First, what do we mean by the Real Presence? By
the Real Presence we mean the Presence now on earth until the end of
time of Jesus Christ — true God and true Man in the fullness of both
natures contained by the Eucharistic species. Christ in the fullness
of His human and divine natures abides in the Eucharist. The Latin
phrase is connitator. We have Jesus Christ inside there in a
way that He is not present anywhere else except in heaven. What do
we mean by the Real Presence? After the Consecration we distinguish
philosophically between the substance and accident. The substance is
that which makes a thing what it is and underlies its properties or
accidents, but the properties can change. The substance remains. We
are the same substance from the time we are conceived in the womb to
the present moment. Our accidents or properties have certainly
changed. Now some questions:
1) After the consecration is the substance of bread and wine on
the altar? No.
2) After consecration are the accidents of bread
and wine, are the physical properties of bread and wine, real
physical properties on the altar after consecration? Yes, that's
the first miracle of the Real Presence. There are two miracles to
the Real Presence. The first miracle is that you have real
physical properties minus their substance. The first miracle of
faith in the Eucharist is in the real absence of the substance of
bread and wine. You can taste, you can touch, you can feel bread
and wine but the substance is not there.
3) Is the substance of Christ's Body and Blood
on the altar after Consecration? Yes. In other words, does Christ
have the organs of His Body, does He have His Hands and Feet, and
Features, His Eyes, and Mouth, and Eyes and Heart? Do they have
size and dimension and color? Is the human mind of Christ thinking
in the Eucharist? Is the human will of Christ in the Eucharist
loving? Yes. Is the whole Christ there? Yes. The fourth yes, is
the second big mystery of the Real Presence. The first mystery is
that we have accidents without their substance. The second mystery
is we have physical properties without their visible sensibly
perceptible manifestation.
Teaching, therefore, devotion to the Real Presence
as a means of growth in sanctity should begin with the one who does
the teaching, him knowing exactly what the Real Presence means. What
does it mean? It, first of all, means that in the Eucharist we have
the whole Christ. The Council of Trent gave us the term which is
part of our faith, in the Eucharist we have the Totus Christus,
the whole Christ. We believe as Catholics that in the Eucharist
Christ is present with the fullness of His divine nature and the
fullness of His human nature. There is no problem whatever or no
test of the faith to say that Christ is present with the fullness of
His divine nature because Christ had been present as God on earth
long before the Incarnation took place. Christ as God is everywhere!
The real test of faith is whether we believe Christ is present not
only as God but is present as Man. Nor is that enough. It is not
merely that He is present as Man but that He is present as Man in
the fullness of His bodily or corporeal nature and in the fullness
of His spiritual human nature. Nor is that enough. We believe that
in the Eucharist is present Christ with His Body and Blood which are
living and possess all the physical properties that any living human
being has, so too with the soul. That soul is united with Christ's
humanity. It is therefore a soul with a mind. Christ has two
intellects; He has two wills. Consequently, Christ is present in His
soul with the fullness of His human mind and His human will and both
are distinct from the Divine mind and will.
What is the simplest way of identifying the Real
Presence? The Real Presence is Jesus Christ who is living in heaven
at the right hand of His heavenly Father and on earth only and
exclusively in the Eucharist. To summarize, therefore, the Real
Presence refers to that reality which constitutes the Living Christ.
And just as truly as Christ was really present in the fullness of
His human and divine natures only within the limits of that Child
whom Mary loved at Bethlehem (outside of the Child that lay in the
straw at Bethlehem God was surely present but Christ was not present
as the God-Man). He was not present as God and Man in the air that
He breathed. He was not present as the God-Man in Mary or Joseph. He
was present only and uniquely in that Man Who was born on Christmas
day. The Eucharist began in the womb of Mary. St. Augustine's phrase
"the flesh of Jesus is the flesh of Mary," is beautiful. It means
that when we believe in the Real Presence we believe that having
risen from the dead and ascended at the right hand of His heavenly
Father, Christ did not leave the earth. The real difference between
anyone else and a Catholic is that a Catholic believes that Christ
is present in heaven and on earth. The expression and on earth
is our faith in the Real Presence. The discovery of the full reality
of the Real Presence I consider one of the greatest graces in the
spiritual life. A lot of believers don't really see it. That's the
foundation of the spiritual life!
Now the history of spirituality as related to the
Real Presence. Here you could choose the life of any saint: ancient,
medieval or modern. If you want to know the relationship there is
between devotion to the Real Presence and growth in sanctity, read
the lives of the saints. They all had it. One of the simplest
ways of promoting devotion to the Real Presence among those in
formation is to get them to read from and about these saints about
whose devotion to the Real Presence we know the most. Once it dawns
on you then you deal with Him as you deal with the living Christ.
