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June 15, 2001
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Real Presence of Jesus Christ in the Sacrament of the Eucharist:
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in the Sacrament of the Eucharist: Basic Questions and Answers,
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General Secretary, USCCB
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Introduction
The Lord Jesus, on the night before he suffered
on the cross, shared one last meal with his disciples. During
this meal our Savior instituted the sacrament of his Body and
Blood. He did this in order to perpetuate the sacrifice of the
Cross throughout the ages and to entrust to the Church his Spouse
a memorial of his death and resurrection. As the Gospel of Matthew
tells us:
While they were eating, Jesus took bread, said
the blessing, broke it, and giving it to his disciples said,
"Take and eat; this is my body." Then he took a cup, gave thanks,
and gave it to them, saying, "Drink from it, all of you, for
this is my blood of the covenant, which will be shed on behalf
of many for the forgiveness of sins." (Mt 26:26-28; cf. Mk 14:22-24,
Lk 22:17-20, 1 Cor 11:23-25)
Recalling these words of Jesus, the Catholic
Church professes that, in the celebration of the Eucharist, bread
and wine become the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ through the
power of the Holy Spirit and the instrumentality of the priest.
Jesus said: "I am the living bread that came down from heaven;
whoever eats this bread will live forever; and the bread that
I will give is my flesh for the life of the world. . . . For my
flesh is true food, and my blood is true drink" (Jn 6:51-55).
The whole Christ is truly present, body, blood, soul, and divinity,
under the appearances of bread and wine—the glorified Christ who
rose from the dead after dying for our sins. This is what the
Church means when she speaks of the "Real Presence" of Christ
in the Eucharist. This presence of Christ in the Eucharist is
called "real" not to exclude other types of his presence as if
they could not be understood as real (cf. Catechism, no.
1374). The risen Christ is present to his Church in many ways,
but most especially through the sacrament of his Body and Blood.
What does it mean that Jesus Christ is present in the Eucharist
under the appearances of bread and wine? How does this happen?
The presence of the risen Christ in the Eucharist is an inexhaustible
mystery that the Church can never fully explain in words. We must
remember that the triune God is the creator of all that exists
and has the power to do more than we can possibly imagine. As
St. Ambrose said: "If the word of the Lord Jesus is so powerful
as to bring into existence things which were not, then a fortiori
those things which already exist can be changed into something
else" (De Sacramentis, IV, 5-16). God created the world
in order to share his life with persons who are not God. This
great plan of salvation reveals a wisdom that surpasses our understanding.
But we are not left in ignorance: for out of his love for us,
God reveals his truth to us in ways that we can understand through
the gift of faith and the grace of the Holy Spirit dwelling in
us. We are thus enabled to understand at least in some measure
what would otherwise remain unknown to us, though we can never
completely comprehend the mystery of God.
As successors of the Apostles and teachers of the Church, the
bishops have the duty to hand on what God has revealed to us and
to encourage all members of the Church to deepen their understanding
of the mystery and gift of the Eucharist. In order to foster such
a deepening of faith, we have prepared this text to respond to
fifteen questions that commonly arise with regard to the Real
Presence of Christ in the Eucharist. We offer this text to pastors
and religious educators to assist them in their teaching responsibilities.
We recognize that some of these questions involve rather complex
theological ideas. It is our hope, however, that study and discussion
of the text will aid many of the Catholic faithful in our country
to enrich their understanding of this mystery of the faith.
- Why does Jesus give himself to us as
food and drink?
Jesus gives himself to us in the Eucharist as spiritual nourishment
because he loves us. God's whole plan for our salvation is directed
to our participation in the life of the Trinity, the communion
of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Our sharing in this life begins
with our Baptism, when by the power of the Holy Spirit we are
joined to Christ, thus becoming adopted sons and daughters of
the Father. It is strengthened and increased in Confirmation.
It is nourished and deepened through our participation in the
Eucharist. By eating the Body and drinking the Blood of Christ
in the Eucharist we become united to the person of Christ through
his humanity. "Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood remains
in me and I in him" (Jn 6:56). In being united to the humanity
of Christ we are at the same time united to his divinity. Our
mortal and corruptible natures are transformed by being joined
to the source of life. "Just as the living Father sent me and
I have life because of the Father, so also the one who feeds
on me will have life because of me" (Jn 6:57).
