Dear Sisters, dear brothers and sisters in Christ, each year after Pentecost Sunday, we celebrate a sequence of feast days in which we give thanks to God for some of the most wonderful mysteries of our faith: first of these was last Sunday’s solemnity of the Holy Trinity, of God as He has revealed Himself to us in His own inner life in order to invite us to share in that divine life. Next Friday we will celebrate the solemnity of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, the mystery of the heart whereby God-made-man loves us to the end: which is His total self-giving for us on the cross. Today we celebrate a feast which comes between the Trinity and the Sacred Heart, the solemnity of the Most holy Body and Blood of our Lord, commonly known as ‘Corpus Christi’ which is not only a mystery in heaven, like the Trinity and the Sacred Heart, but is fully present and alive to us here and now on the earth.
In the second reading we heard St Paul’s account of the Last Supper, at which our Lord took bread and gave thanks to God and gave it to His disciples as He solemnly announced to them that ‘This is my Body’. Sometime before this Last Supper Our Lord had taught that He was the living bread, and that unless we eat Him we cannot have life in Him. At the Last Supper He was fulfilling that promise and added to it this command: ‘Take this, all of you, and eat of it, for this is my Body.’
Nor was this His only gift at the table that holy night, for at the end of the supper He took the chalice and said: ‘this is the chalice of my Blood’. The feast which we are celebrating today is that of the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ our Lord, ‘Corpus et Sanguis Christi.’ You see how His Body and Blood are consecrated separately at Mass, first the bread and then the wine, recalling how they were separated when every last drop of His Blood was shed on Calvary. Then, just before Communion, you see that a fragment of the broken Body of Christ is dropped into the chalice to signify that the Body and Blood are reunited at the resurrection, and that they will remain united for all eternity in heaven, and that it is the Body and Blood together that we receive in Holy Communion.
But let me go back to those first words St Paul tells us that our Lord said at the Last Supper: ‘this is my Body.’ The words tell us what that bread in His hands has now become, its new reality. It is no longer bread, then, but the Body of Christ. So, just why did He turn bread into His Body? It was so that we might eat his flesh. Think now about these words: ‘This is my Body’. Do we not hear them spoken often today by people who mean the exact opposite of what Christ means? See what happens if we change the emphasis from our Lord’s words: ‘This is my Body’ to ‘this is my body’. Don’t we hear these words from people today who want to claim absolute rights over their own bodies? Isn’t this what we get in a society where women now have the right to destroy their babies in the womb for no other reason than that they are ‘in my body’? This is what the decriminalization of abortion which was voted in last week in Parliament has led us to. What does it take for a mother to want to kill the child in her womb? It is the sense that that child is somehow opposing and denying the freedom and personal autonomy of the mother. ‘This is my body’ becomes the justification for making the free choice to destroy that other person that child, it’s ‘my body, my choice’.
Moreover, isn’t this idea of my body, my choice, what lies behind the new law also passed in Parliament last week, that allows people to kill themselves, and to force others to assist them to do so? It’s my body, it’s my life, or rather: it’s my body, it’s my death if I want it so. And so what Pope John Paul II called the ‘Culture of death’ has spread like a cancer and has poisoned our laws and the minds of so many people, so that out of the murder of the unborn child comes the death-wish of assisted suicide – It is not just that this law permits those who want to end their own lives for whatever reason with a doctor’s help, but more sinister still, this new law does not prevent those who want to free themselves of the burden and expense in of elderly relatives in need of loving care and of help in their final years, from pressurizing them to seek assisted suicide. So inevitably we will move from the apparent but illusory mercy of assisted suicide to the deliberate, legalized murder of the helpless aged and infirm.
How different this is from our Lord, who, according to St Paul, after saying ‘This is my Body’, goes on to say, not, ‘which is for what I want to do with it’, but rather, ‘which is for you’. With those words, above all, our Lord is saying the exact opposite of what the modern mantra ‘this is my body’ is saying. Our Lord is saying to us that His Body is not for His own private ends, much less kept back from suffering for His own selfish purposes, but rather ‘this is my body which I offer up both here and now for you to eat, and also will offer up tomorrow on the cross to take away your sin and reconcile you to the Father so that you may live for ever in heaven.’ And this is the beauty of what our Lord does: He gives us His Body to eat so that we may be nourished by Him. He gives us His body on the cross so that we may be saved by Him.
When we eat food, we eat something that is dead. But when we eat the Body of Christ we eat that which is alive. Yes, it is in the form or appearance of bread, since that is what it was before our Lord changed it, but it is no longer bread, because now it has been changed into His Body. Because our Lord’s flesh is alive, it has the life of Christ’s soul in it. It is not dead flesh but living. And the flesh of Christ, His sacred Body on the Altar, is living not for Himself but for us. ‘This is my Body which is for you.’ He gave up His life for us, He surrendered His Body for us, so that we might be nourished and fed from Him. Do we not often say, ‘you are what you eat’? If that is true from eating food that is essentially dead, what far greater results come to us from eating that which is truly alive and life-giving? What is dead we can change into ourselves. But the Body of Christ which is alive changes us into Himself, transforms us into His likeness, preparing us for the resurrection.
Very soon I will once more pronounce those sacred words of our Lord: ‘This is my Body, which is given up for you,’ and the commandment which accompanies it: ‘do this in remembrance of me’. Remembrance here is not simply a casting back of the mind to a past and finished event. When we ‘do this in remembrance of Him’ we are not simply play-acting something that is over and done with. We are doing that which makes real the very thing we commemorate. Jesus gave His Body to His apostles the night before He gave it up on the cross. The sacrifice of Calvary was already present in the act of handing over His Body at the Supper. For us, the sacrifice of Calvary is still present whenever we celebrate the Mass. For the Mass is not a mere commemoration, it is the re-presentation, here and now, of all that Jesus did both at the Last Supper and on the cross. This is why we call the Mass a Sacrifice, and why our Lord’s words: ‘this is my Body’ were not meant as a mere symbol of His Body, but as the real, literal truth. The miracle of the Body and Blood of Christ is not only meant to make us wonder with amazement at such a miracle, that Jesus should turn bread and wine into His flesh and Blood, but also to be conscious and aware that we are being nourished and transformed into the likeness of the One who feeds us in this wonderful way.
As a reminder of what it is that we celebrate at every Mass, and in order to emphasise the meaning of the great feast we are celebrating particularly today, when you come to receive Holy Communion I will show you the Sacred Host as usual but using the Latin words which are the popular name of this day: ‘Corpus Christi’; to which, as usual, you reply ‘Amen’ before you receive with all due reverence and devotion the Body and Blood of Christ.