You talk to Him; you know He is there listening. He sees you; and
with the eyes of faith you see Him. Being in the company of Christ
is not the same as knowing in whose company you are. This is one
grace that I urge you to get for yourselves and then to urge other
Catholics to pray for, for themselves. Some young people may have
it. Converts usually have it. Most of the time that's how their
conversion starts.
Consequently, one of the most effective ways of
inspiring the faithful to be more devoted to the Real Presence is to
expose them to the life history of the great men and women who have
reached sanctity because of their own great devotion to the Real
Presence. A few names are: the outstanding theological writer on the
Real Presence, St. Alphonsus de Ligouri and St. Peter Julian Eymard,
the founder of the Blessed Sacrament Fathers and Brothers. St. Peter
Julian Eymard's writings about the Real Presence are especially
important because they bring out how Christ in the Real Presence is
to be imitated. This Christ who is imitable from His visible stay on
earth to His Eucharistic stay on earth. Among the virtues that Peter
Julian brings out that Christ wants us to especially imitate in the
Eucharistic Presence are His patience, His love, His obedience and,
with strong emphasis, His humility. A third saint is St. Margaret
Mary. The two books that are easily available in English translated
are her letters and her autobiography. Margaret Mary's devotion to
the Eucharist was so deep that she says devotion to the Sacred Heart
is devotion to the Real Presence to the Holy Eucharist. There is no
devotion that modern Popes have more emphasized than devotion to the
Sacred Heart for the best reasons because the Eucharist is the
Sacred Heart . . . making sure that we know His physical Heart is
there.
Now we proceed with an analysis of both the why
and the how of cultivating devotion to the Real Presence and this as
a means of fostering sanctity. There are three principle reasons why
devotion to the Real Presence is such an effective means of
fostering holiness.
There is no single mystery of our faith that more
surely strengthens the faith than this mystery. It is no wonder that
it has been called the Mystery of Faith. To believe in the
Real Presence is to believe in everything else, the Trinity, the
Redemption, and the Incarnation. We know how demanding this faith
can be from that 6th chapter of John — the only occasion when we
know His own disciples walked from Jesus was when He announced the
Real Presence. The complaint has been repeated over the centuries.
This is intolerable language. Who can believe it? Those who want to
believe it. But let's make sure we know what the object of this
faith is. It is not that Christ is present there as God. He was, on
earth before the Incarnation. It is not even that the substance of
Christ's Body and Blood is there. It is that Christ is present with
His physical properties. It is that we believe that Christ is there
with that which we cannot see, which we cannot touch, which we
cannot experience with our bodily senses. AS the Tantum ergo
says faith supplies the defect of the senses. Christ has His
sensibly perceptible properties in the Eucharist and I believe they
are there though my senses cannot perceive them. As we hold our
faith it's twice tested in the Eucharist. Christ's contemporaries
during His visible stay on earth saw only a Man and believed that
behind that man is God. We see only the Eucharistic species and
behind them we believe there is a Man and behind Him there is God.
Anyone who is weak in their Eucharistic faith, will be weak right
down the line across the whole spectrum of the mysteries of
Christianity. The main reason for the defection of 10,000 priests in
the United States since the Second Vatican Council was a weakening
of faith in the Real Presence. That is absolutely and incontestably
true. A priest whose faith in the Real Presence is strong, is a
priest who is faithful to His priestly duties, devoted and, with
God's grace, is effective in winning souls.
The Real Presence because it is a sacrament
confers the grace that is proper to this sacrament. What is the
grace? The grace to love. So why is devotion to the Real Presence so
important? Because it is especially through faith in the Eucharist
that we obtain an increase of the virtue of charity both towards God
and towards our fellow man.
Why is devotion to the Eucharist so valuable for
promoting sanctity? Because it fosters community worship. Something
mysterious happens when a group of people worship together before
the Real Presence. In other words, they receive grace from that Real
Presence that is absolutely unique and that is why religious
communities as communities who want to become strong and stable must
have communal devotion to the Eucharist. This is so true that under
no matter what guise of excuse a community weakens in its cooperate
devotion to the Real Presence that community is in trouble and if it
is not careful is in danger of disintegration.
How to foster progress in holiness through greater
devotion to the Real Presence:
a) Be sure you yourself know the meaning of the mystery of the
Real Presence and explain it accordingly to others.
b) Make sure there is no doubt in anyone's mind
that the Eucharist is a sacrament three times over. It is
sacrament as Sacrifice in the Mass; it is sacrament as communion
when received; it is sacrament as just being present, which means,
Christ just because He is present on the altar gives grace. How
does He give grace? Infallibly as the ex opera operato just
because the Blessed Sacrament is reserved therefore everyone who
comes before that presence no less than everyone who came before
the presence of Christ during His visible stay on earth. You
couldn't be in Christ's Presence without being affected by Him.