By being united to Christ through the power of the Holy Spirit
dwelling in us, we are drawn up into the eternal relationship
of love among the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. As Jesus
is the eternal Son of God by nature, so we become sons and daughters
of God by adoption through the sacrament of Baptism. Through
the sacraments of Baptism and Confirmation (Chrismation), we
are temples of the Holy Spirit, who dwells in us, and by his
indwelling we are made holy by the gift of sanctifying grace.
The ultimate promise of the Gospel is that we will share in
the life of the Holy Trinity. The Fathers of the Church called
this participation in the divine life "divinization" (theosis).
In this we see that God does not merely send us good things
from on high; instead, we are brought up into the inner life
of God, the communion among the Father, the Son, and the Holy
Spirit. In the celebration of the Eucharist (which means "thanksgiving")
we give praise and glory to God for this sublime gift.
- Why is the Eucharist not only a meal
but also a sacrifice?
While our sins would have made it impossible for us to share
in the life of God, Jesus Christ was sent to remove this obstacle.
His death was a sacrifice for our sins. Christ is "the Lamb
of God, who takes away the sin of the world" (Jn 1:29). Through
his death and resurrection, he conquered sin and death and reconciled
us to God. The Eucharist is the memorial of this sacrifice.
The Church gathers to remember and to re-present the sacrifice
of Christ in which we share through the action of the priest
and the power of the Holy Spirit. Through the celebration of
the Eucharist, we are joined to Christ's sacrifice and receive
its inexhaustible benefits.
As the Letter to the Hebrews explains, Jesus is the one eternal
high priest who always lives to make intercession for the people
before the Father. In this way, he surpasses the many high priests
who over centuries used to offer sacrifices for sin in the Jerusalem
temple. The eternal high priest Jesus offers the perfect sacrifice
which is his very self, not something else. "He entered once
for all into the sanctuary, not with the blood of goats and
calves but with his own blood, thus obtaining eternal redemption"
(Heb 9:12).
Jesus' act belongs to human history, for he is truly human and
has entered into history. At the same time, however, Jesus Christ
is the Second Person of the Holy Trinity; he is the eternal
Son, who is not confined within time or history. His actions
transcend time, which is part of creation. "Passing through
the greater and more perfect tabernacle not made by hands, that
is, not belonging to this creation" (Heb 9:11), Jesus the eternal
Son of God made his act of sacrifice in the presence of his
Father, who lives in eternity. Jesus' one perfect sacrifice
is thus eternally present before the Father, who eternally accepts
it. This means that in the Eucharist, Jesus does not sacrifice
himself again and again. Rather, by the power of the Holy Spirit
his one eternal sacrifice is made present once again, re-presented,
so that we may share in it.
Christ does not have to leave where he is in heaven to be with
us. Rather, we partake of the heavenly liturgy where Christ
eternally intercedes for us and presents his sacrifice to the
Father and where the angels and saints constantly glorify God
and give thanks for all his gifts: "To the one who sits on the
throne and to the Lamb be blessing and honor, glory and might,
forever and ever" (Rev 5:13). As the Catechism of the Catholic
Church states, "By the Eucharistic celebration we already
unite ourselves with the heavenly liturgy and anticipate eternal
life, when God will be all in all" (no. 1326). The Sanctus
proclamation, "Holy, Holy, Holy Lord . . . ," is the song of
the angels who are in the presence of God (Is 6:3). When in
the Eucharist we proclaim the Sanctus we echo on earth the song
of angels as they worship God in heaven. In the eucharistic
celebration we do not simply remember an event in history. Rather,
through the mysterious action of the Holy Spirit in the eucharistic
celebration the Lord's Paschal Mystery is made present and contemporaneous
to his Spouse the Church.
Furthermore, in the eucharistic re-presentation of Christ's
eternal sacrifice before the Father, we are not simply spectators.
The priest and the worshiping community are in different ways
active in the eucharistic sacrifice. The ordained priest standing
at the altar represents Christ as head of the Church. All the
baptized, as members of Christ's Body, share in his priesthood,
as both priest and victim. The Eucharist is also the sacrifice
of the Church. The Church, which is the Body and Bride of Christ,
participates in the sacrificial offering of her Head and Spouse.
