Quantcast
Click here to read more...
March 27, 2008
Newsletter:     
Search:        
 
Click Here to Order!
 
Return to Home Page Return to Old Archive Home Page Doctrine, Scripture, Morality, Vocation, Community Identity, Sexuality, Family, Healing, Work Art, Ideas, Technology, Science, Business Politics, Bioethics, Ecology, Justice, Peace Spirituality, Prayers, Poems, and Witness Archive of top news from around the web Columns, Reviews and Personal Essays What is Godspy?
spacer
spacer
<MEDITATIONS>
RELATED LINKS
July 25: Feast of Saint Christopher
"He was a man of enormous size and strength, who had been converted to Christianity by a holy hermit. Having no gift for preaching, fasting, or prayer, the customary practices of the good Christian, he searched for some other way of showing his love of God. An inspiration came to him. He went to a certain stream whose current was so dangerous that travelers were often swept away while trying to ford it. Here Christopher built a hut for shelter, then stationed himself on the bank, and carried across all who came, a sort of human ferry."  [EWTN]

July 26: Feast of Sts. Joachim and Anne, Parents of Our Lady
"Whatever their names or the facts of their lives, the truth is that it was the parents of Mary who nurtured Mary, taught her, brought her up to be a worthy Mother of God. It was their teaching that led her to respond to God's request with faith, 'Let it be done to me as you will.'" [Catholic Online]

July 29: Feast of St. Martha
"St. John has given us a glimpse of the other and deeper side of her [Martha's] character when he depicts her growing faith in Christ's Divinity (11:20-27), a faith which was the occasion of the words: 'I am the resurrection and the life.' The Evangelist has beautifully indicated the change that came over Martha after that interview: 'When she had said these things, she went and called her sister Mary secretly, saying: The Master is come, and calleth for thee.'" [New Advent]

July 30: Feast of Bl. Thomas Abel
"Priest and martyr.... He was chaplain to Queen Catharine, and defender of the validity of her marriage with Henry VIII, for which reason he was eventually put to death." [New Advent]

ADVERTISEMENTS
Click here to buy the movie...
 
 
 
 
 
 
Click here to see the video!
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Click here to buy!
 
 
 
Click Here to Order!
 
 
 
Click here to buy!
 
 
 
 
 
 

GIVE THEM SOME FOOD YOURSELVES.

The Eucharist is not merely an expression of communion in the Church's life; it is also a project of solidarity for all of humanity.

The Gospel for Sunday, July 31, 2005
Eighteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time
Mt: 14:13-21

The Eucharist bears the "mark of universality" and prefigures in a sacramental way the time when "all who share one human nature, regenerated in Christ through the Holy Spirit and beholding the glory of God, will be able to say with one accord: 'Our Father'" (Ad Gentes, 7). In this way, while the Eucharist helps us to understand more fully the significance of mission, it leads every individual believer, the missionary in particular, to be "bread, broken for the life of the world." Humanity has need of Christ "broken bread."

In our day human society appears to be shrouded in dark shadows while it is shaken by tragic events and shattered by catastrophic natural disasters. Nevertheless, as "on the night he was handed over" (1 Corinthians 11:23), also today Jesus "breaks the bread" (cf Matthew 26:26) for us in our Eucharistic celebrations and offers himself under the sacramental sign of his love for all mankind. This is why I underlined that "the Eucharist is not merely an expression of communion in the Church's life; it is also a project of solidarity for all of humanity" (Mane Nobiscum Domine, 27); it is "bread from heaven" which gives eternal life (cf John 6: 33) and opens the human heart to a great hope.

Present in the Eucharist, the same Redeemer who saw the needy crowds and was filled with compassion "because they were troubled and abandoned, like sheep without a shepherd" (Matthew 9:36), continues through the centuries to show compassion for humanity poor and suffering. And it is in his name that pastoral workers and missionaries travel unexplored paths to carry the "bread" of salvation to all. They are spurred on by the knowledge that, united with Christ "center not just of the history of the Church, but also the history of humanity (cf. Ephesians 1:10; Colossians 1:15-20)" (Mane Nobiscum Domine, 6), it is possible to meet the deepest longings of the human heart. Jesus alone can satisfy humanity's hunger for love and thirst for justice; He alone makes it possible for every human person to share in eternal life: " I am the living bread that came down from heaven; whoever eats this bread will live forever" (John 6:51). The Church, one with Christ, becomes "broken bread."

When the ecclesial Community celebrates the Eucharist, especially on Sunday the Day of the Lord, it experiences in the light of the faith the value of the encounter with the Risen Christ and is ever more aware that the Sacrifice of the Eucharist is "of many" (Matthew 26:28). We who nourish ourselves with the Body and Blood of the crucified and risen Lord, cannot keep this "gift" to ourselves; on the contrary we must share it. Passionate love for Christ leads to courageous proclamation of Christ; proclamation which, with martyrdom, becomes a supreme offering of love for God and for mankind. The Eucharist leads us to be generous evangelizers, actively committed to building a more just and fraternal world...

...Still today Christ urges his disciples: "Give them some food yourselves" (Matthew 14:16). In his name missionaries all over the world proclaim and witness to the Gospel. Through their efforts there resound once again the words of the Redeemer: "I am the bread of life; he who comes to me will never be hungry; he who believes in me will never thirst" (John 6:35); they too become "bread broken" for their brothers, some even to the point of sacrificing their lives. How many missionary martyrs in our day! May their example draw numerous young men and women to tread the path of heroic fidelity to Christ! The Church has need of men and women willing to consecrate themselves wholly to the great cause of the Gospel...

May the Virgin Mary, the Mother of God, help us relive the experience of the Upper Room so that our ecclesial Communities may become authentically "Catholic"; that is Communities where "missionary spirituality" which is "intimate communion with Christ" (Redemptoris Missio, 88), is closely related to "eucharistic spirituality" of which the model is Mary, the "woman of the Eucharist" (Ecclesia de Eucharistia, 53); Communities always open to the voice of the Spirit and to the needs of humanity, Communities where believers, missionaries in particular, do not hesitate to offer themselves as "bread, broken for the life of the world."

July 25, 2005

Excerpted from Pope John Paul II's Message for World Mission Sunday, February 22, 2005.

Email A Friend
READER COMMENTS
07.25.05   Godspy says:
The Eucharist is not merely an expression of communion in the Church's life; it is also a project of solidarity for all of humanity.

Click to buy at Amazon.com!
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Advertise | About Us