Sixth Sunday after
Pentecost
Thoughts for the Week - Fr. R. Taouk
21st July 2019
God in Our Midst - The Blessed Sacrament
by Pope Urban IV
Over this mystery, which prepares joy for us and elicits our
tears, we rejoice weepingly and weep joyfully because our
hearts are entranced with joy at the remembrance of so great
a benefit, and in the sense of the most just gratitude which
we owe it, we cannot refrain from tears. O infinite, Divine
love! O exceedingly great condescension of our God! O
astounding miracle of His liberality! Not enough to make us
masters of the goods of this world, He even places all
creatures at our command. This was not even enough for His
goodness to us. He raised man to so great a dignity as to
give him Angels to guard him and celestial spirits to serve
him and to guide the elect to the possession of the
inheritance which is prepared for them in Heaven. After so
many brilliant proofs of His munificence, He has given us a
still greater pledge of His unspeakable charity by bestowing
Himself on us. Exceeding the very fullness of His gifts and
the very measure of His love, He offers Himself for our food
and drink.
O admirable liberality, in which the Giver is the Gift, and
the Gift is the very One Who gives! O unexampled liberality
by which He gives Himself! Our God has given Himself to be
our food because man, condemned to death as he is, can be
restored to life by this means only. By eating the forbidden
fruit he incurred death, and by partaking of the Tree of
Life, he has been redeemed. In the former was the sting of
death; in the latter the food of life. By eating the former
he inflicted a wound upon himself; by eating of the latter
he recovered health. Thus the partaking of the one food
wounded him; the partaking of the other healed him. Wound
and cure proceed from the same source, and what entailed
death upon us, has restored us to life. Of the former it is
said: "On the day on which you shall eat thereof, you shall
die the death"; and of the latter, "He that eats of this
bread shall live for ever".
O Substantial Food which perfectly satisfies and truly
nourishes, not the body, but the heart; not the flesh, but
the soul! Our compassionate Redeemer, who knew that man
needed spiritual nourishment, has in this institution of
charity and mercy prepared for his soul the most precious
and most nourishing food that His wisdom could devise.
Man has eaten the Bread of Angels, and therefore Our Lord
said: "My flesh is meat indeed!" This Divine Bread is eaten,
but it is not changed, because it assumes no other form in
him who eats it. It transforms the worthy receiver into Him
whom it contains. O most excellent, most adorable and most
venerable Sacrament, to which we can never give adequate
praise, honour and glory and whose benefits we can never
justly extol! O Sacrament, which is worthy of being revered
from the bottom of the heart, loved with the most tender and
fervent affection and of being deeply engraved upon our
memory in indelible characters! O most precious remembrance,
which ought to be made known and exalted in all places,
which all Christians ought ever to remember with feelings of
the deepest gratitude, which can never sufficiently meditate
upon or ever sufficiently worship. We are therefore bound to
cherish a perpetual remembrance of it, so that we may
constantly have Him before our eyes who offers this
inestimable benefit to us. For the more we consider the
Gift, the more we prize Him who bestows it.
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