In the Eucharist, the sacrifice of Christ becomes the sacrifice
of the members of his Body who united to Christ form one sacrificial
offering (cf. Catechism, no. 1368). As Christ's sacrifice
is made sacramentally present, united with Christ, we offer
ourselves as a sacrifice to the Father. "The whole Church exercises
the role of priest and victim along with Christ, offering the
Sacrifice of the Mass and itself completely offered in it" (Mysterium
Fidei, no. 31; cf. Lumen Gentium, no. 11).
- When the bread and wine become the Body
and Blood of Christ, why do they still look and taste like bread
and wine?
In the celebration of the Eucharist, the glorified Christ becomes
present under the appearances of bread and wine in a way that
is unique, a way that is uniquely suited to the Eucharist. In
the Church's traditional theological language, in the act of
consecration during the Eucharist the "substance" of the bread
and wine is changed by the power of the Holy Spirit into the
"substance" of the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ. At the same
time, the "accidents" or appearances of bread and wine remain.
"Substance" and "accident" are here used as philosophical terms
that have been adapted by great medieval theologians such as
St. Thomas Aquinas in their efforts to understand and explain
the faith. Such terms are used to convey the fact that what
appears to be bread and wine in every way (at the level of "accidents"
or physical attributes - that is, what can be seen, touched,
tasted, or measured) in fact is now the Body and Blood of Christ
(at the level of "substance" or deepest reality). This change
at the level of substance from bread and wine into the Body
and Blood of Christ is called "transubstantiation." According
to Catholic faith, we can speak of the Real Presence of Christ
in the Eucharist because this transubstantiation has occurred
(cf. Catechism, no. 1376).
This is a great mystery of our faith—we can only know it from
Christ's teaching given us in the Scriptures and in the Tradition
of the Church. Every other change that occurs in the world involves
a change in accidents or characteristics. Sometimes the accidents
change while the substance remains the same. For example, when
a child reaches adulthood, the characteristics of the human
person change in many ways, but the adult remains the same person—the
same substance. At other times, the substance and the accidents
both change. For example, when a person eats an apple, the apple
is incorporated into the body of that person—is changed into
the body of that person. When this change of substance occurs,
however, the accidents or characteristics of the apple do not
remain. As the apple is changed into the body of the person,
it takes on the accidents or characteristics of the body of
that person. Christ's presence in the Eucharist is unique in
that, even though the consecrated bread and wine truly are in
substance the Body and Blood of Christ, they have none of the
accidents or characteristics of a human body, but only those
of bread and wine.
- Does the bread cease to be bread and
the wine cease to be wine?
Yes. In order for the whole Christ to be present—body, blood,
soul, and divinity—the bread and wine cannot remain, but must
give way so that his glorified Body and Blood may be present.
Thus in the Eucharist the bread ceases to be bread in substance,
and becomes the Body of Christ, while the wine ceases to be
wine in substance, and becomes the Blood of Christ. As St. Thomas
Aquinas observed, Christ is not quoted as saying, "This bread
is my body," but "This is my body" (Summa Theologiae,
III q. 78, a. 5).
- Is it fitting that Christ's Body and
Blood become present in the Eucharist under the appearances
of bread and wine?
Yes, for this way of being present corresponds perfectly to
the sacramental celebration of the Eucharist. Jesus Christ gives
himself to us in a form that employs the symbolism inherent
in eating bread and drinking wine. Furthermore, being present
under the appearances of bread and wine, Christ gives himself
to us in a form that is appropriate for human eating and drinking.
Also, this kind of presence corresponds to the virtue of faith,
for the presence of the Body and Blood of Christ cannot be detected
or discerned by any way other than faith. That is why St. Bonaventure
affirmed: "There is no difficulty over Christ's being present
in the sacrament as in a sign; the great difficulty is in the
fact that He is really in the sacrament, as He is in heaven.
And so believing this is especially meritorious" (In IV Sent.,
dist. X, P. I, art. un., qu. I). On the authority of God who
reveals himself to us, by faith we believe that which cannot
be grasped by our human faculties (cf. Catechism, no.
1381).
- Are the consecrated bread and wine "merely
symbols"?
