J.M.J. Yesterday's Memorial of Saint Thomas Aquinas spurred me to think again--as if we could ever stop!--about the Most Blessed Sacrament.
Here is something that I wrote some years ago.
Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen wrote years ago that while Jesus could have
chosen to leave anything--financial security, a promise of earthly
contentment, etc.--as a "last will and testament" to His Apostles during
the Last Supper on the evening of Holy Thursday, He decided to leave
behind the very best gift possible: Himself. And the world has never
been the same.
The Most Holy Eucharist is the real, true and substantial Body, Blood,
Soul and Divinity of the Son of God and Son of Mary. How fortunate we
are to have the Most Blessed Sacrament near us.
The Church would not be the Church without the Most Holy
Eucharist. And the Holy Spirit inspires the Faithful to be aware that
the Church adores the Father in Jesus living in the Holy Eucharist
through the power of the Holy Spirit.
Do I know what the Holy Eucharist is? Can I explain this "Sacrament of Sacraments" to another?
Can I identify persons in my life who seem (or, if deceased, seemed) to
be on "fire" for the Holy Eucharist? Who are my Eucharistic "heroes" and "heroines"?
How do I prepare myself to receive Holy Communion? Am I aware of the
obligation to fast for one hour from food and drink (medicine and water
may be taken) before receiving the Most Blessed Sacrament?
Do I confess any and all previously unconfessed mortal sins to a priest
within the Sacrament of Penance before going to Holy Communion?
Do I notice any difference in my thoughts and behavior after receiving Holy Communion? Am I reverent and silent whenever I am close to the Tabernacle?
Have the years of receiving the Body and Blood of Christ made me less
self-serving and more generous towards the outcast, lonely, forgotten
and dying?
If I were to stop availing myself of the Most Holy Eucharist, would I
remain charitable and joyful? Can I exist without Jesus in the Most
Blessed Sacrament?
Have I ever contemplated the link between the Eucharistic Jesus and the Mother of God?
Do I spend time in adoration of the Holy Eucharist whether reserved in the Tabernacle or exposed in the Monstrance?
Our response to the Most Holy Eucharist is quite simple: adoration, love
and conversion. How pleased the Risen Lord Jesus will be when His needy
sons and daughters finally cooperate and allow His Body and Blood to
bring about their genuine happiness in this life as well as in the next.
"O Sacrament most holy, O Sacrament divine, All praise and all thanksgiving, be every moment Thine."
Jesus, Living in the Most Blessed Sacrament, have mercy on us!
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