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Holy Name Monastery
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Corpus Christi

June 8, 2026 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

Solemnity of the Most Holy Body

and Blood of Christ

This crowd that Jesus is speaking to had made a pilgrimage to see him in person, instead of going to Jerusalem for the celebration of Passover.   It would have been easier to go to the nearby city, but something was drawing them to the great teacher.  And, walking was their mode of transportation, and the distances were often across rough terrain or long detours around lakes. Someone has calculated that in his 3-year public ministry Jesus walked 912 miles.  (Now, I thought that was an interesting tidbit in case you play Catholic trivia.)

Here’s another.  Someone has calculated that Mary, the mother of Jesus, walked 12,187 miles by the time she was 50 years old.  The distance around the world at the equator is 24,901 miles.  This means that in her lifetime Mary walked almost half the distance around world.  (No wonder she waited until after her death to make so many miraculous appearances.)

Now, come with me back to Jesus and the crowd who wanted to take Jesus by force and make him their king.  In other words, Jesus is speaking to a crowd that has felt the pangs of a deep, deep longing for something more than physical hunger.  But as so often happens, they have misplaced the object of their yearning.  They have placed their longing on “king.” Jesus wants them to see that their true longing is for “living bread.”.

Today, Jesus is asking us to defog our soul’s glasses in order to bring our longing into clearer focus.  John wants us to see into and through Jesus, that our real longing is not for things that pass away but for things that endure for imperishable Light, and kinship (not kingship).

Jesus keeps referring to bread, living bread.  We know that the majority of Jesus’ followers were the poor.    And it is a known fact that 50% of a poor person’s diet was (and often is) some form of bread.  Life was a struggle, not unlike the fate of many of the people we know.  Each day’s food had to be earned that day; and was just enough for a day’s survival.  This is not the bread that Jesus is talking about.  He is talking about a Living Bread:  an abiding, dynamic relationship with Him.   “They who eat my flesh and drink my blood will abide in me, and I in them.”

In response to the people who quarreled over his words, Jesus doesn’t seem to answer the question posed about how salvation will come about, perhaps because this reality can only be understood after his death and Resurrection.   They could not imagine a future supper with such significance, or the horrific suffering and death of the One they so admired, nor the resurrection that would startle the world.  They did not yet know the gift of self in Bread and Wine.  As one writer says it, they could not conceive of the Eucharistic presence that Jesus would give us so that He might continue to “mingle with us.”  Isn’t that a touching phrase – mingle with us?!

The bottom line is that people are scrambling like crazy to find the diet that is right for them. But there is a diet you don’t hear much about – the one presented in today’s gospel – the “Bread of Life Diet.” It’s spiritually high-carb but offers full nutritional value. Jesus says, “I am the bread of life,” and promises that people on his program “will never hunger or thirst again!” This is an extravagant claim!  But, unlike some TV ads that offer guaranteed fat burners, Jesus can deliver on what he promises!

We’ve heard the Good News … now it’s our task and obligation to share that news!

~Sister Roberta Bailey, OSB

 

 

 

 

 

First Reading: Proverbs 9:1-6              Second Reading: Ephesians 5:15-20
Gospel Reading: John 6:51-58
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Filed Under: Blog, Front Page, Homily Tagged With: blood, body, Christ, Corpus Christi, Jerusalem, Jesus, Mary, Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ

Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ

June 23, 2025 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

This is one of my favorite feasts.  It celebrates the ultimate in self-giving, not only to lay down one’s life for another but, further, to freely give one’s essence to another.  This story of the feeding of the 5,000 is the only one of Jesus’ miracles that appears in all four Gospels. In Luke’s version the feeding of the crowd is not the result of Jesus’ compassion for the crowd.  It is an incentive to the disciples to do something about the problem they perceive.  When they want Jesus to send the crowd away so they (the crowd and themselves) can get something to eat, Jesus tells them,  “Give the people some food on your own.”  When we come to the Eucharistic table, hungry for the Word of God and the Body of Christ, what does the Jesus, in the person of the priest say?  “Take this, all of you, and eat of this.  Take this, all of you, and drink.”

That’s the challenge before us.  What, exactly, does Jesus mean by “food.”?  The story is about food for the body in a deserted place.  People who live in fear and hiding lest they be persecuted or killed over the practice of their religion certainly live in a deserted place.  The “food” they desire is the courage, the support to sustain them in faith.  We pray that all people of goodwill will find strength in hope, convinced that, as St. Paul wrote to the Romans, “the sufferings of the present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory to come.” (Romans 8:18)  In the midst of current challenges may they, and we, seek the kingdom and find strength in hope.

I recall in 1959-60 when our wood-frame convent was condemned by the fire department.  The townspeople responded with open hearts when they were asked: “May we live with you until we can build a new house?”  We certainly felt “welcomed as Christ” – the people viewed it a privilege to house the sisters and some of our boarding school students.

PS     I will share another true little story with a Eucharist theme.

One day (in a Montessori class of 4-5 year-olds) I had shown a filmstrip.  (Remember them?  They were the precursors of PowerPoint and Smart Boards.)    After the class had viewed the story of the Miracle of the Loaves and Fishes, I asked them to tell me the story.  Martha was so animated that the rest of the class sat mesmerized as she explained how it happened.  “There was a little boy named Benjamin who had some bread.  He gave it to Jesus.  Jesus raised his eyes to heaven, thanked his Heavenly Father, and said (click your fingers) Bing!  And there was enough for everyone!”  He said what?  “You heard him – he said BING and there was enough for everyone!” (Clue: The cue to move to the next picture frame.)

I think it is safe to predict you won’t hear Fr. Pat (our celebrant) at Mass say “BING” – although it may ring in your head.  However, at the sacred words of consecration there will be enough for everyone – enough of Jesus for our whole world!  He is only depending on us to make room in our hearts and in our lives to respond generously and without hesitance to his query: “Where may I eat today? Where may I rest?”

~Sister Roberta Bailey, OSB

 

 

Have a good week! In your kindness: pray for protection for violent weather, good growing season, and for adequate health care benefits and food for  ALL the hungers of the body and heart.

 

 

First Reading: Genesis 14:18-20              Second Reading: 1 Corinthians 11:23-26
Gospel Reading: Luke 9:11b-17
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Filed Under: Blog, Front Page, Homily Tagged With: Blood and Body of Christ, body, Corpus Christi, Feast of Corpus Christi, feeding, food, God, Jesus, Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ

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