In everyday language, we call a "symbol" something that points
beyond itself to something else, often to several other realities
at once. The transformed bread and wine that are the Body and
Blood of Christ are not merely symbols because they truly are
the Body and Blood of Christ. As St. John Damascene wrote: "The
bread and wine are not a foreshadowing of the body and blood
of Christ—By no means!—but the actual deified body of the Lord,
because the Lord Himself said: ‘This is my body'; not ‘a foreshadowing
of my body' but ‘my body,' and not ‘a foreshadowing of my blood'
but ‘my blood'" (The Orthodox Faith, IV [PG 94, 1148-49]).
At the same time, however, it is important to recognize that
the Body and Blood of Christ come to us in the Eucharist in
a sacramental form. In other words, Christ is present under
the appearances of bread and wine, not in his own proper form.
We cannot presume to know all the reasons behind God's actions.
God uses, however, the symbolism inherent in the eating of bread
and the drinking of wine at the natural level to illuminate
the meaning of what is being accomplished in the Eucharist through
Jesus Christ.
There are various ways in which the symbolism of eating bread
and drinking wine discloses the meaning of the Eucharist. For
example, just as natural food gives nourishment to the body,
so the eucharistic food gives spiritual nourishment. Furthermore,
the sharing of an ordinary meal establishes a certain communion
among the people who share it; in the Eucharist, the People
of God share a meal that brings them into communion not only
with each other but with the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Similarly,
as St. Paul tells us, the single loaf that is shared among many
during the eucharistic meal is an indication of the unity of
those who have been called together by the Holy Spirit as one
body, the Body of Christ (1 Cor 10:17). To take another example,
the individual grains of wheat and individual grapes have to
be harvested and to undergo a process of grinding or crushing
before they are unified as bread and as wine. Because of this,
bread and wine point to both the union of the many that takes
place in the Body of Christ and the suffering undergone by Christ,
a suffering that must also be embraced by his disciples. Much
more could be said about the many ways in which the eating of
bread and drinking of wine symbolize what God does for us through
Christ, since symbols carry multiple meanings and connotations.
- Do the consecrated bread and wine cease
to be the Body and Blood of Christ when the Mass is over?
No. During the celebration of the Eucharist, the bread and wine
become the Body and Blood of Christ, and this they remain. They
cannot turn back into bread and wine, for they are no longer
bread and wine at all. There is thus no reason for them to change
back to their "normal" state after the special circumstances
of the Mass are past. Once the substance has really changed,
the presence of the Body and Blood of Christ "endures as long
as the Eucharistic species subsist" (Catechism, no. 1377).
Against those who maintained that the bread that is consecrated
during the Eucharist has no sanctifying power if it is left
over until the next day, St. Cyril of Alexandria replied, "Christ
is not altered, nor is his holy body changed, but the power
of the consecration and his life-giving grace is perpetual in
it" (Letter 83, to Calosyrius, Bishop of Arsinoe [PG
76, 1076]). The Church teaches that Christ remains present under
the appearances of bread and wine as long as the appearances
of bread and wine remain (cf. Catechism, no. 1377).
- Why are some of the consecrated hosts
reserved after the Mass?
While it would be possible to eat all of the bread that is consecrated
during the Mass, some is usually kept in the tabernacle. The
Body of Christ under the appearance of bread that is kept or
"reserved" after the Mass is commonly referred to as the "Blessed
Sacrament." There are several pastoral reasons for reserving
the Blessed Sacrament. First of all, it is used for distribution
to the dying (Viaticum), the sick, and those who legitimately
cannot be present for the celebration of the Eucharist. Secondly,
the Body of Christ in the form of bread is to be adored when
it is exposed, as in the Rite of Eucharistic Exposition and
Benediction, when it is carried in eucharistic processions,
or when it is simply placed in the tabernacle, before which
people pray privately. These devotions are based on the fact
that Christ himself is present under the appearance of bread.
Many holy people well known to American Catholics, such as St.
John Neumann, St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, St. Katharine Drexel,
and Blessed Damien of Molokai, practiced great personal devotion
to Christ present in the Blessed Sacrament. In the Eastern Catholic
Churches, devotion to the reserved Blessed Sacrament is practiced
most directly at the Divine Liturgy of the Presanctified Gifts,
offered on weekdays of Lent.
- What are appropriate signs of reverence
with respect to the Body and Blood of Christ?
