Friday, July 1, 2022

Chúa Nhật Lễ Kính Mình và Máu Thánh Chúa Năm C

 Chúa Nhật Lễ Kính Mình và Máu Thánh Chúa Năm C

Thường xuyên chúng ta nghe trong Kinh Thánh, Thiên Chúa yêu thương chăm sóc con người, dân riêng của Chúa được thể hiện dưới dạng thức ăn và đồ uống. Như Thượng tế Melchizedek ban phúc lành cho Ápraham với những món quà bánh và rượu mà ông đã dâng lên Thiên Chúa, vì những thứ này được coi là những thứ cần thiết nhất cho cuộc sống. Sự nhân từ, quan tâm và rộng lượng của Chúa là một chủ đề bất biến và được thể hiện theo những cách nổi bật trong Tân Ước.
Trong phép lạ bẻ bánh và hoá ra nhiều, Chúa Giêsu chỉ có năm chiếc bánh và hai con cá, nhưng với phúc lành của Thiên Chúa, Ngài đã hoá ra nhiều để có thể ban của ăn nuôi sống hơn 5.000 người và vẫn còn dư thừa! Cũng giống như cách mà Thiên Chúa đã nuôi sống dân Israel trong sa mạc trong cuộc Xuất hành trở về đất hứa. Trong cuộc hành trình đó, Chúa đã cho họ manna từ trời, chim cút và nước uống.
Trong Thánh Lễ, bí tích Thánh Thể là nơi chúng ta gặp gỡ Thiên Chúa như trong cuộc hành trình về Đất Hứa, Chúa muốn duy trì cuộc sống và nuôi dưỡng chúng ta. Chúa đến với chúng ta trong bánh và rượu trên bàn thờ và Bánh Rượu này đã trở nên Mình và Máu của Chúa Kitô.
Thiên Chúa luôn muốn gần gũi, âu yếm thân mật với chúng ta theo như cách thương yêu của con người vật chất. Vì thế, chúng ta không nên nghĩ rằng sự hiện diện của Thiên Chúa chỉ giới hạn trong việc cử hành Bí tích Thánh Thể hoặc Thiên Chúa không ban cho chúng ta những thứ khác ở những nơi khác nhau và theo những cách khác nhau. Thiên Chúa là Đấng luôn hằng hữu, là Nguồn ban sự sống, và là Người luôn nuôi dưỡng chăm sóc chúng ta, con cái của Ngài ở khắp mọi nơi. Lạy Chúa, xin hãy duy trì và nuôi dưỡng trái tim và tâm hồn chúng con.

Corpus Christi Sunday: Gen. 14:18-20; 1 Cor. 11:23-26; Lk. 9:11-17
So often throughout the Bible God’s loving care for his people is expressed in terms of food and drink. Melchizedek blessed Abraham with gifts of bread and wine, for they were considered the essentials for life. God’s generosity and care is a constant theme and it is expressed in striking ways in the New Testament. In the miraculous feeding, Jesus had only five loaves and two fish, but with his blessing, he was able to provide for 5,000 people and still with leftovers! It was the same way God provided for the Israelites in the desert during the Exodus. In that journey, God gave them manna, quail, and water.
The Eucharist is where we encounter God in a way that sustains and nourishes us. God comes to us in the bread and wine on the altar that become the body and blood of Christ. God always touches us in physical ways. But we should not think that God’s presence is limited to the celebration of the Eucharist or that God does not provide for us in different places and in different ways. God is the Sustainer, Provider, and the Nourisher — always and everywhere. Lord, sustain and nourish my heart and soul.

