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Loaves and Lakes: Eucharist 101
Sunday Guide
BY TOM & APRIL HOOPES July 27-August 9, 2008 Issue |
Posted 7/22/08 at 12:44 PM
Since we skip
the first issue in August, we’ll look at two Sundays this week: Aug. 3 and Aug.
10 are the 18th and 19th in ordinary time. The Pope is on vacation at
Bressanone Seminary in the northern Italian Alps from July 28 to Aug. 11. On
Aug. 3 and 10 he will recite the Angelus with the public in front of the
cathedral in Bressanone.
Parish
Epriest.com shares Best Parish
Practices from around the country.
The Cathedral of the Immaculate
Conception in Camden, N.J., has had success with The King’s Men men’s group.
Msgr. Michael Mannion, pastor/rector at the cathedral, said, “When mature
Christian men get together and talk about their responsibilities, their lives,
their dreams and their struggles as men, their spouses, families and children
are the definite beneficiaries. And that’s the true sign of a Christian group.”
In 2004, three men met at Theology
on Tap in Philadelphia and began meeting to discuss Church teaching. Their
group grew. They met with Bishop McFadden on March 2, 2006, to propose their
concept of “The King’s Men.” Since the apostolate was founded, more than 200
men and more than 15 priests have attended and the apostolate has seen
increased sacramental life; increased devotion to Mary; men joining, or
considering, the seminary; and active apostolic involvement.
Find more information at the Epriest
website.
Family
Last week, we wrote about a surprise
family trip the Hoopeses enjoyed this summer. This week’s emphasis on
Philadelphia reminds me of a planned day-trip we took a year ago.
Google has opened up new vistas for
trip planning. Last year, Tom made a folder of interesting locations in
Philadelphia and created a notebook with a picture of the Liberty Bell on the
front and the words “Hoopes Family Enrichment Day.”
We woke up early and went to Mass at
a pilgrimage church in Philadelphia, then spent the morning in the historic
district and the afternoon at the King Tut exhibit downtown.
The folder allowed everyone to read
up on our destinations in the car, and it gave the trip an air of formality
that got all the kids to take it seriously. We dressed alike for the trip
(black T-shirts and white pants) and each of the kids took notes in order to
give a brief oral report afterwards.
Readings
18th Sunday: Isaiah 55:1-3; Psalm
145:8-9, 15-18; Romans 8:35, 37-39; Matthew 14:13-21
19th Sunday: 1 Kings 19:9, 11-13;
Psalm 85:9, 10-14; Romans 9:1-5; Matthew 14:22-33
EPriest.com offers free homily
packs for priests.
Our Take
The Gospel readings for the two
Sundays are related, and together they provide a first lesson in the doctrine
of the Eucharist.
On the 18th Sunday of ordinary time,
we hear the miracle of the multiplication of the loaves — which Frank Sheed in
his book To Know Christ Jesus argues should be
called the “multi-location” of the
loaves.
“Observe how strange a miracle it
was,” he writes. “Jesus did not simply hand out the five loaves and the two
fish to the first few people, and then create further loaves and further fish
for the rest. In some mysterious way he fed everybody with those five loaves
and those two fish. The food left over at the end was the remains of the
original supply.”
He quotes this odd sentence in
John’s Gospel for confirmation: “They filled 12 baskets with the fragments from
the five barley loaves” (John 6:13).
The 19th Sunday of ordinary time
tells the story that immediately follows the multi-location of the loaves. In
it Christ walks across the water to the apostles’ boat in the middle of the sea
and quiets a storm. Here we see that the unusual relationship Christ has with location
applies not just to bread but also to his own body.
To believe in the Eucharist, you
have to first believe in transubstantiation — that Christ can take the form of
bread. Christ spent his whole life making the case by continually showing he
was Almighty God while looking like an ordinary man. When he walked on water
and through locked doors, he showed that his body is not like ours.
To believe in the Eucharist, you
next have to believe in multi-location — that Christ can have ascended into
heaven but still be present in his body, blood, soul and divinity in more than
one place on earth.
The miracle of the loaves makes that
case. In the Gospel of John, it is immediately after the miracles of the loaves
and the walking on water that Christ teaches that “he who eats my flesh and
drinks my blood has eternal life.” Christ, the good teacher, has carefully
prepared his followers to believe it. Now the Church repeats the lesson for us.
The Hoopeses are editorial directors of Faith & Family magazine (faithandfamilymag.com).
Our good friend Diane von Glahn now offers her
‘Faithful Traveler’ show on DVD. The first features the Miraculous Medal Shrine
in Philadelphia. TheFaithfulTraveler.com
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