Everything else about life is secondary.
c) The Holy Hour is something that goes back to
Christ's agony in the garden, when He asked Peter, James, and John
to watch with Him. St. Margaret Mary quoted Christ several times.
Christ's greatest sorrow as He expressed it was that consecrated
souls are so careless about this. Archbishop Sheen preached the
Holy Hour in season and out of season. He didn't miss a Holy Hour
once from the time of his ordination until he was laid up in the
hospital. If it has to be broken up to get an hour in — OK. You
spend one hour before the Blessed Sacrament each day besides the
Mass and you've saved your soul and you become truly religious.
d) Encourage people when they have the option to
pray before the Blessed Sacrament. That does not mean that prayer
that is not before the Blessed Sacrament is not very efficacious.
But all things being equal, when I have the option I spend the
time there.
e) Ask for a deeper faith in the Real Presence.
If Christ tells us, "ask and you shall receive," then our asking
Him for a deeper faith He will give it to us.
f) Just want to be with the Eucharistic Christ
for no other reason. You don't know why. You just want to be
around and as far as possible do what you have to do there. Do
your work before the Blessed Sacrament. Get the idea that He is
there. Anything that you can do before the Blessed Sacrament do
it. So just be with Him; and find any excuse to be with Him.
g) Be so imbued with faith in Christ's
Eucharistic Presence that you want to tell everybody else about It
and then take every reasonable and if need be unreasonable
occasion to tell people. Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament means
everything to you, so explain the Real Presence, encourage
devotion to the Real Presence.
Compare the Real Presence with the Mystical Body
of Christ. Both are realities. Christ now has two existences which
until He died on the Cross He had only one. Perhaps we could put
this in stages. Before the Incarnation, God was present on earth
only as God. With the Incarnation God became present on earth as the
God-Man. The distinctive difference between Christ's presence on
earth since the Incarnation and before, the distinctive difference
is His humanity. There is now a Man who is hypostatically, that is
totally and substantially united, with the divinity present in the
world of space and time. The moment Christ died on the Cross, the
Mystical Body came into existence. The physical Body of Christ came
into existence at Nazareth when Mary said, "Be it done to me
according to Your word." The Mystical Body came into existence the
moment Christ pronounced the words: "It is finished. Into Your hand
I commend My spirit." The moment Christ died what had been only the
physical Christ now took on in addition His members with whom He
united Himself as their Head. The Mystical Body of Christ,
therefore, is the Church. The Mystical Body may also be called the
communion of saints. The Mystical Body is that communion of the
souls in heaven, the souls in purgatory, and the living who are in
God's grace and members of the Church on earth, who are the members
of what we call the Mystical Body, whose head is the Physical Body.
So the Mystical Body is a society; the Mystical Body is a group of
people united with Christ. The Mystical Body has a soul. The soul of
that Mystical Body is the Holy Spirit. St. Paul distinguishes — he
never mixes the two up; he never confuses the physical Body of
Christ with the Mystical Body. The physical Body in Greek is Sarx;
the Mystical Body or the Church in Paul is Soma. What's the
difference? The difference between the physical Body of Christ and
the Mystical Body of Christ is all the difference between Jesus
Christ who is the Son of God, that became the Son of Mary, and the
society of all those who are united with Christ joined to their
Head. The Mystical Body as such is not sensibly perceptible. You
cannot see the Mystical Body as Mystical Body with your senses. You
do not directly touch this Mystical Body but the Head Christ is
sensibly perceptible, the members are as members sensibly
perceptible. The physical Christ is Jesus; the Mystical Body is the
Church.
We receive the physical Body of Christ
substantially. We receive the rest of the Mystical Body in spirit or
volitionally because Christ has all of us on His mind. He has all of
us in His Heart. And in so far as the whole Church is on Christ's
mind and in Christ's Heart that is the extent that we receive what
is on His mind and in His Heart.
The physical Body of Christ by Christ's own
command is necessary to keep the Mystical Body of Christ alive. In
other words, the members of the Mystical Body who are still
struggling on earth will not remain united with that Mystical Body
unless they receive the physical Body. They will not grow in union
with Him; they will not grow in union with one another, unless they
receive the Head of the Mystical Body in the Eucharist. The one is a
condition for the other. Remember until we reach the Beatific Vision
we can be separated from Him. Consequently we must constantly
strengthen our bonds with Him at the risk of losing that union when
we mainly strengthen our bonds with Him through the Eucharist. That
is why it is called the Sacrament of unity. We are all naturally
individual persons, separate, distinct from one another. Nature
divides; grace unites. The principal source of that which unites is
the Eucharist. That's why Christ couldn't have as He did at the Last
Supper given the command to love one another as He has loved us
unless He gave us the means. He made sure He gave us both the
command and the means on the same occasion.
© 2002 Inter Mirifica
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