucharistic in all aspects of our life!
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