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In Focus
Catechesis on the
...the Holy Eucharist as the Lord Jesus Christ’s own Body and Blood, his “gift for the life of the world (John 6: 51).”
Holy Eucharist BY BISHOP DAVID M. O’CONNELL, C.M.
PREFACE
A
s we continue our diocesan participation in this first year of the “Eucharistic Revival” announced by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops for our country, I thought it appropriate, as Bishop of the Diocese of Trenton, to prayerfully compose some reflections on the Holy Eucharist and share them with the clergy and faithful of the Diocese. Often enough in the course of our Diocesan Synod, participants expressed concern about the lack of good catechesis among many of the faithful on any number of aspects of our Catholic faith and teaching, the Holy Eucharist included. The purpose of the Synod, as declared by our Holy Father, was “to listen” to one another as we “journey together” in faith. Now may be a most opportune time, by means of follow-up to that “listening,” to consider the gift and mystery of the Holy Eucharist that is the focus our current “Eucharistic Revival” through a series of catechetical presentations. At the onset, I want to note that this catechetical series on the Holy Eucharist that follows is, by no means, an exhaus-
tive treatment of its subject. How could it be? I have tried to highlight many aspects of the inexhaustible gift and mystery of the Holy Eucharist as the Body and Blood of the Lord Jesus Christ, drawn from Scripture and tradition, that are particularly meaningful to me and, hopefully, will be to the reader. So much more could be reflected upon, written and said. I do not take up here the topic of the clergy and faithful’s preferences for either the 1962 or the 1970/2011 Roman Missal or recent pronouncements of the Holy See about either. Neither do I go into detail about the various liturgical parts of the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. Similarly, the polemical question of the worthy reception of PREFACE the Holy Eucharist by Catholic public officials who espouse moral positions contrary to the Church’s teaching is not addressed here. Bishops and pastors have the responsibility to discuss such matters with the individuals themselves, challenging them to a conversion of heart and conscience. My purpose in writing this catechetical series is simple: to re-present the Catholic Church’s understanding of the Holy Eucharist as the Lord Jesus Christ’s own Body and Blood, his “gift for the life of the world ( John 6: 51).”
Eucharistic Series
Continued on 8
November 2022
THE MONITOR MAGAZINE 7