Corpus Christi Sunday 2022
Opening Prayer: Lord Jesus, I come before you in praise and adoration as I think of your total gift of yourself in your Body and Blood. I thank you that through the Eucharist you unite your people in your visible body on earth, the Church. In faith, I know you are really and truly present in the Eucharist and I thank you that I can encounter you tangibly in Holy Communion and in Eucharistic Adoration. In hope, I know the Eucharist is a hint of the heavenly banquet that you are guiding me to, and I know that your life in me through Communion increases my love for you and others. Lord, in this time of prayer, I ask you to strengthen my faith and hope in and my love for your Real Presence in the Eucharist.
Encountering Christ:
1. Corpus Christi: At the Last Supper, Jesus said, “This is my Body.” He didn’t say “This represents my body.” In fact, in the Bread of Life discourse in John 6:55, Jesus said, “For my flesh is true food, and my blood is true drink.” Many of his disciples responded, “This saying is hard; who can accept it?” (John 6:61) and then “As a result of this, many [of] his disciples returned to their former way of life and no longer accompanied him” (John 6:66). Jesus did not call them back and try to mitigate the impact of his words. Instead, he asked those still with him, “Do you also want to leave?” (John 6:67). He couldn’t have spoken more clearly about the true nature of the Eucharist. But Catholics today still struggle with this truth. A widely reported Pew Research Center study showed that sixty-nine percent of all self-identified U.S. Catholics believe that the bread and wine remain as “symbols of the body and blood of Jesus Christ,” with only thirty-one percent saying they believe in the Real Presence of Jesus in the Eucharist. The U.S. Bishops, like Jesus, are continuing to insist on the truth about the Eucharist. You may have heard of their efforts in the “My Flesh for the Life of the World” campaign for a national Eucharistic revival, which is meant to renew the Church by enkindling a living relationship with the Lord Jesus Christ in the Holy Eucharist. How deep is my belief in and my devotion to Christ’s Real Presence in the Eucharist?
2. Bringing Together Past, Present, and Future: This miracle gave witness to the reality of who Jesus was. He provided for the people abundantly out of almost nothing. In doing so, he brought to mind God providing manna for his people when they hungered in the desert. The miracle also foreshadowed the Eucharist and the heavenly banquet we hope to share in eternity. In all of these, we see that for which Jesus taught us to pray: “Give us this day our daily bread…” Christ himself is the Bread of Life and receiving this Bread “increases the communicant’s union with the Lord, forgives his venial sins, and preserves him from grave sins. Since receiving this sacrament strengthens the bonds of charity between the communicant and Christ, it also reinforces the unity of the Church as the Mystical Body” (CCC 1416). Do we see the Eucharist as our daily bread? Do we try to attend daily Mass?
3. Bring What You Have: Dallas Jenkins, founder of the popular television series The Chosen recounted that this Gospel marked a turning point in his life. His Hollywood movie failed at the box office and effectively ended his career. As he and his wife prayed (and cried), this Scripture came to his wife, and they talked about what it could mean. Later that night, he was on the computer, and he received a message from a friend, “Remember, your job is not to feed the five thousand; it’s only to provide the loaves and fish.” When Dallas asked why he sent that message, the friend said that God told him to. The Chosen grew out of that experience of failure and that message. God wants us to bring the gifts and talents we have, no matter how little and inadequate they seem to us, for him to multiply and distribute as he desires. As St. Teresa of Calcutta said, “God has called us not to be successful, but to be faithful.” Our fear of failure or overemphasis on success can limit our willingness to give ourselves to God and thus limit his ability to work in us, multiplying our gifts, and through us, to touch and enrich the lives of others. Do we have talents or gifts that we have been unwilling to offer to the Lord? Do we have gifts or abilities that we consider insignificant and so we fail to offer them to the Lord?
Conversing with Christ: Lord, how blessed I am that you make yourself available to me in the gift of the Eucharist. It is the source and summit of the Christian life, yet sometimes I can take it–you, your great gift–for granted. As the Eucharist Revival kicks off, stir in my heart a revival of love for you in the Eucharist. Open my mind and heart with awe and gratitude. Strengthen me by this gift to be able to give myself more fully to you, offering the loaves and fish of my life for you to use to build your Kingdom.
Resolution: Lord, today by your grace I will make an effort to go to an additional daily Mass or an additional hour of Adoration this week and offer it to all those who doubt the Real Presence.

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