Recommit
to the Eucharist
On Holy Thursday night, during the Mass of
the Lord’s Supper, Pope John Paul II signed a new Encyclical
Letter: Ecclesia De Eucharistia.
The Pope marks each Holy Thursday with a
letter to priests. Now, on his 25th Holy Thursday as Pope,
he writes to us all ‘On the Eucharist and its Relationship
to the Church.’
The Pope acknowledges the active participation
of the laity in the liturgy. But he also mentions some Eucharistic
‘shadows’: some have abandoned Eucharistic adoration;
present the Eucharist as merely a community celebration and
not a sacrifice; introduce unauthorised liturgical changes.
The Pope’s wish is not to condemn.
He wants to encourage fine liturgy and Eucharistic devotion.
He believes this will bring people back to Christ and to the
Church – something many parishes in our Archdiocese
have discovered for themselves.
The Letter begins by explaining how the
Eucharist makes sacramentally present the body and blood of
Christ, offered to his Father for the world’s redemption.
The Eucharist draws all people together around the one sacrifice
offered by Jesus for us all.
Chapter 2 teaches us about Holy Communion,
through which the Church grows in unity and holiness. Our
worship of the Blessed Sacrament is not confined to Holy Mass.
The Pope reminds Pastors of their responsibility to encourage
Eucharistic adoration, exposition, and prayer.
In Chapter 3 the Pope writes that without
the ordained priesthood, there is no truly Eucharistic assembly.
Hence Catholics do not receive communion in non-Catholic churches,
or substitute inter-denominational services for Holy Mass.
Inter-Church services are a step on the way to full Eucharistic
communion, not a replacement for it.
The fourth chapter explains the Eucharist
‘cannot be the starting point for communion; it presupposes
that communion already exists.’ The Eucharist does not
magically bring about communion without a human response first.
This is why, if aware of grave sin, we go
to Confession before going to Holy Communion. It is also why
Holy Communion is reserved for Catholics: the Eucharist can
only create communion between those who already believe what
the Church believes about the Eucharist.
Our devotion to the Eucharist is expressed
in the decoration of our churches and celebration of our liturgies.
Certain artistic and cultural forms give proper honour to
Our Lord; others can say more about our abilities to be innovative
than Jesus’s unchanging presence.
To ensure Our Lord is properly honoured
and people’s minds are raised to him, the Pope reminds
us that ‘liturgy is never anyone’s private property,
be it the celebrant or the community in which the mysteries
are celebrated.’ The Church’s norms for worship
are to be followed faithfully.
The final chapter turns to Mary, the ‘Woman
of the Eucharist’; the ‘first tabernacle’
who bore the Body of Christ in her womb.
The Pope reflects on his own priesthood
and deepening understanding of the Eucharist. He calls us
to grow in knowledge and love of this great treasure; to study
the Eucharist in the ‘school’ of the saints; to
praise the Eucharist with St Thomas Aquinas, the ‘poet
of Christ in the Eucharist’, with whom he chooses to
end his Letter.
We give sincere thanks that the Holy Father
has written to the Universal Church once again. Let us recommit
ourselves to ever-greater love for the Eucharist and pledge
ourselves to revival of the worship of Our Lord in the Sacrament
of the Altar.
+ Denis J. Hart,
Archbishop of Melbourne.
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