The Body and Blood of Christ present under the appearances of
bread and wine are treated with the greatest reverence both
during and after the celebration of the Eucharist (cf. Mysterium
Fidei, nos. 56-61). For example, the tabernacle in which the
consecrated bread is reserved is placed "in some part of the
church or oratory which is distinguished, conspicuous, beautifully
decorated, and suitable for prayer" (Code of Canon Law,
Can. 938, §2). According to the tradition of the Latin Church,
one should genuflect in the presence of the tabernacle containing
the reserved sacrament. In the Eastern Catholic Churches, the
traditional practice is to make the sign of the cross and to
bow profoundly. The liturgical gestures from both traditions
reflect reverence, respect, and adoration. It is appropriate
for the members of the assembly to greet each other in the gathering
space of the church (that is, the vestibule or narthex), but
it is not appropriate to speak in loud or boisterous tones in
the body of the church (that is, the nave) because of the presence
of Christ in the tabernacle. Also, the Church requires everyone
to fast before receiving the Body and Blood of Christ as a sign
of reverence and recollection (unless illness prevents one from
doing so). In the Latin Church, one must generally fast for
at least one hour; members of Eastern Catholic Churches must
follow the practice established by their own Church.
- If someone without faith eats and drinks
the consecrated bread and wine, does he or she still receive
the Body and Blood of Christ?
If "to receive" means "to consume," the answer is yes, for what
the person consumes is the Body and Blood of Christ. If "to
receive" means "to accept the Body and Blood of Christ knowingly
and willingly as what they are, so as to obtain the spiritual
benefit," then the answer is no. A lack of faith on the part
of the person eating and drinking the Body and Blood of Christ
cannot change what these are, but it does prevent the person
from obtaining the spiritual benefit, which is communion with
Christ. Such reception of Christ's Body and Blood would be in
vain and, if done knowingly, would be sacrilegious (1 Cor 11:29).
Reception of the Blessed Sacrament is not an automatic remedy.
If we do not desire communion with Christ, God does not force
this upon us. Rather, we must by faith accept God's offer of
communion in Christ and in the Holy Spirit, and cooperate with
God's grace in order to have our hearts and minds transformed
and our faith and love of God increased.
- If a believer who is conscious of having
committed a mortal sin eats and drinks the consecrated bread
and wine, does he or she still receive the Body and Blood of
Christ?
Yes. The attitude or disposition of the recipient cannot change
what the consecrated bread and wine are. The question here is
thus not primarily about the nature of the Real Presence, but
about how sin affects the relationship between an individual
and the Lord. Before one steps forward to receive the Body and
Blood of Christ in Holy Communion, one needs to be in a right
relationship with the Lord and his Mystical Body, the Church
- that is, in a state of grace, free of all mortal sin. While
sin damages, and can even destroy, that relationship, the sacrament
of Penance can restore it. St. Paul tells us that "whoever eats
the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord unworthily will have
to answer for the body and blood of the Lord. A person should
examine himself, and so eat the bread and drink the cup" (1
Cor 11:27-28). Anyone who is conscious of having committed a
mortal sin should be reconciled through the sacrament of Penance
before receiving the Body and Blood of Christ, unless a grave
reason exists for doing so and there is no opportunity for confession.
In this case, the person is to be mindful of the obligation
to make an act of perfect contrition, that is, an act of sorrow
for sins that "arises from a love by which God is loved above
all else" (Catechism, no. 1452). The act of perfect contrition
must be accompanied by the firm intention of making a sacramental
confession as soon as possible.
- Does one receive the whole Christ if
one receives Holy Communion under a single form?
Yes. Christ Jesus, our Lord and Savior, is wholly present under
the appearance either of bread or of wine in the Eucharist.
Furthermore, Christ is wholly present in any fragment of the
consecrated Host or in any drop of the Precious Blood. Nevertheless,
it is especially fitting to receive Christ in both forms during
the celebration of the Eucharist. This allows the Eucharist
to appear more perfectly as a banquet, a banquet that is a foretaste
of the banquet that will be celebrated with Christ at the end
of time when the Kingdom of God is established in its fullness
(cf. Eucharisticum Mysterium, no. 32).
- Is Christ present during the celebration
of the Eucharist in other ways in addition to his Real Presence
in the Blessed Sacrament?
Yes. Christ is present during the Eucharist in various ways.
