Sharing in the Body
and Blood of the Lord Sanctifies Us
When we offer the
sacrifice the words of our Saviour are fulfilled just as the blessed Apostle
Paul reported them: On the same night he was betrayed the Lord
Jesus took some bread, and thanked God for it and broke it, and said: ‘This is
my body, which is for you: do this as a memorial of me.’ In the same way he
took the cup after supper, and said, ‘This cup is the new covenant in my blood.
Whenever you drink it, do this as a memorial of me.’ Until the Lord comes,
therefore, every time you eat this bread and drink this cup, you are
proclaiming his death.
So the sacrifice is
offered to proclaim the death of the Lord and to be a commemoration of him who
laid down his life for us. He himself has said: A
man can have no greater love than to lay down his life for his friends. So, since Christ died for us, out of
love, it follows that when we offer the sacrifice in commemoration of his
death, we are asking for love to be given us by the coming of the Holy Spirit.
We beg and we pray that just as through love Christ deigned to be crucified for
us, so we may receive the grace of the Holy Spirit; and that by that grace the
world should be a dead thing in our eyes and we should be dead to the world,
crucified and dead. We pray that we should imitate the death of our Lord. Christ, when he died, died, once for all, to sin,
so his life now is life with God. We
pray, therefore, that in imitating the death of our Lord we should walk
in newness of life, dead
to sin and living for God.
Thus it is that all
the faithful who love God and their neighbour drink the cup of the Lord’s love
even if they do not drink the cup of bodily suffering. Soaked through with that
drink, they mortify the flesh in which they walk this earth. Putting on the
Lord Jesus Christ like a cloak, their desires are no longer those of the body.
They do not contemplate what can be seen but what is invisible to the eyes.
This is how the cup of the Lord is drunk when divine love is present; but
without that love, you may even give your body to be burned and still it will
do you no good. What the gift of love gives us is the chance to become in truth
what we celebrate as a mystery in the sacrifice.
Source: The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of
Readings
From St Fulgentius of
Ruspe's Tract against Fabian
Image
taken from Wikimedia
Commons
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