He is present in the person of the priest who offers the sacrifice
of the Mass. According to the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy
of the Second Vatican Council, Christ is present in his Word
"since it is he himself who speaks when the holy scriptures
are read in the Church." He is also present in the assembled
people as they pray and sing, "for he has promised ‘where two
or three are gathered together in my name there am I in the
midst of them' (Mt 18:20)" (Sacrosanctum Concilium, no.
7). Furthermore, he is likewise present in other sacraments;
for example, "when anybody baptizes it is really Christ himself
who baptizes" (ibid.).
We speak of the presence of Christ under the appearances of
bread and wine as "real" in order to emphasize the special nature
of that presence. What appears to be bread and wine is in its
very substance the Body and Blood of Christ. The entire Christ
is present, God and man, body and blood, soul and divinity.
While the other ways in which Christ is present in the celebration
of the Eucharist are certainly not unreal, this way surpasses
the others. "This presence is called ‘real' not to exclude the
idea that the others are ‘real' too, but rather to indicate
presence par excellence, because it is substantial and through
it Christ becomes present whole and entire, God and man" (Mysterium
Fidei, no. 39).
- Why do we speak of the "Body of Christ"
in more than one sense?
First, the Body of Christ refers to the human body of Jesus
Christ, who is the divine Word become man. During the Eucharist,
the bread and wine become the Body and Blood of Christ. As human,
Jesus Christ has a human body, a resurrected and glorified body
that in the Eucharist is offered to us in the form of bread
and wine.
Secondly, as St. Paul taught us in his letters, using the analogy
of the human body, the Church is the Body of Christ, in which
many members are united with Christ their head (1 Cor 10:16-17,
12:12-31; Rom 12:4-8). This reality is frequently referred to
as the Mystical Body of Christ. All those united to Christ,
the living and the dead, are joined together as one Body in
Christ. This union is not one that can be seen by human eyes,
for it is a mystical union brought about by the power of the
Holy Spirit.
The Mystical Body of Christ and the eucharistic Body of Christ
are inseparably linked. By Baptism we enter the Mystical Body
of Christ, the Church, and by receiving the eucharistic Body
of Christ we are strengthened and built up into the Mystical
Body of Christ. The central act of the Church is the celebration
of the Eucharist; the individual believers are sustained as
members of the Church, members of the Mystical Body of Christ,
through their reception of the Body of Christ in the Eucharist.
Playing on the two meanings of "Body of Christ," St. Augustine
tells those who are to receive the Body of Christ in the Eucharist:
"Be what you see, and receive what you are" (Sermon 272). In
another sermon he says, "If you receive worthily, you are what
you have received" (Sermon 227).
The work of the Holy Spirit in the celebration of the Eucharist
is twofold in a way that corresponds to the twofold meaning
of "Body of Christ." On the one hand, it is through the power
of the Holy Spirit that the risen Christ and his act of sacrifice
become present. In the eucharistic prayer, the priest asks the
Father to send the Holy Spirit down upon the gifts of bread
and wine to transform them into the Body and Blood of Christ
(a prayer known as the epiclesis or "invocation upon").
On the other hand, at the same time the priest also asks the
Father to send the Holy Spirit down upon the whole assembly
so that "those who take part in the Eucharist may be one body
and one spirit" (Catechism, no. 1353). It is through
the Holy Spirit that the gift of the eucharistic Body of Christ
comes to us and through the Holy Spirit that we are joined to
Christ and each other as the Mystical Body of Christ.
By this we can see that the celebration of the Eucharist does
not just unite us to God as individuals who are isolated from
one another. Rather, we are united to Christ together with all
the other members of the Mystical Body. The celebration of the
Eucharist should thus increase our love for one another and
remind us of our responsibilities toward one another. Furthermore,
as members of the Mystical Body, we have a duty to represent
Christ and to bring Christ to the world. We have a responsibility
to share the Good News of Christ not only by our words but also
by how we live our lives. We also have a responsibility to work
against all the forces in our world that oppose the Gospel,
including all forms of injustice. The Catechism of the Catholic
Church teaches us: "The Eucharist commits us to the poor.
To receive in truth the Body and Blood of Christ given up for
us, we must recognize Christ in the poorest, his brethren" (no.
1397).
- Why do we call the presence of Christ
in the Eucharist a "mystery"?
The word "mystery" is commonly used to refer to something that
escapes the full comprehension of the human mind. In the Bible,
however, the word has a deeper and more specific meaning, for
it refers to aspects of God's plan of salvation for humanity,
which has already begun but will be completed only with the
end of time. In ancient Israel, through the Holy Spirit God
revealed to the prophets some of the secrets of what he was
going to accomplish for the salvation of his people (cf. Am
3:7; Is 21:28; Dan 2:27-45). Likewise, through the preaching
and teaching of Jesus, the mystery of "the Kingdom of God" was
being revealed to his disciples (Mk 4:11-12). St. Paul explained
that the mysteries of God may challenge our human understanding
or may even seem to be foolishness, but their meaning is revealed
to the People of God through Jesus Christ and the Holy Spirit
(cf. 1 Cor 1:18-25, 2:6-10; Rom 16:25-27; Rev 10:7).
The Eucharist is a mystery because it participates in the mystery
of Jesus Christ and God's plan to save humanity through Christ.
We should not be surprised if there are aspects of the Eucharist
that are not easy to understand, for God's plan for the world
has repeatedly surpassed human expectations and human understanding
(cf. Jn 6:60-66). For example, even the disciples did not at
first understand that it was necessary for the Messiah to be
put to death and then to rise from the dead (cf. Mk 8:31-33,
9:31-32, 10:32-34; Mt 16: 21-23, 17:22-23, 20:17-19; Lk 9:22,
9:43-45, 18:31-34). Furthermore, any time that we are speaking
of God we need to keep in mind that our human concepts never
entirely grasp God. We must not try to limit God to our understanding,
but allow our understanding to be stretched beyond its normal
limitations by God's revelation.
Conclusion
By his Real Presence in the Eucharist Christ
fulfils his promise to be with us "always, until the end of the
age" (Mt 28:20). As St. Thomas Aquinas wrote, "It is the law of
friendship that friends should live together. . . . Christ has
not left us without his bodily presence in this our pilgrimage,
but he joins us to himself in this sacrament in the reality of
his body and blood" (Summa Theologiae, III q. 75, a. 1).
With this gift of Christ's presence in our midst, the Church is
truly blessed. As Jesus told his disciples, referring to his presence
among them, "Amen, I say to you, many prophets and righteous people
longed to see what you see but did not see it, and to hear what
you hear but did not hear it" (Mt 13:17). In the Eucharist the
Church both receives the gift of Jesus Christ and gives grateful
thanks to God for such a blessing. This thanksgiving is the only
proper response, for through this gift of himself in the celebration
of the Eucharist under the appearances of bread and wine Christ
gives us the gift of eternal life.
Amen, amen, I say to you, unless you eat the
flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you do not have
life within you. Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood has
eternal life, and I will raise him on the last day. For my flesh
is true food, and my blood is true drink. . . . Just as the
living Father sent me and I have life because of the Father,
so also the one who feeds on me will have life because of me.
(Jn 6:53-57)
For Further Reading
Congregation for the Eastern Churches, Instruction
on Liturgy (January 1996).
Congregation of Rites, Eucharisticum Mysterium, Instruction
on the Worship of the Eucharist (May 25, 1967).
Pope John Paul II, Dominicae Cenae, Letter to the Bishops
of the Church on the Mystery and Worship of the Eucharist (February
24, 1980).
Pope Paul VI, Mysterium Fidei, Encyclical on the Holy Eucharist
(September 3, 1965).
Pope Pius XII, Mediator Dei, Encyclical on the Sacred Liturgy
(November 20, 1947).
Second Vatican Council, Sacrosanctum Concilium, Constitution
on the Sacred Liturgy (December 4, 1963).
Subcommittee on the Third Millennium, National Conference of Catholic
Bishops, A Book of Readings on the Eucharist: A Eucharistic
Jubilee (Washington, D.C.: United States Catholic Conference,
2000).
Theological-Historical Commission for the Great Jubilee of the
Year 2000, The Eucharist, Gift of Divine Life (New York:
The Crossroad Publishing Company, 1999).

Secretariate for Doctrine
and Pastoral Practices
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops
3211 4th Street, N.E., Washington, DC 20017-1194 (202) 541-3000
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Conference of Catholic Bishops
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